A new list of 25 film titles for the National Film Registry is going to be
announced on December 12, 2018. As we get closer to that date, we look
back at some films added in previous years.
In 1999, Spike Lee’s powerful “Do the Right Thing” made the list with
this, his still highly timely film. In an essay on the film, author
David Sterritt said:
“Spike Lee’s most fully realized film, ‘Do the Right Thing,’ is urban
and American down to its bones. This helps explain why reaction to it
was so mixed at the Cannes International Film Festival, where I saw its
world premiere in 1989 with an audience of international critics and
journalists. Spectators applauded at the end, but their clapping seemed
driven more by duty than enthusiasm, as if it were de rigueur to cheer a
maverick movie by a spunky black filmmaker even if his message seemed
cranky or cryptic. Europeans wondered if its subject was timely—racial
unrest is ‘very 1960s,’ a West German critic told me—and some Americans
criticized it for stirring up discontents that seemed, well, unnecessary
in the late 1980s.”
Read the remainder of the “Do the Right Thing” (PDF) essay.
Title: “Do the Right Thing”
Year of Release: 1999
Year Added to the National Film Registry: 1999 (See all films added to the Registry in 1999.)
Trivia: As of this writing, Spike Lee has two other
films currently on the Registry, “Malcolm X” and his documentary “Three
Little Girls.”
via https://blogs.loc.gov/now-see-hear/2018/11/reading-the-film-registry-do-the-right-thing-1989/
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