She Hate Me
Movie Review:
Spike
Lee is still angry and ranting! That's the good news. But
this film is so all over the place that he drowns out his
own argument and sabotages the story.
Jack (Mackie)
is a high-flier in a pharmaceutical firm who's sacked when
he blows the whistle on his boss' (Harrelson) insider trading.
Jack's assets are frozen as part of the investigation, and
in a moment of financial weakness he accepts a large sum
of money to impregnate his ex-fiancee (Washington) ... and
her girlfriend (Ramirez). Eighteen pregnant lesbians later,
he starts to have second thoughts, but by then his latest
client, daughter (Bellucci) of a mob boss (Turturro), has
caught the eye of FBI agents investigating the other case.
Is there a single
issue Lee doesn't address here? Besides using every genre
(rom-com, courtroom thriller, family drama, historical revisionism,
political satire) he jams the film with statements about
injustice, institutional racism and civil rights; business
ethics, legal wrangling and organised crime; romance, sexuality
and morality; diabetes, Aids and fertility. It's just too
much! Not to mention the fact that it's probably physically
impossible, even for a stud like Jack, to impregnate five
women a night, three nights in a row.
This overlong,
rambling approach is tempered by extremely strong performances
from the astonishing cast (newcomer Mackie is excellent),
blending gifted newcomers with superb veterans. It also
helps that the issues are important ones, and Lee is adept
enough to grapple with them meaningfully. He's a superb
director who can cut through the scene in jarringly clever
ways, especially when working with an exceptional cinematographer
like Matthew Libatique. So why is Terence Blanchard's mellow
jazz score so mopey?
Surely
the point is to show how black people, even hugely successful
ones, are often the ones caught in society's corrupt web.
But this comes through more strongly in the Watergate flashbacks
(with Ejiofor as 'whistleblower' Frank Wills) than in the
sprawling central plot. And it must be noted that very lesbian
in the film has satisfying porn-style sex with a man, while
the romantic plot is a pure misogynistic fantasy. If this
is meant to be degrading and provocative, then maybe Lee
has succeeded after all.
Rich
Cline
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