America
Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing is a picture of an American community torn apart by hate. The civil unrest under the surface throughout the movie ?which surfaces itself drastically in the end ?stems from hatred and prejudice within the small community of Bed-Stuy in Brooklyn. Although Mookie at one point says that America is a free country, the film depicts an America that will never be free until the hatred that abounds in its citizens is turned i
Near the middle of the film, representatives from each of the film's ethnic groups rattle off lists of racial epithets that each of them hear ?and probably think ?every day. America's hatred, therefore, is not sufficiently extinguished through restraint. A departure from the narrative, this short collection of shots skillfully gets into the minds of the film's characters. He is the one character that states a solution to the problem of hatred in America, but ironically, he is the one character who dies. Another scene that illustrates the theme of hatred in America is Radio Raheem's monologue and dramatic interpretation of the ongoing battle between love and hate. His death is partly due to his own . The unleashing of these hateful names coincides in the film with the unleashing of deadly violence. It is when these epithets are truly voiced by the characters in the end of the film that the violence which was lurking comes to life in Sal's Famous Pizzeria. Since this scene is not really a part of the action of the plot, it becomes obvious that much of the tension in the film stems from the characters' understanding that their hatred should not always be voiced. This hatred is always bubbling under the surface, and the characters?rage comes from the restraint they know they must use. The most obvious example of the hatred running rampant throughout the film comes at its center.
Common topics in this essay:
Mookie America,
Radio Raheem's,
Spike Lee's,
Pizzeria America's,
hatred america,
america free,
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