Spike Lee has directed, written, produced, and acted in dozens of films
that present an expansive, nuanced, proudly opinionated, and richly
multifaceted portrait of American society. As the only African-American
filmmaker ever to establish a world-class career, Lee has paid acute
attention to the experiences of racial and ethnic minorities. But white
men and women also play important roles in his movies, and his interest
in class, race, and urban life hasn't prevented his films from ranging
over broad swaths of the American scene in stories as diverse as the
audiences who view them. His defining trait is a willingness to raise
hard questions about contemporary America without pretending to have
easy answers; his pictures are designed to challenge and provoke us, not
ease our minds or pacify our emotions. The opening words of his 1989
masterpiece Do the Right Thing present his core message in two
emphatic syllables: "Wake up!"
Spike Lee's America is a vibrant and provocative engagement not only
with the work of a great filmmaker, but also with American society and
politics.