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- From: nyxfer%panix.com@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu (N.Y. Transfer)
- Subject: NEWS:Media Racists Attack Spike Lee
- Message-ID: <1992Sep4.200141.14035@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
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- Resent-From: "Rich Winkel" <MATHRICH@MIZZOU1.missouri.edu>
- Date: Fri, 4 Sep 1992 20:01:41 GMT
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- Via The NY Transfer News Service ~ All the News that Doesn't Fit
-
- Media racists attack filmmaker Spike Lee
-
- By Monica Moorehead
-
- With the release of the film "Malcolm X" just three months away,
- director Spike Lee is urging the public and especially the Black
- community to turn out in huge numbers for the film during the
- opening weekend.
-
- In an interview with the Los Angeles Times Aug. 26, Lee called
- for a boycott of classes and work on Nov. 20, the first day the
- film goes into wide release. He initially made the request at a
- recent meeting of the National Association of Black Journalists
- in Detroit.
-
- In the interview, Lee justified the school boycott with the
- explanation that his film will "provide the American history
- children are not getting in school. If they go see the film and
- write a report on what they've seen the teacher can't hold that
- [skipping class] against them."
-
- Whether Lee's call for a boycott will have an impact is anybody's
- speculation. It's too early to tell. But it has already roused a
- racist reaction.
-
- The New York Post, notorious for its racist vulgarities, went out
- of its way to solicit quotes from moderate African American
- officials like New York Mayor David Dinkins and even the totally
- discredited right-wing reactionary Roy Innis of the Congress of
- Racial Equality. Both took issue with Lee's pronouncement.
-
- The big business media are forever seeking opportunities to drive
- a wedge into the Black, Latino and other oppressed and working
- class communities. Lee has been a long-time target of the media
- for his outspokenness on the question of institutionalized racism
- within the education system and even Hollywood.
-
- The movie "Malcolm X" could arguably become the most
- controversial movie of 1992, similar in impact to the movie
- "JFK."
-
- It has been nothing short of a struggle for Lee to make this
- film. Originally it was to be directed by Norman Jewison, a
- well-respected white director associated with the movie "In the
- Heat of the Night." When Lee pointed out that only a Black
- director should make a film on Malcolm X, Jewison bowed out.
-
- The next hurdle was the budget for the film. Warner Brothers had
- agreed to a $28 million budget. When the film's production costs
- exceeded that figure, the studio denied Lee additional funding.
- Lee appealed to several Black entertainers, including Bill Cosby
- and Oprah Winfrey, who intervened financially to insure the
- film's completion.
-
- It is not unusual for a film to go over budget. It is unusual for
- a studio to deny extra funding. Except when the film is being
- made by a Black director on a subject like the life of Malcolm X.
-
- (Copyright Workers World Service: Permission to reprint granted
- if source is cited. For more info contact Workers World,46 W. 21
- St., New York, NY 10010; "workers@igc.apc.org".)
-
- -----
- NY Transfer News Service
- Modem: 718-448-2358 nytransfer@igc.org nyxfer@panix.com
-
-