Can never get enough of 'The Count of Monte Cristo' and 'Death Wish' theme movies
Spike Lee, Still Gliding to Success
‘Oldboy’ Reimagines a Korean Tale of Revenge
Hilary Bronwyn Gayle/FilmDistrict
Josh Brolin in “Oldboy,” Spike Lee’s new film about vengeance. Mr. Lee called it a “reinterpretation” of Park Chanwook’s 2003 cult classic of the same title.
By LOGAN HILL
Published: November 20, 2013
“Rage doesn’t have to fester for years, but revenge?” the director Spike Lee said, as he rapidly autographed 50 movie posters in a downtown Manhattan hotel suite. “That stuff takes time. It’s the oldest staple of films, in stories. It goes back to the Bible.”
Damon Winter/The New York Times
Spike Lee
In Mr. Lee’s new film, “Oldboy,"Josh Brolin plays Joe Doucett, an alcoholic ad man and negligent father who is imprisoned in a small, mysterious room for 20 years for no evident reason. Believing that he was framed for his wife’s murder, and that his daughter was abducted, Joe’s rage ferments until it is distilled into pure blood lust.
When Joe is finally uncorked from captivity, he is so monomaniacally bent on vengeance that his unnamed city itself seems to bend to his will. In one shot, Joe, wearing a grim black suit and a murderous scowl, literally glides through city streets, which scroll beneath him like moving sidewalks. He seems propelled toward his revenge, as if pulled by some unseen force.
Mr. Lee’s fans will immediately recognize this gliding shot as his signature double-dolly shot, a love-it-or-hate-it technique that no other director can deploy without being accused of either homage or thievery. Instead of just mounting the camera on a wheeled dolly that rolls on tracks, Mr. Lee places both actor and camera on a single mobile platform. They glide together, binding the actor to the camera, while separating the actor from the surroundings.
Choi Min-sik, far left, and Choi Jae-seob in Park Chanwook’s 2003 cult classic.
When Mr. Lee and the cinematographer Ernest dikkerson first displayed their flourish on the set of 1992’s “Mo’ Better Blues,” it was just “show-offy, student film stuff,” Mr. Lee said. In the years since, he has used the shot to capture the inexorable pull of drugs (“Summer of Sam,” “The 25th Hour”), sex (“Girl 6,""Jungle Fever”), rage (“Inside Man”) and history (“Malcolm X”). When Mr. Lee uses the shot most effectively, the movement creates a sense of propulsive inevitability: Characters like Mr. Brolin’s Joe are literally driven through scenes, unable to turn back.
Video by Richard Cruz
Spike Lee - The Dolly Shot
It is fitting, then, that the first actor Mr. Lee shot that way was himself. The double-dolly shot is not just his signature because, like him, it is brash, blunt, divisive and innovative. Its form also mirrors the bravado and unflappable determination of Mr. Lee’s unyielding career. “I knew I was going to be good before I ever went to film school,” Mr. Lee said, signing his last poster and settling into an armchair.
“Oldboy,” which opens Nov. 27, is a prototypical vengeance film, in which a man’s hardship motivates him to fearsome greatness, so Mr. Lee was asked if revenge had motivated his career.
Spike Lee, Still Gliding to Success
‘Oldboy’ Reimagines a Korean Tale of Revenge
Hilary Bronwyn Gayle/FilmDistrict
Josh Brolin in “Oldboy,” Spike Lee’s new film about vengeance. Mr. Lee called it a “reinterpretation” of Park Chanwook’s 2003 cult classic of the same title.
By LOGAN HILL
Published: November 20, 2013
“Rage doesn’t have to fester for years, but revenge?” the director Spike Lee said, as he rapidly autographed 50 movie posters in a downtown Manhattan hotel suite. “That stuff takes time. It’s the oldest staple of films, in stories. It goes back to the Bible.”
Damon Winter/The New York Times
Spike Lee
In Mr. Lee’s new film, “Oldboy,"Josh Brolin plays Joe Doucett, an alcoholic ad man and negligent father who is imprisoned in a small, mysterious room for 20 years for no evident reason. Believing that he was framed for his wife’s murder, and that his daughter was abducted, Joe’s rage ferments until it is distilled into pure blood lust.
When Joe is finally uncorked from captivity, he is so monomaniacally bent on vengeance that his unnamed city itself seems to bend to his will. In one shot, Joe, wearing a grim black suit and a murderous scowl, literally glides through city streets, which scroll beneath him like moving sidewalks. He seems propelled toward his revenge, as if pulled by some unseen force.
Mr. Lee’s fans will immediately recognize this gliding shot as his signature double-dolly shot, a love-it-or-hate-it technique that no other director can deploy without being accused of either homage or thievery. Instead of just mounting the camera on a wheeled dolly that rolls on tracks, Mr. Lee places both actor and camera on a single mobile platform. They glide together, binding the actor to the camera, while separating the actor from the surroundings.
Choi Min-sik, far left, and Choi Jae-seob in Park Chanwook’s 2003 cult classic.
When Mr. Lee and the cinematographer Ernest dikkerson first displayed their flourish on the set of 1992’s “Mo’ Better Blues,” it was just “show-offy, student film stuff,” Mr. Lee said. In the years since, he has used the shot to capture the inexorable pull of drugs (“Summer of Sam,” “The 25th Hour”), sex (“Girl 6,""Jungle Fever”), rage (“Inside Man”) and history (“Malcolm X”). When Mr. Lee uses the shot most effectively, the movement creates a sense of propulsive inevitability: Characters like Mr. Brolin’s Joe are literally driven through scenes, unable to turn back.
Video by Richard Cruz
Spike Lee - The Dolly Shot
It is fitting, then, that the first actor Mr. Lee shot that way was himself. The double-dolly shot is not just his signature because, like him, it is brash, blunt, divisive and innovative. Its form also mirrors the bravado and unflappable determination of Mr. Lee’s unyielding career. “I knew I was going to be good before I ever went to film school,” Mr. Lee said, signing his last poster and settling into an armchair.
“Oldboy,” which opens Nov. 27, is a prototypical vengeance film, in which a man’s hardship motivates him to fearsome greatness, so Mr. Lee was asked if revenge had motivated his career.
or I'm bout to ride out for the lee residence
