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‘Highest 2 Lowest': Spike Lee Remakes a Kurosawa Classic
‘Highest 2 Lowest': Spike Lee Remakes a Kurosawa Classic

Epoch Times

time2 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Epoch Times

‘Highest 2 Lowest': Spike Lee Remakes a Kurosawa Classic

Halfway through, 'Highest 2 Lowest' became riveting, but overall it's sporadically entertaining, often boring, sometimes engrossing, and sometimes rather silly. R | 2h 13m | Drama, Mystery, Thriller | 2025 Successfully remaking master filmmaker Akira Kurosawa's films is always a tall order. However, the original 'Django' (a redo of 'Yojimbo') and 'The Magnificent Seven' ('Seven Samurai') show that it is possible to pull it off.

9 Spike Lee Joints to Watch (or Revisit) Now
9 Spike Lee Joints to Watch (or Revisit) Now

Vogue

time9 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Vogue

9 Spike Lee Joints to Watch (or Revisit) Now

Spike Lee is something of a Cannes legend—a festival regular who was president of the jury in 2021 and returned this year with his latest high-octane romp, Highest 2 Lowest, a reunion with long-time collaborator Denzel Washington. Ahead of its arrival in theaters this week, we revisit the boundary-pushing auteur's most impactful work to date, from the sun-soaked highs of Do the Right Thing to the devastating gut punch of Da 5 Bloods. She's Gotta Have It (1986) Lee's breakthrough came at the age of 29, with his raucous, ultra-low budget feature-length directorial debut: the zippy tale of a Brooklyn artist (Tracy Camilla Johns) struggling to choose between three lovers, which earned him Cannes's Youth Prize for young directors as well as the Independent Spirit Award for best first feature. Some three decades later, he'd adapt it into a spirited, DeWanda Wise-led Netflix series of the same name, too. Do the Right Thing (1989)

Spike Lee's new movie is much more than a Kurosawa remake
Spike Lee's new movie is much more than a Kurosawa remake

Gulf Today

time19 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Gulf Today

Spike Lee's new movie is much more than a Kurosawa remake

Decked out in a resplendent orange-and-blue-striped zoot suit symbolizing the colours of his beloved New York Knicks, Spike Lee hit the Cannes Film Festival's red carpet in May in full boogie mode. As Lee and his wife, producer Tonya Lewis Lee, huddled under an umbrella and made their way through a throng of photographers, he started dancing as speakers blasted 'Trunks,' a track from the soundtrack of his new film, 'Highest 2 Lowest,' by ASAP Rocky, who also acts in the movie. Accompanied by his superstar partner, Rihanna, exhibiting her sizable baby bump, the rapper locked eyes with Lee and the two broke out into a spontaneous shimmy. With the exception of the Knicks winning the NBA championship (they would be eliminated from the playoffs a few days later), it would be hard to imagine Lee in a more joyous spirit than the one he was in at that May 19 event. His film 'Do The Right Thing' had premiered at Cannes on the same date in 1989. It was also the 100th birthday of Malcolm X, who was portrayed by 'Highest' actor Denzel Washington in their most successful partnership, 1992's 'Malcolm X.' Though months have passed since that triumphant evening, Lee is extending his 'Highest 2 Lowest' victory lap, delighted that he and Washington, whom he calls 'America's greatest living actor,' have joined forces for a fifth time. 'I've had a love relationship with the Cannes Film Festival since 1986 — they've loved all my films that have been there,' says Lee, 68, speaking on a recent video call from his residence at Oak Bluffs in Martha's Vineyard. 'May 19, 2025, was a continuation of that. I don't think it was a mistake that the world premiere of 'Do the Right Thing' was May 19, 1989. I don't think it was a mistake that May 19, 2025, was Malcolm X's 100th birthday. 'For me, some things you just cannot explain. They just happen. And to add to that, this is the first time Denzel has ever been to Cannes with a film.' He pauses: 'It was ancestral spirits, whatever you want to call it,' adding with a mischievous cackle, 'But not voodoo!' A reimagining of Akira Kurosawa's 1963 thriller 'High and Low,' 'Highest 2 Lowest' stars Washington as a wealthy music mogul whose livelihood is threatened by a life-or-death ransom demand. (The film is Lee's first with Washington since 2006's 'Inside Man.') The idea for an updated 'High and Low' has circulated around Hollywood for several years, sparking interest from David Mamet and Chris Rock, among others. Playwright Alan Fox's New York-set script was sent to Lee by Washington, who was convinced he was the only director who could do it justice. 'He didn't have to ask me twice,' cracks Lee. Seated in front of a Kehinde Wiley painting and within reach of a 'Jaws 50th' T-shirt, Lee, who wore a Knicks cap, is relentlessly jubilant, flavoring his comments with humorous exclamations and explosive laughter while declaring 'Highest 2 Lowest' as one of the most deeply felt endeavors of his decades-long career. The passage of time since he and Washington worked together stunned them both. 'Denzel and I didn't realize that it's been 18 years since 'Inside Man,'' he says. 'We only found out when journalists told us.' 'Highest' is also his first film shot and set in New York in more than a decade. The action moves from Brooklyn to the South Bronx. A key set piece involving a subway chase (an homage to 'The French Connection' and the late Gene Hackman, Lee says) is a kinetic mash-up, switching between the pursuit, rowdy Yankee fans traveling to a day game against the 'the hated motherf—ing Boston Red Sox' and a boisterous National Puerto Rican Day celebration in the Bronx featuring Rosie Perez, Anthony Ramos and Eddie Palmieri's Salsa Orchestra. 'We were not playing around,' declares Lee, almost doubled over with glee. 'Bedlam! Mayhem! Puerto Rico is in da house! It's the Bronx, baby! The Bronx!' The new movie also reflects Lee's serious admiration for Kurosawa. His introduction to the work of the legendary Japanese filmmaker came while attending New York University's Graduate Film School: Tribune News Service

Young Scottish jazz artist to score new Spike Lee film
Young Scottish jazz artist to score new Spike Lee film

The National

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The National

Young Scottish jazz artist to score new Spike Lee film

Jazz pianist Fergus McCreadie said it was "absolutely crazy" to have contributed to the soundtrack for Spike Lee's latest film, Highest 2 Lowest, starring Denzel Washington. The 28-year-old, who grew up in Dollar in Clackmannanshire, has previously been nominated for a Mercury Prize and won the Scottish Album of the Year Award in 2022. Announcing the news, McCreadie said that Lee travelled to the Edinburgh Jazz Festival in 2024 to meet with him and the two other members which make up the Fergus McCreadie Trio, which he leads on piano. Several months later, they met again during a "ridiculous trip" to New York where they recorded Stony Gate, an original song for the film which was then transformed into an orchestral arrangement for a number of scenes. McCreadie also recorded a number of other cues for the film, with the rest of the score being put together by American composer Howard Drossin. READ MORE: 'F***ing slags': Oasis take aim at Edinburgh Council chiefs in first Murrayfield gig The poster for the film states: "Original soundtrack by Fergus McCreadie Trio". Sharing the news on social media, McCreadie said: "Been sitting on this for a long time!! Absolutely crazy to have some of my music and playing featured on the soundtrack for the new @officialspikelee film 'Highest 2 Lowest'. Spike came to Edinburgh to meet us at @edinburgh_jazz in 2024 and then we went over to NYC in November to record Stony Gate for the film, as well as a bunch of other cues for the film - what a ridiculous trip it was! "Stony Gate was transformed into an orchestral arrangement for a couple of scenes in the film - it was a real honour to see and hear the great @ work on this and on the rest of the score. Fergus McCreadie "The soundtrack comes out on Monday - pre save it at the link in bio!!" Highest 2 Lowest is a crime thriller based on Akira Kurosawa's 1963 Japanese film High and Low. READ MORE: Police Scotland 'on notice' for visit by JD Vance during UK holiday Alongside Washington, the film also stars Ilfenesh Hadera, Jeffrey Wright, ASAP Rocky and Ice Spice. The film will premiere in the US on August 15 and will be available in the UK exclusively on Apple TV from September 5. The soundtrack for Highest 2 Lowest will be available on Monday.

‘Pee-wee's Big Adventure' at 40, plus the week's best movies in L.A.
‘Pee-wee's Big Adventure' at 40, plus the week's best movies in L.A.

Los Angeles Times

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Los Angeles Times

‘Pee-wee's Big Adventure' at 40, plus the week's best movies in L.A.

Hello! I'm Mark Olsen. Welcome to another edition of your regular field guide to a world of Only Good Movies. Greg Braxton did an interview with the ever-quotable Spike Lee this week. Lee's newest film, 'Highest 2 Lowest,' starring Denzel Washington, is in theaters next week and begins streaming on Apple TV+ on Sept. 5. Lee will make an appearance at the Egyptian Theatre next Thursday for a Q&A after a screening of the film. The film is adapted from Akira Kurosawa's 'High and Low,' in which a wealthy businessman believes his son is kidnapped and must scramble to put together the ransom money. When his son is found, it turns out that actually it is the son of his driver who has been abducted. The criminals still want their ransom, creating a moral dilemma for the businessman. Lee likens the relationship between 'High and Low' and 'Highest 2 Lowest' to that between the renditions of the song 'My Favorite Things' as done by Julie Andrews in 'The Sound of Music' and performed by saxophone great John Coltrane. 'It's a reinterpretation,' he says. 'There's a history of jazz musicians doing reinterpretations of standards. We're jazz musicians in front of and behind the camera.' Likewise, audiences will bring their own feelings to how they would respond to the ethical dilemma at the center of the film. 'That is what makes the whole scenario great,' Lee continues. 'Everyone would answer that situation differently. [Toshiro] Mifune laid down the foundation. He handed the baton to Denzel and Denzel took it, and did not miss a motherf—ing stride. You know like those brothers in the Olympics? We don't drop the baton.' The new film marks the fifth collaboration between Lee and Washington, a collaboration that also includes 'Mo' Better Blues,' 'Malcolm X,' 'He Got Game' and 'Inside Man.' Lee hopes it won't be the last. Even at 68, the director maintains an enthusiasm and focus for his work and the future. 'I'm just getting started,' he says. 'As an individual and an artist, when you're doing what you love, you win. I don't see the finish line, the tape.' 'Highest 2 Lowest' also features a performance by Latin jazz great Eddie Palmieri, who died this week at age 88. On Saturday the Academy Museum will present a 40th anniversary screening of Tim Burton's 'Pee-wee's Big Adventure,' which finds Paul Reubens' signature character on an epic quest to recover his beloved bicycle. As part of the evening's program, the actual prop bicycle will be presented to the museum on behalf of Reubens' estate. The debut feature of director Tim Burton — who has recently found new success with the series 'Wednesday' — 'Pee-wee's Big Adventure' is an endlessly surprising and delightful film, one in which absolutely anything seems possible. In his original review of the film, Michael Wilmington drew comparisons to Peter Lorre and Soupy Sales in attempting to describe the particular appeal of Reubens' petulant, perennially childlike character. 'That's what makes the character work: this sense of absolute, crazed conviction. And it makes the movie work as well — for its own audience,' Wilmington said. 'Be forewarned: This film is not for anyone whose taste in humor runs only to silky Oscar Wildean epigrams or naturalistic comedies of the 'Tootsie' school. The wrong crowd will find these antics infantile and offensive. The right one will have a howling good time.' The recent documentary 'Pee-wee as Himself,' Matt Wolf's startlingly intimate documentary on Reubens, includes recordings made just a few days before his 2023 death and is currently nominated for five Emmy awards. The film explores Reubens' life and how the explosive popularity of the Pee-wee character came to overwhelm him. 'We're all entitled to our inner lives,' Wolf said in an interview for the paper with Dave Itzkoff. 'Artists, particularly, are many different people inside. Paul was no exception, except the way he went about that was more extreme than perhaps you or I.' Alfonso Cuarón's 2006 'Children of Men,' will screen at the Academy Museum in 35mm on Wednesday. (Frankly, the movie does not play out nearly often enough.) As part of the museum's ongoing Branch Selects program, 'Children of Men' was selected by the cinematographers branch in recognition of the work by Emmanuel Lubezki, whose work here is staggering for how often it hides the difficulty of what is being accomplished, creating a sense of naturalism amid complicated technical achievements. Set in 2027 Britain, the film presents a frightening scenario in which no child has been born on Earth for 18 years. Theo (Clive Owen) is a former activist-turned-disillusioned bureaucrat resigned to a staid hopelessness. An encounter with his former lover Julian (Julianne Moore), who has become even more of a militant, leads him to shepherding a young woman named Kee (Clare-Hope Ashitey) to safety. She is well along in a secret pregnancy that could literally save the world. In reviewing the film, Kenneth Turan wrote, 'The best science fiction talks about the future to talk about the now, and 'Children of Men' very much belongs in that class. Made with palpable energy, intensity and excitement, it compellingly creates a world gone mad that is uncomfortably close to the one we live in. It is a 'Blade Runner' for the 21st century, a worthy successor to that epic of dystopian decay. … This is a world of rubble, fear and hopelessness whose connections to our own are never forced; Cuarón is such a fluid director with such a powerful imagination, they don't have to be. This could well be our future, and we know it.' Kevin Crust wrote a piece spotlighting the use of sound and music in the film, noting, 'After a provocative ending that keeps audiences in their seats for the credits, 'Children of Men' continues to reward aurally, finishing strongly with two politically pointed songs. Leaving us with Lennon singing the anti-nationalist rant 'Bring on the Lucie (Freda Peeple)' and Jarvis Cocker declaiming global society's ills with an unprintable refrain in 'Running the World,' Cuarón emphasizes the timelessness of this future-set film and stamps it with a humanistic double exclamation point.' 'The Heartbreak Kid' is back again We have mentioned Elaine May's 1972 'The Heartbreak Kid' in these parts before, but any time it screens is worth mentioning. The Eastwood Performing Arts Center will be screening the film Friday and Saturday from the 2K scan of a 16mm print overseen by film historian and programmer Elizabeth Purchell. (I spoke to Purchell about creating the scan last year.) Cybill Shepherd, one of the film's stars, will be there to introduce the Friday night show. Long notoriously difficult to see because of rights issues, the film is back in regular rep-house rotation thanks to this new scan — a true treat for local audiences. Seeing the film with a roomful of people laughing along is an experience not to be missed. Directed by May from a screenplay by Neil Simon, the film stars Charles Grodin as a man who deserts his new bride (Jeannie Berlin) on their honeymoon so he can pursue another woman (Shepherd). In a review at the time, Charles Champlin wrote, 'We are in the presence of a harsh social commentary, revealing again the dark side of Simon's humor as well as some of Miss May's own angers (reflected in her first feature 'A New Leaf') about the men having it their own way, to everyone's discomfort.' 'Bully' and 'Another Day in Paradise' Though photographer-turned-filmmaker Larry Clark is now largely known for his 1995 debut feature 'Kids,' he did go on to make other films. The New Beverly Cinema will spotlight two of his best with 2001's 'Bully' and 1998's 'Another Day in Paradise' as a double bill Monday and Tuesday. 'Bully' is based on the 1993 true story of a group of South Florida teens who murdered someone in their own circle of friends. Graphic, sweaty and sleazy, the film has an emotional and psychological intensity that makes it deeply disturbing. The cast includes Brad Renfro, Nick Stahl, Bijou Phillips, Rachel Minor, Kelli Garner, Michael Pitt, Daniel Franzese and Leo Fitzpatrick. In a review of the film, Kevin Thomas compares 'Bully' to 'Over the Edge' and 'River's Edge' for its study of disaffected youth, noting, 'Clark presents virtually all the young people in his film as doomed by clueless parents, a boring, arid environment saturated with images of violence and their own limited intelligence. Yet Clark so undeniably cares for these kids, illuminating their out-of-control rage and passions with such clarity, that it's hard to dismiss him as a mere sexploitation filmmaker.' Clark's second feature, 'Another Day in Paradise,' is still arguably his most conventional film, something of a post-Tarantino riff on 'Drugstore Cowboy' as a young drug-addicted couple (Vincent Kartheiser and Natasha Gregson Wagner) fall under the tutelage of an older drug-addicted couple (James Woods and Melanie Griffith) who introduce them to a life of petty crime. In a review, Thomas said, ''Another Day in Paradise' is as mercurial and reckless in tone as are its junkie characters, and Clark catches all these quicksilver shifts with unstinting perception and even compassion. As contradictory as it is energetic, the film takes as many risks as its people do and as a result strikes a highly contemporary nerve.' A riveting and shockingly candid feature by Richard Natale chronicled the behind-the-scenes struggles between Clark, actor Woods (also a producer) and co-producer and co-writer Stephen Chin over final cut of the movie. Things reached a head on the evening of the film's world premiere at the Venice Film Festival, leading to this most unusual quote from Chin: 'The Larry Clark that punched me out in Venice is not the Larry Clark I know as a friend.' For his part, Clark, who checked himself into rehab soon after that incident, said the attack came after a day in which he did 'about 40 interviews and had about 60 margaritas. I was out of control. I have no defense. My motto is to never plead guilty. But in this case, I plead guilty.'

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