{"id":75,"date":"2007-10-01T00:15:24","date_gmt":"2007-10-01T05:15:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/?p=75"},"modified":"2021-08-26T09:22:22","modified_gmt":"2021-08-26T14:22:22","slug":"spike-lee-shes-gotta-have-it","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/2007\/10\/01\/spike-lee-shes-gotta-have-it\/","title":{"rendered":"Spike Lee: She&#8217;s Gotta Have It"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Following on the success of <em>Stranger Than Paradise<\/em>, <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> (1986) provided American independent filmmaking with even greater momentum, adding to the consensus that a bonafide movement had begun. Like Jarmusch, Brooklyn-based Spike Lee was a NYU film-school grad, whose 60-minute thesis film, <em>Joe\u2019s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut <\/em>Heads (1983), won a Student Academy Award. It also managed to achieve some degree of success within independent film circles as the first student film ever selected for the cutting-edge New Directors\/New Films series, and also did well on the international festival circuit. After running into financing problems on a second feature,\u00a0Spike Lee shot <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> on a deferred budget of $175,000, with the domestic rights being picked up by Island Pictures for over twice that amount. Despite receiving mixed critical reviews in the white press, <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> struck a responsive chord with popular audiences, especially black movie-goers, resulting in a domestic gross of over $7 million dollars. In the process, Spike Lee himself became a major cultural icon, taking a giant first step toward becoming the most successful African-American filmmaker in history.<\/p>\n<p>Spike Lee\u2019s<em> She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> takes black female sexuality as its subject in telling the story of Nola Darling, a sexually-active, young African-American woman with multiple sex partners. Using the interview format derived from the tradition of direct cinema, the film manages to create a hybrid form of documentary and dramatic elements through use of a somewhat didactic and unusual essay-like structure in order to interrogate Nola, her three lovers, and the film\u2019s other characters. <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> also incorporates an eclectic medley of more free-form, experimental techniques: mixing black-and-white and color film stocks, fast and slow motion, a montage of still photographs, a couple of musical interludes, and a choreographed dance number.<\/p>\n<p>In one of his early diary entries that accompanies the published screenplay for <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em>, Spike Lee discusses the original idea for the film:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;It\u2019s always amazed me how men can go out and bone any and everything between fifteen and eighty and it\u2019s OK. They are encouraged to have and enjoy sex, while it\u2019s not so for women. If they do what men do they\u2019re labeled whore, prostitute, nympho, etc. Why this double standard? Why not explore this? Have a character, a beautiful young black woman who loves sex, and can love more than one man at a time also. So, that\u2019s the basic outline-premise.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>In choosing to explore this sexual double-standard within the context of the black community, Lee underscored the fact that only an African-American filmmaker could possibly tackle such loaded subject matter \u2013 black sexuality \u2013 even if he had his own gender issues. The brash &#8220;in your face&#8221; aspect of <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> proved to be a brilliant strategic move because it demonstrated so clearly the incredible lack of diversity that existed in mainstream American cinema. Not only did <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> deal with important and controversial subject matter, but it managed to present it in a refreshingly original and highly comedic way.<\/p>\n<p>In <em>Alternative Scriptwriting: Writing Beyond the Rules<\/em> (there\u2019s now a fourth edition with a different subtitle), one of the few non-Hollywood manuals, Ken Dancyger and Jeff Rush cite <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> as an alternative model to a variant of the Aristotelian three-act structure they term the &#8220;restorative three-act structure.&#8221; As they explain:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;A more specific variant of three-act form, derived from the well-made play developed by the French playwright Eugene Scribe in the 1820s, has become the dominant model for mainstream films. Characterized by a clear and logical denouement, this conservative model of storytelling was the most popular dramatic form of the newly dominant French and English middle class that emerged in the &#8220;safe&#8221; Europe after the Napoleonic wars.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Using <em>She&#8217;s Gotta Have It<\/em>\u00a0as one of their examples of more open-ended &#8220;counter-structures,&#8221; Dancyger and Rush argue that the film has &#8220;an ironic two-act structure.&#8221; The authors claim that it has no first turning point and that &#8220;its flashback structure discourages a linear, three-act reading&#8221; because the action has been predetermined and the audience does not actually participate in Nola\u2019s decision to have additional lovers other than Jamie. Yet a flashback structure does not in and of itself negate the possibility of a three-act structure.<\/p>\n<p>Dancyger and Rush, however, concede that <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> has a second turning point:<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;<em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> does have something akin to an act break. After Jamie leaves her, Nola decides to drop her other two lovers and go back to him. However, because we have not been involved in Nola\u2019s initial decision to have three lovers and are not positioned to see the taking of the three lovers as a first-act mistake, we do not feel this break serves as a consequence of some earlier misdirection. We have no sense of her coming back into sync with us as we would with a traditional second-act break. Rather, we stand outside and watch, wondering what she is going to do without being able to prejudge her actions.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Although Dancyger and Rush are certainly right that Nola\u2019s decision to have three lovers is not part of the first act set-up, there is an alternative way of segmenting the acts. The difficulty stems from the fact that Nola never really changes in the course of the film. She is the same person at the end as she was in the beginning, which is why Dancyger and Rush argue that the events in the film have already been predetermined. In this sense, Nola is more of a passive rather than active protagonist because she continues to act the same way throughout. But whereas Nola\u2019s character remains the same, other characters, most notably Jamie, undergo changes as a result of their interactions with her.<\/p>\n<p>The first crisis in the film is triggered by Jamie. It is not about Mars \u2013 or Greer, whom we haven\u2019t as yet met \u2013 but about Opal. In comparison to his response to Mars, Jamie seems completely threatened by the possibility of Nola having a female lover. He is openly hostile to Opal and basically gets rid of her, which functions as the first turning point. Once Opal is out of the way, the second act deals with the complications Nola faces in having three male lovers. The second turning point is much clearer. It involves a crisis precipitated by Jamie when he announces he\u2019s also having an affair and gives Nola an ultimatum. It is also noteworthy that the turning points stem from Jamie\u2019s actions rather than Nola\u2019s.<\/p>\n<p>The first turning point occurs on page 22 of the screenplay, while the second appears on page 59. Thus, the first act is 22 pages long, the second 37, and the third 25. A look at the printed script indicates that this is the exact structure Spike Lee had in mind when he wrote <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> because the screenplay is clearly divided into Beginning, Middle, and End, and those written headings are included in the script. Lee\u2019s journal entry also attests to the fact that this was the intended structure. The film timings of <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> do not deviate very much from the screenplay. The first turning point occurs at 21 minutes, and the second one at roughly 60 minutes. The 80-minute film divides into a first act of 21 minutes, a second act of 38 minutes, and a third act of 19 minutes.<\/p>\n<p>Dramatic feature films that have two-act and one-act structures are actually rare exceptions in American commercial cinema. The major formal innovation of Spike Lee\u2019s debut feature is not really its structure, which I believe contains three acts rather than two, but Lee\u2019s attempt to interrogate the notion a single unified point of view. The narrative employs the documentary-like technique of direct interviews not only with the protagonist, Nola Darling, but with the various other characters \u2013 Jamie, Mars, Greer, Opal, and Clorinda \u2013 who provide their own counter-perspectives on her behavior. All the characters attempt to engage the viewer in the narrative through means of direct address. Nola\u2019s views about her own sexuality contrast with those of her male suitors, who all seek to make her their own. At the center of contention is Nola\u2019s determined refusal to limit herself to a single man.<\/p>\n<p>Although Jamie Overstreet remains Nola\u2019s major romantic interest \u2013 representing the embodiment of romantic love and stable family life \u2013 she also maintains relationships with the witty Mars (Spike Lee), and good-looking male model, Greer. These two men are a study in contrasts. Mars exhibits the strongest cultural identification with African-American culture, while Greer is a narcissistic buppie, whose pretensions seem to be derived completely from the white world. While Mars has the ability to make her laugh, Greer represents pure physical attraction. There are class divisions between them as well. As the unemployed Mars puts it at the Thanksgiving dinner: &#8220;Fifty-dollar sneakers and I gots no job. Tell me how to do it when times get hard.&#8221; Greer, on the other hand, has the fancy convertible and high-profile career. He lumps both Mars and Jamie together by calling them &#8220;ignorant, low-class, ghetto Negroes,&#8221; while Mars refers to Greer at one point as a &#8220;pseudo-black man.&#8221; The men continually insult one another to Nola. Mars is especially merciless in his putdown of his competitors, referring to them as &#8220;two Joe Neckbones&#8221; and Jamie as having &#8220;a sixteen-piece Chicken McNugget head.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Nola\u2019s promiscuity elicits condemnation from all three of her male suitors. Mars calls her a freak. He states his position when we first meet him: &#8220;Look, all men want freaks. We just don\u2019t want \u2019em for a wife.&#8221; Nola criticizes men for not being in touch with their feelings. &#8220;In my experiences,&#8221; she says, &#8220;I\u2019ve found two types of men: the decent ones and the dogs.&#8221; We then get typical and satirical come-ons from the dogs, including the last one who tells her: &#8220;Girl, I got plenty of what you need. Ten throbbing inches of USDA, government inspected, prime-cut, grade-A tube steak!&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>While Nola believes Jamie to be an exception to these men, Jamie turns out to be more threatened by Nola\u2019s lesbian friend, Opal. He assumes because Nola won\u2019t commit solely to him that she must secretly be one herself. While Jamie tolerates her other male lovers, he reacts most strongly to Opal. The other two, Mars and Greer, have different takes on Nola. Mars theorizes that Nola has problems with her father. Greer insists she must be a sex addict in need of professional help. We see Nola rebuff Opal\u2019s sexual advances; we also interview her father, Sonny, who speaks lovingly of her, as well as a sex therapist, Dr. Jamison, who assures us that Nola has a healthy sexuality. Interestingly, Jamie turns on Nola eventually by having an affair with the dancer and then forcibly having sex with her when she calls him one night. In the film\u2019s most controversial scene, Jamie demands that Nola admit that he owns her vagina. Nola\u2019s dream indicates that she is not completely guilt-free. In it, the girlfriends of the three men give the litany of excuses that deflect the blame from their men onto Nola.<\/p>\n<p>Despite the fact that the story centers on Nola, Mars Blackmon manages to breathe the most life into this film through his considerable sense of humor. Although Mars is only a minor romance character, he provides much-needed comic relief at various points in the story, whether it is to put Nola\u2019s undies over his head while pretending to be a super hero, or to use verbal repetitions over and over. It is also Mars who continually infuses the film with a sense of the black vernacular. He tells Nola, &#8220;You know, if I can make a babe laugh, I\u2019m over like a fat rat. And when they stop laughing, I book.&#8221; He also provides references to black politics, culture and sports. He even works his passion for the Knicks into the story. As Mars discusses with Jamie the time Nola caused him to miss the first half of a Knicks and Celtics game in which Bernard King scored thirty-five points, Jamie remarks, &#8220;Larry Bird is the best player in the NBA.&#8221; Mars responds, &#8220;He\u2019s the ugliest motherfucker in the NBA. That\u2019s what he is.&#8221; Mars\u2019s dialogue exhibits the inherent creativity of the black idiom. Despite his low economic status, Mars embodies the vitality of African-American culture itself, which is why Spike Lee played such a prominent role in the highly successful advertising campaign for <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em>, exhorting preview audiences to see the film so he wouldn\u2019t have to return to selling tube socks on the street.<\/p>\n<p>If Mars is the secret life force in the film, so is the place where the story is filmed. Lee is self-deprecating about both Mars and his home town of Brooklyn, but <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> exults in a strident regionalism equal to that of Richard Linklater\u2019s setting of Austin for <em>Slacker<\/em>, or that of Minnesota for the Coen brothers\u2019 <em>Fargo<\/em>. A sense of place supplies energy and vitality to the home-grown visions of many independent films, and<em> She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> is no exception. Hidden beneath the self-effacing urban facade of <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It<\/em> is a love poem to the sprawling, working-class borough that has always taken a subordinate role to the sophistication associated with Manhattan. The film begins with a nostalgic photo-montage of Williamsburg, and at various points we view shots of Fulton Street, Fort Greene Park, and the Brooklyn Bridge. When Nola breaks up with him at the end, Greer equates Manhattan with drive and ambition, which he finds utterly lacking in Nola. He tells her angrily, &#8220;So keep your tired ass here in Brooklyn.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Looking back, Spike Lee\u2019s <em>She\u2019s Gotta Have It <\/em>turned out to be the right film at the right time. Its unexpected commercial success managed to open doors for other subsequent independent-minded writers and directors interested in exploring racially and ethnically diverse subject matter ignored by mainstream cinema. For this reason, it seems incomprehensible that such a landmark classic has virtually disappeared by remaining currently unavailable on DVD in this country. The unfortunate effect of this has been to create another gaping hole in the history of American independent cinema.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Following on the success of Stranger Than Paradise, She\u2019s Gotta Have It (1986) provided American independent filmmaking with even greater momentum, adding to the consensus that a bonafide movement had begun. Like Jarmusch, Brooklyn-based Spike Lee was a NYU film-school<a class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/2007\/10\/01\/spike-lee-shes-gotta-have-it\/\">Read More<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":74,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"cybocfi_hide_featured_image":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[8,9],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/75"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=75"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/75\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":4275,"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/75\/revisions\/4275"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/74"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=75"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=75"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.jjmurphyfilm.com\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=75"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}