Do the Right Thing
Spike Lee’s 1989 film Do the Right Thing takes place on the hottest day of the year in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn. Lee wanted the look of the film to “be bright … almost blinding AFROCENTRIC bright!” Carter took Lee’s direction and used the costumes to reflect the styles of the time and place, with Mookie, Tina, and Radio Raheem dressed in vibrant reds, yellows, and greens that nod to Afrocentrism and bring energy to the film.
The film addresses themes of racial tension and police violence that, unfortunately, remain relevant today. Do the Right Thing was inspired, in part, by the racially motivated death of Michael Griffith, who was hit by a car while fleeing a mob of Italian-American men, and the killing of Michael Stewart, a graffiti artist who was severely beaten while in police custody; the cause of death was disputed but was likely due to a chokehold. The final scene of Do the Right Thing shows quotations by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., advocating peaceful protest, and Malcolm X, advocating violence as self-defense, followed by a photograph of both civil rights leaders shaking hands.
Supporting Imagery
Supporting Imagery notes
Photographer Jamel Shabazz is known for his street style photographs that capture the feel of 1980s Brooklyn hip hop culture. This image, 'Young Bloods' from 1982, shows a kid playing music on a "ghetto blaster" or boombox. Long before ipods and iphones, boomboxes, were portable music devices.
Supporting Imagery
Supporting Imagery notes
1988 Magazine Advertisement for Nike Air Trainer SC featuring Bo Jackson. In the film Spike Lee wears a pair of Nike Air Trainers from the SC line, in the Medicine Ball colorway. Later the name was changed to Nike Air Trainer III.