Hollywood News: Spike Lee jumps for joy receives FIRST Academy Award nomination for directing after 40 years

Blackmayne

Rising Star
Registered
:rolleyes::lol::roflmao::smh:,
It was about as good as a video game, 6 or 7 non shooting hood bangers
and Denzel making a gun sandwich, not hitting shit and pattin' his waves down. :(:yawn:

These are some of the best shootout scenes in history :cool:







Honorable mentions :D





Exactly Bro... loved Training day but,
best shootout scene my ass

Wind River my G :itsawrap:



"Den of thieves":gun03:

 

Blackmayne

Rising Star
Registered
Props to Spike Lee... fuck that!!! Dude is a genius glad he is getting his flowers while he is here.... and for some WOKE shit like Black Klansman too!!
 

jack walsh13

Jack Walsh 13
BGOL Investor
Exactly Bro... loved Training day but,
best shootout scene my ass

Wind River my G :itsawrap:



"Den of thieves":gun03:


Damn I never seen Wind River. I have to watch that now.

tQXYkw.jpg
 

playahaitian

Rising Star
Certified Pussy Poster
Spike Lee On ‘BlacKkKlansman’ Losing Best Pic To ‘Green Book’: “Every Time Somebody Is Driving Somebody, I Lose”
by Matt Grobar

and Anthony D'Alessandro

February 24, 2019 10:02pm








'BLACKKKLANSMAN' BEST ADAPTED SCREENPLAY | Backstage at the Oscars

Volume 90%






The backstage press corps here at the Oscars had questions for Spike Lee after his reaction to Green Book winning Best Picture on Sunday night.



Related
Spike Lee Pulls A Kanye When 'Green Book' Takes Best Picture Oscar




Asked backstage at the Dolby Theatre if his Adapted Screenplay win for BlacKkKlansman makes up for Do the Right Thing loss at the 1990 Oscars and the Academy overlooking it for a Best Picture nomination, Lee quipped in reference to that year’s Driving Miss Daisy Best Picture win: “I’m snake bit. Every time somebody is driving somebody, I lose – but they changed the seating arrangement!”

Pressed again about his sore-loser response in the theater after Green Book was announced as the winner, Lee responded, “Oh wait a minute, what reaction did you see? What did I do?” he continued. “No, I thought I was courtside at the [Madison Square] Garden. The ref made a bad call.”



Still, while Lee didn’t win Best Picture, he finally found himself in that category, which he was happy to acknowledge. In an Oscar night bringing forth multiple historic wins for African-Americans, Lee knows who he has to thank for his own win in Adapted Screenplay.

“Here’s the thing: Without April Reign, #OscarsSoWhite and the former President of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, I wouldn’t be here tonight. [The Academy’s] more diverse. That wouldn’t have happened without Cheryl Boone Isaacs,” Lee told the press. “Facts.”

With three nominations tonight—for Adapted Screenplay, Director and Picture—Lee prepared two speeches for the evening, he said, “one with the list of people I was going to thank, and the other was what you heard me say.”

“[But] I said to myself, ‘Self, your black ass won’t be up here again,’ ” Lee explained of his ultimate decision to go political in his acceptance speech, touching memorably on black history and the 2020 election, in lieu of a more traditional list of thank-yous.

There was much discussion in the room about the director’s 1990 nomination for Do the Right Thing, also in a Screenplay category, regarding the legacy of that film, and how it might be different were he to tackle it today. But Lee wasn’t interested in considering hypotheticals.

“The film was made when it was made. But the thing is, I wrote that film in ’88,” he said. “I was talking about gentrification, about global warming, and all the stuff I talked about in that film is still relevant today.”

Along those same lines, Lee feels confident about what the legacy of BlacKkKlansmanwill be.

“I do know that the coda of this film, where we saw homegrown, red-white-and-blue terrorism…Heather Heyer, her murder was an American terrorist act, when the President of the United States did not refute, did not denounce the Klan, the alt-right and Neo-Nazis,” he said.

Lee reflected. “This film, whether we won Best Picture or not, will stand the test of time for being on the right side of history.”

Of course, multiple journalists tried to get Lee’s thoughts on controversial topics. David Duke has seen the film—but what do you want to say to him? And what did you really think about Best Picture winner, Green Book?

“Let me take another sip,” Lee joked with a glass of champagne in hand. “Next question!”
 

TheBigOne

Master Tittay Poster
Platinum Member
Spike Lee’s Oscars speech enraged Trump. Watch and read it here.


By Amy B Wang
February 25 at 7:46 AM
Spike Lee didn’t just walk onstage Sunday to accept the Academy Award for best adapted screenplay for “BlacKkKlansman.” He practically floated, against the crowd’s thunderous applause, finally leaping into the arms of presenter Samuel L. Jackson for an extended and exuberant hug.

This moment — his first Oscar win — had eluded Lee for decades, after nominations in 1990 (best original screenplay for “Do the Right Thing”) and 1998 (best documentary feature for “4 Little Girls”).

And Lee was prepared.
Drawing forth a sheet of yellow paper, he began his short but powerful acceptance speech:

The word today is “irony.” The date, the 24th. The month, February, which also happens to be the shortest month of the year, which also happens to be Black History month. The year, 2019. The year, 1619. History. Her story. 1619. 2019. 400 years.

Four hundred years. Our ancestors were stolen from Mother Africa and bought to Jamestown, Virginia, enslaved. Our ancestors worked the land from can’t see in the morning to can’t see at night. My grandmother, Zimmie Shelton Retha, who lived to be 100 years young, who was a Spelman College graduate even though her mother was a slave. My grandmother who saved 50 years of Social Security checks to put her first grandchild — she called me Spikie-poo — she put me through Morehouse College and NYU grad film. NYU!

Before the world tonight, I give praise to our ancestors who have built this country into what it is today along with the genocide of its native people. We all connect with our ancestors. We will have love and wisdom regained, we will regain our humanity. It will be a powerful moment. The 2020 presidential election is around the corner. Let’s all mobilize. Let’s all be on the right side of history. Make the moral choice between love versus hate. Let’s do the right thing! You know I had to get that in there.

Though it never mentioned President Trump, Lee’s speech nevertheless seemed to have caught the attention of the president, who aired his displeasure early Monday morning.“Be nice if Spike Lee could read his notes, or better yet not have to use notes at all, when doing his racist hit on your President,” Trump tweeted.
Trump has frequently boasted of his presidency being historically beneficial for African Americans, though statistics often don’t support those claims.



The post came amid a half-dozen tweets Trump posted Monday morning, which railed against everything from Robert Mueller’s investigation to criticism of his negotiations with North Korea.

Trump’s only Oscars-related tweet was the one that criticized Lee.

In backstage interviews Sunday, Lee called out Trump more directly, criticizing him for not taking a harder stance against neo-Nazis after one drove his car into a crowd of counterprotesters at the 2017 “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, killing a woman named Heather D. Heyer.“Heather Heyer, her murder was an American terrorist act. That car drove down that crowded street in [Charlottesville], and the president of the United States did not refute, did not denounce the Klan, alt-right and neo-Nazis,” Lee said. “This film — whether we won best picture or not — this film will stand the test of time being on the right side of history.”

https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts...mp-watch-read-it-here/?utm_term=.01d7e41ccbb9
 

FLoss

Surviving Kamala Harris
BGOL Investor
Exactly, just think about the disenfranchisement of 40 acres and a mule, having delivered Hollywood an un-surmountable variety of talent, 3 of which performers films have made the most box office gross of any and all actors
which include, Wesley Snipes, Samuel L. Jackson and Denzel Washington averaging about 10-15 BILLION in box office revenue.

Yet in 40 years, 40 acres and a mule, have received not one director, studio nod :smh:

Clear and present Racism in America with 1001 excuses.
I was just thinking the other day about how much talent that has gone through his camp....In fact, the kid that won best actor, I think one of his earlier roles was in a Spike Lee flick (Sweet Blood Of Jesus?). Him and his people can recognize talent.
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Still_Processing



Still Processing is a New York Times culture podcast hosted by Jenna Wortham, who works for the New York Times Magazine, and Wesley Morris, the paper's critic at large.[1] The show debuted on September 8, 2016. Still Processing won a 2017 Webby Award in the Podcast & Digital Audio category, and was nominated for a 2019 Shorty Award. [2][3]



99062.jpg
Still_Processing_podcast_cover_art.jpg



Episode Info



With the Academy Awards right around the corner, we take a look back at some previous Best Picture winners. When these winning films were about race, they often highlighted a feel-good racial reconciliation fantasy. But about 30 years ago, there was one movie that was snubbed at the Oscars — “Do the Right Thing” — that is anything but a feel-good racial reconciliation fantasy. We revisit how “Do the Right Thing” showcased realities about race in America in ways that none of the current Oscar nominees — including Spike Lee’s “BlacKkKlansman” — do, and why it matters.












https://www.listennotes.com/podcasts/still-processing/fantasies-pxi-6ZyXFcr/



https://player.fm/series/still-processing-1785512/fantasies



https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/21/...g-fantasies-spike-lee-do-the-right-thing.html
 
Top