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Anonymous SHough610 said...

I felt like it had been done better before. I'm not a big fan of it, but Spike Lee's 1997 movie "Bamboozled" also made a much more effective point about how Blacks are portrayed in the media (and did it more compellingly).

One aspect of the video that bothered me was seeing some people I knew watch it and laugh, not getting the satire. It also seemed a bit hypocritical for Nick Cannon to be protesting when he had seemed to buy into the sort of roles that he's criticizing.

Of course, that's not entirely fair. One of my professors in college made a very good point about women and minority actors/actresses: because of the few *good* roles available and how they often go to the most known stars (Meryl Streep, Denzel Washington, etc.) women and minorities are forced into roles that they might not want in order to make ends meet.

February 1, 2010 at 10:48 PM

Blogger Aaron C. said...

I was one of the six people who saw "Bamboozled" during its theatrical run. It's been a long time, but I remember thinking that - like a lot of Spike Lee's movies after "Do the Right Thing" - it was overly long with the message getting lost in the whole "A Spike Lee Joint" approach to filming.

I really should see it again, because over the years, it's obvious that everyone liked "Bamboozled" more than me and I'm willing to see if I'm wrong on this.

February 2, 2010 at 5:47 AM

Anonymous SHough610 said...

I agree with you on it actually. I don't think that Spike will ever top Malcolm X or Do the Right Thing (both of which were filmed during what you referred to as the last great Black cultural Renaissance). He is too enamored of the digital filming techniques he used and he's beginning to be engulfed by the bitterness that marks his public persona as he's gotten older (look at the embarrassing spat with Clint Eastwood and the following controversy that he changed history worse than he claimed Eastwood did) but it's still a decent movie.

February 2, 2010 at 7:14 AM

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