Bamboozled Movie Review
Bamboozled Review

"Bamboozled" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Spike LeeProducer : Jon Kilik,Spike Lee
Screenwiter : Spike Lee
Starring Damon Wayans, Savion Glover, Jada Pinkett-smith, Tommy Davidson, Michael Rapaport, Paul Mooney
Welcome to a piece of American history. In the old music hall, white comedians
and song 'n' dance men would splash their faces in charcoal, maybe throw on a
pair of white gloves, then go through the step-n-fetchin' routine, the exotica
and the buffoonery of perceived black culture. Jim Crow, Amos 'n' Andy, Mammy,
L'il Black Sambo, Uncle Tom, and the Ten Pickaninnies were typical characters
thrown on stage and screen for the amusement and mockery of white audiences.
What began as white actors in blackface evolved with the 1950s Amos and Andy
Show on television, featuring black actors in blackface. The content remained
the same, with Amos and Andy portrayed as lazy, ignorant, chicken eatin', banjo
playin', shifty clowns. Once the show lost favor with an outraged public, the
television studios put a halt on developing new shows about the black
experience -- degrading or otherwise -- for several decades.
Spike Lee's Bamboozled works as angry satire, asking that we not forget the
offensive and disturbing corners of our history.
Pierre Delacroix (Damon Wayans) is the one black writer working for the CNS
television studio. The ratings are plummeting, so an Ebonics-talking hotshot
producer named Dunwitty (Michael Rapaport) turns to his Ivy-League educated
black stooge and demands a new urban themed show with a fresh new hook. "You
can do it, my nigga!" Dunwitty beams, "and I can call you my nigga because my
wife is black and I got two interracial babies at home."
Delacroix has cooked up dozens of ideas for sitcoms and dramas involving black
characters, all of which have been rejected as old hat. Thinking he can beat
the television industry at its own game, he comes up with the most offensive,
disgusting, horrible idea he could possibly imagine: a revival of the minstrel
show featuring black actors in blackface. His mission is to get fired
immediately, the only way to break his contract.
Well, surprise, surprise! Dunwitty claims to have a boner for the idea, so
they immediately go into production. Delacroix and his assistant, Sloan (Jada
Pinkett Smith) are suddenly in over their heads, faced with a choice to either
go with the flow and ride on the magic carpet of their success or realize the
consequences of their actions and do something to combat the blatant racism of
this program.
The premise of Spike Lee's film is undoubtedly strong, with a promising first
act that keeps the stakes very high. Immediately, however, some of the warning
signs start to show, such as his one-dimensional depiction of Delacroix, the
whitest black man on the planet, and the conflicted Sloan, whose character
changes in such radical leaps and bounds that we again realize, no matter how
well-performed the role is by Pinkett Smith, Spike Lee could not write a fully
developed woman character to save his life.
If the opening of the movie is good enough to carry us through some of its
unsubtleties, Spike Lee really hits his stride with the televised mistrel
show. Inspired by the vaudeville routines, performers "Mantan" (Savion Glover)
and "Sleep 'n' Eat" (the superb Tommy Davidson) dress in gaudy costumes, don
the white gloves and charcoal make-up, fire engine red lips, and googly eyes,
and they follow the gawky movements of stereotypical blackface characters.
No punches are pulled. We see scenes where the two goofballs sneak into the
chicken coop for some good eatin' while massah prowls outside with his
shotgun. The scene has been set in Massah's watermelon patch, where the
darkies dance their troubles away.
Purely offensive and disturbing, Spike Lee's accurate recreations of these
programs are heightened by montage footage of the actual minstrel shows of
America's past. This black and white footage haunts the present day situations
of actors Manray (Glover) and Womack (Davidson), including those painful scenes
where they sit in front of a mirror, melting cork into black paste, swabbing
their skin in cocoa butter to prevent burning and smearing red lipstick on
their mouths.
For quite a while, Bamboozled works as brilliant satire. Even if the offstage
antics of Manray, basking in his newfound fame, and Womack, bitter at his own
exploitation, feel fairly obvious as dramatic archetypes, Lee's situation is
strong enough to carry it through.
However, in the middle of the second act, Spike Lee hurls his entire movie over
the cliff with some obvious dramatic tactics. We're treated to scenes which we
knew were coming, such as the inevitable lecturing of Delacroix by his mother,
who is ashamed of him. Of course, Sloan figures into a predictable would-be
love triangle between Delacroix and Manray. (After all, what are women
characters good for?)
As with almost every film he's made, Spike Lee clutters up his movie with
distracting subplots such as obvious, pontificating potshots at the Wu-Tang
Clan, Tommy Hilfiger's clothing line, O.J. Simpson's trial, and violence in the
media.
His unforgivable last fifteen minutes feature a kidnapping, violence and
bloodshed which are as ridiculous and contrived as they are out-of-character
and so concerned with making a "point" that it betrays no less than three of
the major characters in his scenario (especially the main female character, who
sinks to a great low without any foreshadowing.)
It nearly destroys the movie, and certainly tarnishes the conclusion. Spike Lee
again comes up with seemingly five different endings while wrapping the movie
up, and is content to include each and every one of them.
That said, no other filmmaker is tackling this subject matter today. Spike Lee
may be pompous and arrogant, create one-sided arguments, and go for unsubtle
choices, but he's also a master of visual allegory, he creates vivid and
colorful dialogue, and he arouses passion in his audience. Bamboozled, for all
its numerous and frustrating flaws, is important viewing. It's a film which
says, in no uncertain terms, that there are some things we must not forget.
New Line's Platinum Series DVD release features a slew of extras, notably a
commentary track wherein Lee talks prodigiously about the film's roots --
giving credit to The Producers and Network as well he should. Substantial
deleted footage, a making-of documentary, and music videos are also included.
Recommended.
Who's on the booze?
Reviewer: Jeremiah Kipp





