logo
Spike Lee on Denzel's brilliance – ‘He's Jordan' – and the sports movie he's dying to make

Spike Lee on Denzel's brilliance – ‘He's Jordan' – and the sports movie he's dying to make

Washington Post10 hours ago
In the most pivotal scene of 'He Got Game,' the 1998 Spike Lee film starring Denzel Washington and future NBA Hall of Famer Ray Allen, the script called for basketball prodigy Jesus Shuttlesworth to defeat his father, Jake, 11-0, during a one-on-one showdown.
Washington, playing the role of Jake but drawing on his own background as a baller, wasn't going to let that happen.
'Denzel said f--- that,' Lee recalled this week with a laugh. 'Forget about it. A zero doughnut?'
'I got an ego like the next man,' Washington said this week in an interview. 'He wasn't beating me like that, no.'
Knowing that he was matched up with an acting novice in Allen, Washington, who played junior varsity basketball at Fordham and grew up playing with the likes of future NBA players Gus and Ray Williams in Mount Vernon, New York, set up his movie son by telling Allen that he struggled going left. Then when Lee called action, Washington drove left on Allen and scored. And he scored again. And again.
'I got in some lucky shots,' Washington said.
A confused Allen turned to Lee and did what any basketball player masquerading as a movie star would do in that situation.
'Instead of saying, 'Cut,' he's like this,' Lee said, forming his hands like a letter 'T,' ''Timeout! Timeout! Timeout! I'm supposed to win 11-zip.''
Lee shrugged his shoulders, realizing that a better scene was unfolding before his eyes. The tension increased every time Jake got buckets. Jesus eventually shut down Jake, but Washington got a moral victory, and 'He Got Game' was elevated by a master's intuition.
'He's Jordan,' Lee said of Washington. 'Are you going to put the clamps on Jordan? If you have Jordan, you're not going to put the wraps on him. He got the green light. Everybody don't get the green light, but my brother from Money Earnin' Mount Vernon, he gets it.'
That kind of trust and respect is what has allowed Washington and Lee to team up for five films together — the most recent of which, 'Highest 2 Lowest,' opens in theaters this weekend for the first collaboration between the two in nearly two decades. The movie centers on music mogul David King, played by Washington, and the moral dilemma he faces when asked to pay a financially crippling ransom to save the life of his best friend's kidnapped son.
'It was a New York story,' said Washington. 'I said, 'This is Spike.' I trust him completely. He'll do his New York thing and I'll do what I do and I ain't got to think about what he's doing and he doesn't have to worry about what I'm doing. I made a good decision. It was like going home.'
'You know that Donny Hathaway and Roberta Flack song, 'Back Together Again'? That's what it is,' Lee said of the reunion.
'He Got Game' remains the only feature in Lee's four-decade filmography that can be classified as a sports movie. But sports iconography is as integral as the pulsating jazz scores to Lee's movies: Bernard King references and Mars Blackmon's obsession with Michael Jordan's sneakers in his breakout film 'She's Gotta Have It' (1986). Mookie wearing a Jackie Robinson jersey and Buggin Out getting upset that a white man in a Larry Bird jersey stepped on his Jordan 4s in 'Do The Right Thing' (1989). Scenes filmed at Yankee Stadium in 'Summer of Sam' (1999). Lee's passion for sports bleeds into most of his films.
'Highest 2 Lowest' continues the tradition, with former NBA star and 'He Got Game' alum Rick Fox playing a college basketball coach where the kidnapping occurs, flashes of Alexander Van Armstrong's painting of Joe Louis, and the ransom exchange taking place in the Bronx, near Yankee Stadium, where Yankees fans headed to the game holler, 'Boston sucks!'
Lee is arguably the most famous supporter of New York teams and is rarely spotted in public without some combination of a Yankees cap, orange-and-blue Knicks apparel and exclusive Jordans (possibly the Spizike edition). For this interview, he's wearing a Knicks hat and a Jordan brand T-shirt.
But in his movies, sports references go deeper than decoration. They give deep meaning to his characters and convey the tensions they encounter, often tied to the racial and cultural dynamics that permeate competition.
'It's handed down from your father,' Lee said of his love of sports. 'I was born in 1957. It was different in America. I'm of the generation where fathers took their kids to the sport events even before they could walk. My father, the late Bill Lee, great musician, loved sports. He loved New York teams. And I'm the first child, so big influence from my daddy.'
Lee has done documentaries and short films about sports heroes Jim Brown, Kobe Bryant and Mike Tyson. He produced the sports drama 'Love & Basketball.' But the sports film that he's been longing to make for nearly 20 years is 'Save Us, Joe Louis,' a biopic that examines the heavyweight champion's relationship with German rival Max Schmeling.
The two boxers met twice at Yankee Stadium: In 1936, with Schmeling knocking out the seemingly invincible Louis in the 12th round in a fight that Adolf Hitler used to support his belief in Aryan superiority, and in 1938, with the Brown Bomber destroying the Nazi propaganda with a first-round knockout. Lee has a script, co-written with Budd Schulberg, the Oscar-winning screenwriter of 'On the Waterfront.' The movie's completion would help Lee fulfill a promise he said he made at Schulberg's deathbed, in 2009.
And one of the many movies that Lee was unable to make is a Jackie Robinson biopic starring Washington — and it's a regret that runs deep. Lee grew up in Brooklyn, where the game and America were changed when Robinson integrated Major League Baseball, and the filmmaker's love for Black baseball's pioneers is so deep that he not only owns Josh Gibson's catcher's mitt but named his daughter after Negro Leagues legend Satchel Paige. Lee wrote the script in 1996, basing it on the Robinson autobiography, 'I Never Had It Made,' and conversations with Robinson's widow, Rachel. Finding funding was impossible, and it didn't help that Washington — age 42 at the time — believed he was too old to handle the physical toll of the role.
'I grabbed my knees right away,' Washington said with a laugh. 'Probably too old to slide. I got six knee surgeries that said no.'
'Sometimes your projects just don't get made,' Lee said. 'Jackie is one of my heroes. It was an epic film. I got to read that script again. I haven't read it in a while.'
Lee said he is reminded of the cultural significance of 'He Got Game' almost every time he's at his courtside seat cheering on the Knicks.
'People still want to remake it,' Lee said. 'When [players] get a chance, they're going to casually sneak over to me and say, 'Yo Spike, what about that remake? Put me in.' They don't have to mention 'He Got Game,' I know automatically what they're talking about.'
'He Got Game' might never get a sequel, but having the chance to spin the block once more with Washington in 'Highest 2 Lowest' gave Lee the chance to marvel at the actor's brilliance. In another late-night clash similar to the one-on-one battle with Jake and Jesus, Washington finds himself in a recording studio with the man responsible for the kidnapping, Yung Felon, who is portrayed by rapper A$AP Rocky. During the confrontational encounter, Washington took off on an unscripted monologue, mixing lyrics from Nas, Tupac and DMX.
'Bars,' Lee said of the exchange. 'Denzel did his thing, went into his Nas bag and broke out 'Illmatic.' A$AP Rocky went with the flow. I didn't know. Rocky didn't know. Beautiful move. Denzel flipped it and he just lifted the whole scene way up in the sky. When you lift the scene up, you're lifting the movie up, too. That's the intuition that Denzel has about it.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dillon Gabriel insists 'There's entertainers and there's competitors' remark was not swipe at Shedeur Sanders
Dillon Gabriel insists 'There's entertainers and there's competitors' remark was not swipe at Shedeur Sanders

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Dillon Gabriel insists 'There's entertainers and there's competitors' remark was not swipe at Shedeur Sanders

Dillon Gabriel appeared to throw some shade in addition to his 18 passes during his preseason debut on Saturday for the Cleveland Browns. But it wasn't directed at fellow rookie Shedeur Sanders, as many immediately speculated. After sitting out the Browns' preseason opener with a hamstring injury, Gabriel got the start versus the Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles and played respectably. He completed 13 of 18 passes, but one of them was returned for a pick 6 by Eagles rookie safety Andrew Mukuba. However, Gabriel made a remark during a televised interview that quickly raised eyebrows. Speaking on the sideline after Tyler Huntley took over at QB, he appeared to take a swipe at Sanders, with whom he's competing for a spot on the Browns' depth chart and perhaps a spot on the roster. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Asked by reporter Aditi Kinkhabwala to share his thoughts on "tuning out the noise" and not letting it interfere with his preparation, Gabriel seemingly addressed something unrelated to the question. "There's entertainers and there's competitors, and I totally understand that," Gabriel said. "But my job is to compete. And that's what I'm focused on." Interpreting that comment as a dig at Sanders could be taking the remark out of context. But the exact exchange went like this: Kinkhabwala: "You gave us some fabulous wisdom on how you tune out the noise and don't let it infiltrate yourself; will you share that with everybody at home?" Gabriel: "Yeah, it's just part of it. You know, there's entertainers and there's competitors, and I totally understand that. But my job is to compete. And that's what I'm focused on." Gabriel was asked about demonstrating leadership and talking to receivers and running backs on the sideline in the previous question. So it's possible he was continuing some thoughts on that, even though Kinkhabwala went on to another question. Another possibility was that Gabriel remembered what he heard at Oregon — perhaps head coach Dan Lanning, in particular — about facing Sanders and Colorado. Lanning infamously made a pregame locker room speech in which he told his players, "They're fighting for clicks, we're fighting for wins." However, Bo Nix was Oregon's quarterback that season. Gabriel was at Oklahoma. And the Ducks did not play the Buffaloes during his lone season at Oregon after transferring. Yet it's not difficult to imagine that Gabriel talked to his former coaches and teammates before he was preparing to compete against Colorado's outspoken QB in a competition for a roster spot. As a third-round draft pick, Gabriel's place on the roster seems more assured than Sanders, who was selected in the fifth round. Yet Sanders has received decidedly more attention from media and fans because of his drop down the NFL draft board and his self-promoting persona at Colorado that continued leading up to the draft. In his preseason debut, Sanders threw for 138 yards and completed 14 of 23 passes with two touchdowns. Gabriel's remark, especially the "entertainers" crack, didn't seem to be addressing the media, Yet he insisted otherwise when asked about it after Saturday's game, saying he was referring to the media with that. (Other NFL reporters supported that notion, faulting the league's social media channels for posting the clip out of context.) "I'm all about my team and each other," Gabriel said. Though Gabriel was actually taking a shot at the media, not Sanders, the comment will still likely be picked apart and become a topic during the upcoming week of practice. As a result, Gabriel possibly created the very noise he was asked about tuning out.

Well-traveled Liberty fall to well-rested Lynx, New York still searching for first win in season series
Well-traveled Liberty fall to well-rested Lynx, New York still searching for first win in season series

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Well-traveled Liberty fall to well-rested Lynx, New York still searching for first win in season series

The New York Liberty were playing their third road game this week. The Minnesota Lynx were playing their first game this week. And it showed Saturday — well, only at first. The Liberty scored just 12 points in the first quarter, their fewest to open a game this year, and didn't make a single 3-pointer in the frame. Three minutes into the second quarter, the Lynx boasted a 15-point advantage. That's when Sandy Brondello's injury-riddled and battle-tested New York squad rallied, eventually taking a lead that it juggled throughout the second half. But the Liberty ultimately didn't have enough in the tank to hold off the top team in the league table, a Lynx group continuing to avenge its WNBA Finals defeat and now two victories away from matching the franchise single-season wins record it set last year. After starting a mere 2-of-13 from the field, including 1-of-6 from deep, Kayla McBride dropped a 29-foot 3 with 31.9 seconds remaining to effectively seal the deal. McBride, who uncharacteristically missed four free throws, made enough to help ice an 86-80 win at the charity stripe. New York (21-13), still stuck in a scrum for the No. 2 seed in the playoffs, is now 0-3 against the Lynx this season after beating them in five games for the 2024 WNBA championship. Minnesota (28-5) improved to 17-1 at home and hasn't lost a game this month. During that stretch, the Lynx are 4-0 without the W's leading scorer in the lineup. Napheesa Collier, a top candidate for the league's MVP honor this year, was sidelined for the fourth game in a row as she continues to recover from a sprained right ankle. In her absence, fellow All-Star Courtney Williams stepped up with a season-high 26 points on 10-of-18 shooting, plus five assists. "Honestly, we down Phee," Williams told CBS in her on-court postgame interview. "So, like I always say, somebody got to give a little bit more. We all got to give a little bit more. So when I'm feeling it, it's a problem." The Liberty were missing three key pieces of their frontcourt: Nyara Sabally, Isabelle Harrison and, most importantly, two-time WNBA MVP Breanna Stewart. Stewart, currently nursing a knee injury, hasn't played since July 26. She's missed 10 consecutive games, and the Liberty are just 4-6 in that span. Despite not making a 3 in the first quarter, New York finished with 11 on the day. Five different Liberty players made a pair of triples, and they all scored in double figures. That group included Kennedy Burke and Marine Johannès, who added 11 and 12 points off the bench, respectively. Liberty center Jonquel Jones, last year's WNBA Finals MVP, led the team with 17 points and polished off a 16-0 New York run that started cutting into a double-digit, first-quarter deficit and then created a second-quarter lead. From that point forward, the Liberty and Lynx traded blows. While Williams carried an offensive load with her jumpshot, she and others consistently located Jesscia Shepard and Alanna Smith in the paint down the stretch. Those two combined for 31 points and 17 rebounds. "I think when I knock down a couple shots, that big got to step up," Williams told CBS. "And when they step up, I got my bigs that I know can finish down low." New York won't have to wait long for another chance at Minnesota. The Liberty will host the Lynx on Tuesday, the WNBA heavyweights' final regular-season matchup this year.

Seiya Suzuki hits a tiebreaking single as the Cubs edge the Pirates 3-1
Seiya Suzuki hits a tiebreaking single as the Cubs edge the Pirates 3-1

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Seiya Suzuki hits a tiebreaking single as the Cubs edge the Pirates 3-1

CHICAGO (AP) — Seiya Suzuki hit a tiebreaking single in the eighth inning, and the Chicago Cubs beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 3-1 on Saturday for a sorely needed victory. Kyle Tucker hit a leadoff single against Evan Sisk (0-1) and stole second before coming home on Suzuki's grounder into center field. Nico Hoerner tacked on a two-out RBI double following an intentional walk to Ian Happ. Chicago (69-53) had dropped four of five, including a 3-2 loss in the series opener on Friday. Cubs left-hander Shota Imanaga pitched seven innings of three-hit ball. Andrew Kittredge (3-3) got three outs before Brad Keller handled the ninth for his first save. Tommy Pham homered for Pittsburgh (52-72), which lost for the sixth time in seven games. ___ AP MLB:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store