(ThyBlackMan.com) The Tyler Perry/Spike Lee rivalry took another turn last week with Perry telling Spike “to go straight to hell”, once again igniting the debate between their fans and commentators on the topic of buffoonery and images of African-American life on film in their movies and beyond. Tyler Perry fans are loyalists, oblivious to any criticism of his films and are quick to call his detractors out as haters, quickly citing his box office success and his financial empire. I find it funny how people assess quality with a monetary figure, completely disregarding its impact and what kind of message it spreads. I also find it funny that folks dismiss Spike Lee, ignoring the impact of his films and his fights in Hollywood, plus his role in reestablishing a “Black Hollywood” and essentially paving the way for Tyler Perry’s success.
For those of you who’ve forgotten…
Spike Lee is one of the greatest filmmakers in cinema history. Go ahead, read that statement again and notice that I didn’t preface filmmaker with Black. Though his films are rich with African-American culture, casts and issues, they have transcended race by injecting our culture into the fabric of mainstream cinema. Still skeptical? Since She’s Gotta Have It in 1985, Spike has openly discussed hyper sexuality, class divisions, race relations, Black love, the affect and effect of drugs in our families and communities, media exploitation, interracial dating, the Black family as an institution, and our internal battle with complexion.
Spike Lee is influential. He, along with A Different World’s Hillman University, introduced Historically Black Colleges and Universities to a generation that may have never known their existence, explored the culture of Jazz music, resurrected Malcolm X’s legacy, showed us the high-stakes business of high school basketball, shared the story of Black soldiers in a segregated military, examined historical events such as the Birmingham church bombing and Hurricane Katrina, and showcased stand-up comedy in a way that it was never seen before. Factor in what he’s meant for the careers of Denzel Washington, Wesley Snipes, and Samuel L. Jackson and you start to get the idea.
Spike Lee is unheralded. In the nearly 25 years since his films have gone nationwide, he’s received two Academy Award nominations, Do the Right Thing (Best Original Screenplay) and 4 Little Girls (Best Feature Documentary), but lost both times. Do the Right Thing wasn’t even nominated for Best Picture, which Driving Miss Daisy won that year…go figure! For all of his successes, he’s only had one box office blockbuster and that was Inside Man in 2006.
Spike Lee is controversial. He has never shied away from controversy on or off-screen. Whether his saying “Jews run Hollywood“, calling Larry Bird overrated, saying Eddie Murphy wasn’t helping young Black actors enough (take another look Spike), his battle with Clint Eastwood over the lack of Black soldiers in Letter from Iwo Jima and Flags of Our Fathers, to calling Trent Lott “a card-carrying member of the Ku Klux Klan” or his most recent war of words with your favorite filmmaker Tyler Perry, he has always spoken his mind and proven time and again that no subject is untouchable.
Two of my personal favorites, Bamboozled and She Hate Me are controversial in nature but inspective in content and go to places where other films just don’t attempt to reach. Bamboozled, a satire of the way African-Americans are portrayed in the media and She Hate Me explored the ethical dilemmas of corporate fraud and the desperation blowing the whistle led the lead character to by resorting to impregnating lesbians for $10,000 a pop.
Spike Lee is a teacher. Watch his films and see snapshots of historical moments and figures in time, listen as a character makes reference to a moment of days gone by, watch as he brings to life a time in history forgotten or ignored by far too many. Pay attention as the theme of the film becomes a central character in the action.
Spike Lee is an artist. We know in each film we’re gonna get that camera effect that shows the actor or actress as if they’re gliding. But look at the angles, the colors, the scenery, the way the films look like beautiful snapshots pieced together. Watch how his shooting tells a story beyond the script.
Spike Lee is an icon. Think back to “Mars Blackmon” climbing off the silver screen and into Nike commercials with Michael Jordan. He’s a fixture courtside at Knicks games and his in-game battles with Reggie Miller have elevated Miller’s legend as a “Knick Killer“. His 40 Acres and a Mule Production Company is recognizable for its historical reference, but also the battles he fights from within Hollywood.
Spike Lee is a genius… writer, producer, director, actor, cultural critic, Knick fan, and philanthropist. He’s bold, risk taking, gives a middle finger to critics and the mainstream, Spike Lee doesn’t make the movies you want to see, he makes the movies you need to see.
Staff Writer; Al-Lateef Farmer
More of his work can be found over at: The World According to Teef.
Also feel free to connect via Twitter; http://twitter.com/wrldacrdng2Teef
Spike Lee is a role model of how to be successful African-American artist, without selling out. Tyler Perry is a very successful Negro-American artist who at times goes for the cheap laugh and rides the stereotype train all the way to the bank.
I can’t help but wonder why more African-American film makers, Singleton, et al, aren’t highlighted in these articles besides Lee/Tyler. Ebony used to fill that void and offer our community a list of successful African-Americans broken down and highlighted by profession.
Our kids and the world at large need to be informed, as well as entertained. Lee takes on the much harder task of informing and entertaining. Perry goes for entertainment over enlightenment.
I also think that Perry dumbs down his movies to the point of cliche’. That’s too bad because he commands such a large stage and undersells the potential for mental growth among his primary audience.
Perry = 3 Stooges, Lee = Lenny Bruce.
As an adult I appreciate Lenny Bruce more. If I was dating today, I’d appreciate a young woman more who was mature enough to have moved beyond the 3 Stooges. It would make for a lot more interesting conversations after the movie was over.
Thank you for this article!
I also believe that Spike Lee is a genius, and that his comments, regarding Tyler Perry, shouldn’t just be dismissed as “hating”. He has earned the right to speak his mind on the current state of “black cinema”. I am hoping and praying that the Tyler Perry “loyalists” have a defined reason as to why they love him so, and not just because they can not get enough of Madea and his other comical characters which are portrayed as the norm. Is it too much for them to bare the truth that Spike puts out there, and easier to cling to the distraction of Perry’s work? What message does he place in his movies that uplifts and empowers or speaks the truth to his audience? This again is just my opinion which I also have a right to.
Thank you Anonymous Author Named “Staff.” I don’t care for Spike Lee, but at least he has the guts to sign his own work.
Lee didn’t “resurrect” Malcolm X’s legacy, HE REWROTE IT to fit his angry point of view. And that’s what this is really about…Spike Lee is furious with Tyler Perry for not using his success to spread the message that “the white man is the source of all our problems and must never be trusted.”
Why are you celebrating Lee for declaring “Jews run Hollywood?” Any outrageous statement is cause for celebration because it’s evidence that “no subject is untouchable?” It’s okay to lie and disparage other races because you’re “speaking your mind?” Please, grow up.
Much Agreed. Spike Lee is the man.
My response to people calling Spike Lee supporters “Haters” is ignorance is bliss and misery loves company.
People don’t want to see us for the beautiful people we are, they want to see us in our stagnant state.