Thursday 15 December 2016

He got game Analysis


He got game (1998) Dir. Spike Lee

He got game is an American Sports drama directed by Spike Lee. The production companies for the film are Spike's own company that he set up called 40 acres and a mule Filmworks, the other production company was Touchstone pictures. There are several themes that run throughout the film that include love, family, hatred, unrequited love and sports.

The film is based around Jake Shuttlesworth and his son Jesus Shuttlesworth. Jake is in prison for murdering his wife, and for that his son hates him and doesn't look at him as a father anymore. Spike uses Basketball in the film as a bonding tool as Jake used to help teach his son when he was younger. Jake uses this as a way to work himself back into his sons life and help make a decision about what college he wants to go to and to try and make up for the years they lost and for what happened between him and Jesus' mum Martha. We see that Basketball is going to be a key element of the film from the first few opening scenes, we see clips of people basketball on courts in neighbourhoods, we then see Jake in prison on a court with another inmate taking shots. Towards the end of the film, we see a flashback of Jake teaching Jesus and 'helping' him to get better at the game. In this scene we start to see another reason as to why Jesus doesn't particularly like him.

Wednesday 14 December 2016

Miracle at St.Anna Analysis


Miracle at St. Anna Dir. Spike Lee (2008)

Miracle at St. Anna is an American-Italian war film, the genre of the film is historical fiction. Several themes ran throughout the film which include Religion, Family, Betrayal, Unrequited love, war and Friendship. The film was filmed and made in 2008 and was directed by Spike Lee and was written by James McBride. The films locations include America, Italy and Port Nassau in the Bahamas. The production companies for the film were Spike Lee's own production company 40 Acres and a Mule film works, Touchstone pictures and RAI Cinema, while Walt Disney Studios and Motion pictures distributed the film. The films budget was $45 million, at the box office the film only grossed $9.3 million and made $10.1 million from DVD sales, which totalled $19.4 million overall.

The film features a circular narrative that leads us to the end of the film and connects the story together. The use of the flashbacks in the movie helps us to understand how the characters got to the place they were, it is used as a backstory to each of the characters so we can get to know what they have been through and get an idea of who they are. The film starts with a black man working in a booth at a post office, we see him serve a customer then another customer approaches his booth and asks for a 20 cent stamp. Then after a staring at him a couple of times, the man shoots the customer and closes the booth. The next scene we see is of the gun resting on a hat with a pool of blood around them, this is the scene we see at the end of the film to show to the audience why it happened and the events leading up to it.

The use of a hand-held camera in the battle scenes helps makes the audience feel more involved in the film and makes them feel like they are there with the characters. The hand-held camera is used to emphasise the chaos within the scene, all the gunfire and explosions, the soldiers screaming and shouting in pain at being shot or having limbs blown off. The close-ups of the characters helps to show the pain and anguish they are enduring in the battle and shows their body language towards the events that are happening. We see the effect that the war can have on soldiers at 00:16:23, when one of the soldiers in the Army Platoon starts to become scared and nervous praying for his mum to come and help him. The close-ups and mid-shots of the soldier when he is going through this situation shows his body language and his emotions. Spike uses these shots to shows how scared and petrified soldiers could be when it came to war and when you were called upon to go out to find and fight the enemy army. Not only does it help show emotion and body language, it helps us to sympathise with the characters and almost feel what they are going through.

Racism was a key theme shown in the film by Spike. He showed how the whites used their colour as a position of power and use it to show their superiority above the blacks. A scene where this was indicated was when the soldiers wanted to eat in a café which was occupied by other white Americans and the owner treated the blacks in a patronising and derogatory way by telling them to sit out the back like dogs away from the whites. Close up shots of the all the soldiers face showed their emotions of how they was upset and violated at the fact four white German guys got to sit in a booth despite the fact they are the people they are at war with, and despite the fact they are serving in the Army helping the country, they still get no respect from anyone. However, they repeat their action a while; they went back to the café with an aggressive and violent approach towards the owner and the other white people in there, the owner was intimidated and scared because they were all brandishing weapons.