He Got Game Movie Review
He Got Game Review
"He Got Game" Overview

Rating: R
1998
Cast and Crew
Director : Spike LeeProducer : Jon Kilik,Spike Lee
Screenwiter : Spike Lee
Starring : Denzel Washington,Ray Allen,Milla Jovovich
If Spike Lee weren't so self-absorbed, he would probably be one of the best
filmmakers around today. Instead, he gets caught up in camera tricks, mood
lighting, and abrupt editing in an apparent attempt to keep any audience so
confused trying to figure out what he is doing that they cannot become
emotionally involved in his films.
He Got Game, the latest Spike Lee joint features NBAer Ray Allen as Jesus
Shuttlesworth, the top high school basketball player in the country. As he is
pondering his future after graduation, he is surrounded by friends and family
trying to help him with his decision without really looking out for his own
best interest. Among those trying to help is his father, Jake, played by
Denzel Washington, who has been temporarily released from the state
penitentiary under orders to get Jesus to sign with the governor's alma mater.
Unlike most movies that star pro athletes, He Got Game does not fail because of
Allen's acting shortcomings. He, and the other pro basketball players featured
in the film, are surprisingly solid. Instead, the film comes up short
primarily because Lee does not allow the audience to get involved with the
characters until the last half-hour of the film. Lee's obsession with
technical gadgetry in this film represents a disturbing trend in his work.
Where in earlier films like Do the Right Thing and Malcolm X, his
unconventional camera moves and effects only seemed to come in when we least
expected them to heighten the emotion, in more recent films like Clockers and
He Got Game, Lee's effects serve to keep us at arm's length.
Despite this apparent formalism through the majority of the film, He Got Game
still contains a strong emotional power near the climax, when Lee finally lets
up on the effects. Spike Lee is definitely a talented filmmaker, but if his
next project is going to continue this trend toward formalism, I hope it's a
music video.
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Review by Bradley Null
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