Saturdays, 2:30pm to 4:30pm Saturday 20 June to Saturday 8 August
Sydney Cinémathèque at the Art Gallery of New South Wales presents a retrospective of the early films of legendary director, Spike Lee.
Across four decades, Spike Lee has remained one of the most prolific and provocative voices in contemporary cinema. This season revisits his early period, when he emerged as a young radical, a firebrand cinephile reimagining African American film on his own terms. Ever since picking up a Super 8 camera to document the birth of disco and civil unrest on the streets of New York in 1977, Lee has spun bold stories of Black life, racism and urban politics.
This series brings together eight essential ‘Spike Lee Joints’, from the musical comedy School daze to the Brooklyn classic Do the right thing, the sweeping epic Malcolm X (screening on 35mm) and Bamboozled, a scathing showbiz satire. Buoyed by vibrant pop and soul soundtracks, these films confront urgent social issues with formal bravura, embracing jump cuts, direct-to-camera address and vivid ‘Afrocentric bright’ colour palettes. Uncompromising yet entertaining, Lee’s early work ushered in a new wave of Black cinema, proving that films centred on nuanced African American experiences could achieve critical acclaim and lasting cultural cachet without conforming to Hollywood stereotypes.
Co-presented with the Melbourne Cinémathèque.
Cinémathèque ticket bundles – save up to 30% when you book three or more sessions. Terms & conditions apply.