Da 5 Bloods: Spike Lee leverages Netflix’s strengths for an unfiltered message
31 years ago, Spike Lee's breakout film Do The Right Thing forced audiences around the world to confront the realities of police injustice perpetrated upon African Americans. The fictional film chronicled a full day in New York City's Bed-Stuy neighborhood and ended with a police officer choking a black man to death in front of the entire neighborhood.
It was a statement Spike Lee film for many reasons, and one was its ability to weave real-life trauma into the story, whether by flashing back to stock footage of atrocities or by having characters call out African-American leaders' quotes and philosophies. Lee's work takes particular care to make sure truth and fiction never stray far from each other—and if that 1989 film seems painfully relevant now, remember that it was firm in calling out decades of all-too-familiar headlines back then, too.
While Lee's latest film, the Netflix exclusive Da 5 Bloods, takes its story half a world away from America, its shadow of oppression remains as pronounced, affecting, and complicated as in any of Lee's most acclaimed works—and takes advantage of Netflix's platform to do so in particularly uncompromising fashion.
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