Spike Lee quotes:

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  • I had a great education. From kindergarten to John Dewey High School in Coney Island, I am public-school educated.

  • The truth is I've been doing Kickstarter before there was Kickstarter; there was no Internet. Social Media was writing letters, making phone calls, beating the bushes.

  • I'd like to state that Spike Lee is not saying that African American culture is just for black people alone to enjoy and cherish. Culture is for everybody.

  • I don't get tripped up in technology. I use technology as a tool. 'Oldboy' we shot Two Pro 35mm. For 'Da Blood of Jesus,' we shot digitally. We shot the new Sony F55. It's a 4K camera.

  • I always give the example, if you turn on the radio today, black radio, Lenny Kravitz is not black. Bob Marley wasn't black: in the beginning, only white college stations played Bob Marley.

  • I used the principles of Kickstarter to make 'She's Gotta Have It.' We filmed that in 1985 to 1986. The final cost was $175,000. I didn't have that money. It was friends, grants, donations. We saved our bottles for the nickel deposit.

  • 25th Hour,' like a lot of my films, takes place in New York City. I've been very fortunate to make films in the city that I live. I mean, it's great going home at night instead of being on location.

  • I didn't dream about being a director. I didn't know I wanted to do something with film until the summer between my sophomore and junior years at Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia.

  • Any time you talk about the look of the film, it's not just the director and the director of photography. You have to include the costume designer and the production designer.

  • I'm very careful about how I portray violence in my films. I do believe that violence, especially violent video games, are not a good thing for young kids.

  • It comes down to this: black people were stripped of our identities when we were brought here, and it's been a quest since then to define who we are.

  • I live in New York City, the stories of my films take place in New York; I'm a New York filmmaker.

  • I'm riding my man Obama. I think he's a visionary. Actually, Barack told me the first date he took Michelle to was 'Do the Right Thing.' I said, Thank God I made it. Otherwise you would have taken her to 'Soul Man.' Michelle would have been like 'What's wrong with this brother?'

  • If we became students of Malcolm X, we would not have young black men out there killing each other like they're killing each other now. Young black men would not be impregnating young black women at the rate going on now. We'd not have the drugs we have now, or the alcoholism.

  • I think that anyone who lives in New York, who's lived here, who's spent any time here, knows that it's basically a love-hate relationship, you might say. Even though I still think it's the greatest city in the world and I wouldn't live anywhere else, there're still things about it one doesn't like. The love far outweighs the negative.

  • For me, I believe in God, God is real.

  • Don't think that because you haven't heard from me for a while that I went to sleep. I am still here, like a spirit roaming the night. Thirsty, hungry, seldom stopping to rest.

  • All directors are storytellers, so the motivation was to tell the story I wanted to tell. That's what I love.

  • And one thing Hollywood does well is sequels.

  • Do the Right Thing' was my first union film. I looked at the rosters, and for the most part, it was white males. Especially the Teamsters. So we had some conversations.

  • A spine to my films that's become more evident to me is that many are about the choices people make, and the reverberations of those choices. You go this way, or that way, and either way, there's going to be consequences.

  • I am a hybrid. I do independent films and also do Hollywood films - I love them both.

  • I think that every minority in the United States of America knows everything about the dominant culture. From the time you can think, you are bombarded with images from TV, film, magazines, newspapers.

  • Violence is a part of America. I don't want to single out rap music. Let's be honest. America's the most violent country in the history of the world, that's just the way it is. We're all affected by it.

  • I'm just trying to tell a good story and make thought-provoking, entertaining films. I just try and draw upon the great culture we have as a people, from music, novels, the streets.

  • She's Gotta Have It' was shot in twelve days and two six-day weeks.

  • Since the days of slavery, if you were a good singer or dancer, it was your job to perform for the master after dinner.

  • First of all, what in this world does not revolve around money? But money is a big part of film, unlike a lot of other art forms.

  • I'm blessed, I can afford to send my children to private school.

  • People think I'm this angry black man walking around in a constant state of rage.

  • I've been blessed with the opportunity to express the views of black people who otherwise don't have access to power and the media. I have to take advantage of that while I'm still bankable.

  • I tend to favour films that have multiple plot and story lines, multiple characters and ensemble pieces.

  • I am very fortunate I can send my kids to private school, but everybody does not have the money. If you cannot get your kid in a good school today, your kids are going to be behind the eight ball.

  • I like to work with the same people when I can, and you want to get people with the same interests that you have, and the same aesthetic.

  • There's a lot of Americans, black and white, who think that we've arrived where we need to be and nothing else needs to be done and affirmative action needs to be dismantled.

  • There's an unwritten law that you cannot have a Jewish character in a film who isn't 100 percent perfect, or you're labeled anti-Semitic.

  • I don't see any negativity with what Brad Pitt is doing with his Make It Right Foundation, or what Sean Penn is trying to do in Haiti.

  • Music is, for me, a great tool of a filmmaker, the same way cinematography, the acting, editing, post-production, the costumes are. You know, to help you tell a story.

  • My grandmother lived to be 100 years old. Her grandmother was a slave, yet she was a college graduate in the Spellman class of 1917. She taught art for 50 years and she saved her Social Security checks for her children's education.

  • My cousin Malcolm Lee is also a filmmaker.

  • We grew up in a very creative environment and were exposed to the arts at a very young age, so it's not a surprise that all of us are in some form of the arts.

  • You gotta make your own way. You gotta find a way. You gotta get it done. It's hard. It's tough. That's what I tell my students every day in class. I've been very fortunate. Some people might call me a hardhead, but I'm not going to let other people dictate to me who I should be or the stories I should tell. That doesn't register with me.

  • I give interracial couples a look. Daggers. They get uncomfortable when they see me on the street.

  • I respect the audience's intelligence a lot, and that's why I don't try to go for the lowest common denominator.

  • As we move toward the millennium, the year 2000, the most powerful nations are not those that have nuclear bombs, but those that control the media. That's where the battle is being fought; that is how you control people's minds.

  • I knew I was never going to play professional sport, but I loved playing and I went to all the games I could afford to.

  • When I went to school, you had to take art, you had to play an instrument. You had to play an instrument. But it's all degraded since then. I do not know what kind of nation we are that is cutting art, music, and gym out of the public-school curriculum.

  • I don't like to use the word 'remake', I think reinterpretation is a better word. It's just a matter of respecting the source, and then trying to make your own film, and trying not to be inhibited by being so beholden to every single thing... We respect the source, but we make changes to it.

  • I think the best actors in the world are here in New York City. And this city is just so vibrant the energy is just phenomenal. Great crews here. All the technicians, all the artists that work in this industry. I've just been very happy with the body that we've been able to do, especially those films we shot here in New York City.

  • I don't dictate, you don't dictate to Stevie Wonder, not successfully.

  • American slavery was not a Sergio Leone Spaghetti Western. It was a holocaust. My ancestors are slaves. Stolen from Africa. I will honor them.

  • You have to do the research. If you don't know about something, then you ask the right people who do.

  • Sex and racism have always been tied together. Look at the thousands of black men who got lynched and castrated. The reason the Klan came into being was to protect white southern women.

  • I'll be vilified if I shoot a film in Toronto for New York. And rightfully so!

  • I think it would be very boring dramatically to have a film where everybody was a lawyer or doctor and had no faults. To me, the most important thing is to be truthful.

  • A lot of times, we censor ourselves before the censor even gets there.

  • 'Red Hook Summer' is another chapter in my chronicles of Brooklyn.

  • Making films has got to be one of the hardest endeavors known to humankind.

  • She's Gotta Have It' and 'School Daze,' I really didn't know what I was doing. And the biggest indicator of that was the acting. 'Do the Right Thing' was like the first film where I really felt comfortable working with actors.

  • People sometimes forget all the films that we've done. They remember the likes of 'Malcolm X' and 'Do the Right Thing.' But I've been working since 1986. From the beginning, I was determined to not just be a flash in the pan. I've got to keep up with Woody Allen. He's lapping me.

  • Mike Tyson is the most complex person I've ever met in my life. I've known Mike since 1986. We're both from Brooklyn. I didn't know him growing up, but once he became heavyweight champion, I knew him then.

  • People of color have a constant frustration of not being represented, or being misrepresented, and these images go around the world.

  • I think my work shows that I love women. I understand where these types of criticisms are coming from because black people have been so dogged out in the media, they're just extra sensitive.

  • I think people who have faults are a lot more interesting than people who are perfect.

  • It has been my observation that parents kill more dreams than anybody.

  • I get offered to do stuff where the money's nice but it's not something I want to do - I get offered a lot of commercials too.

  • '25th Hour,' like a lot of my films, takes place in New York City. I've been very fortunate to make films in the city that I live. I mean, it's great going home at night instead of being on location.

  • A lot of times you get credit for stuff in your movies you didn't intend to be there.

  • A woman who is very secure in herself, what she's about, what she wants to do, who probably figures that she's a prize catch-sooner or later he's going to come around.

  • America doesn't have the moral right to tell other people what to do. To say the whole world has to fall into line is you-know-what. I hope more people will rise up.

  • Amongst black people, you have always heard it said that once a black man reaches a certain level, especially if you are an entertainer, you get a white trophy woman. I didn't make that up.

  • Any film I do is not going to change the way black women have been portrayed, or black people have been portrayed, in cinema since the days of D.W. Griffith.

  • As a people we do not need anyone else's stamp of approval.

  • As a writer I want everybody to get a chance to voice their opinions. If each character thinks that they're telling the truth, then it's valid. Then at the end of the film, I leave it up to the audience to decide who did the right thing.

  • Because many advances have happened, we've lost the urgency (and that's just human nature) that we had before, when we couldn't vote, couldn't use mass transportation, or drink from the fountains.

  • Cause mo better makes it mo better.

  • Critics like to build you up, tear you down, and then, if you're lucky, build you up again.

  • 'Do the Right Thing' was like the first film where I really felt comfortable working with actors.

  • Everything I do is always scrutinised. But that's all I'll say about that.

  • Fight the power that be. Fight the power.

  • He revolutionized music videos. Before Michael Jackson, MTV refused to play African-American artists.

  • I ain't Martin Luther King. I don't need a dream. I have a plan.

  • I am trying to stay away from this position of me "returning to my roots." As if my roots are that I'm only comfortable working on low-budget, small films. That's not the case at all.

  • I believe in destiny. But I also believe that you can't just sit back and let destiny happen. A lot of times, an opportunity might fall into your lap, but you have to be ready for that opportunity. You can't sit there waiting on it. A lot of times you are going to have to get out there and make it happen.

  • I collect names for characters. Names are valuable; they can be your first source of insight into a character.

  • I consider Madonna a friend, and she sure knows how to work the publicity machine. Of course, I don't have breasts. If I did have, I'd be in the number one spot over Madonna.

  • I decided to be a filmmaker between my sophomore and junior years at Morehouse. Before I left for the summer of 1977, my advisor told me I really had to declare a major when I came back, because I'd used all my electives in my first two years. I went back to New York and I couldn't find a job. There were none to be had. And that previous Christmas someone gave me a Super-8 camera, so I just started to shoot stuff.

  • I didn't dream about being a director. I didn't know I wanted to do something with film until the summer between my sophomore and junior years at Morris College in Atlanta, Georgia.

  • I don't like acting; not in front of the camera.

  • I don't really analyze my stuff when I write. I write about stuff that I'm interested in, that I'm feeling at that particular time. When I stand back and look at the complete work, I might see themes that run through the whole film, but I'm not really conscious of it when I'm doing it.

  • I don't think I'm a total pessimist, so I think you can find hope in all my films.

  • I don't think my films are going to get rid of racism or prejudice. I think the best thing my films can do is provoke discussion.

  • I don't think racism can be eliminated in my lifetime ... or my children's or grandchildren's. But I think it's something we have to strive for. I'm going to keep working toward that day coming.

  • I like people to look like they're floating.

  • I may have been born yesterday, but I stayed up all night.

  • I miss my brother. Prince was a funny cat. Great sence of humor.

  • I never understood the concept of showing everything in the trailer. Why go to a movie if there's no surprise? I can't do it like that.

  • I really don't deal with hypotheticals.

  • I think black people have to be in control of their own image because film is a powerful medium. We can't just sit back and let other people define our existence.

  • I think if people looked at my body of work, they'd see a great breadth of work.

  • I think it is very important that films make people look at what they've forgotten.

  • I think there's a lot of hope in my work. I don't think I'm a total pessimist, so I think you can find hope in all my films. Some more than others, but there's definitely... I think we want to convey the feeling of hope with the montage at the end.

  • I want to tell stories, I don't really try to get boxed in by a specific genre.

  • I wouldn't be doing motherfu**ing films for almost three decades if every time I did something that someone didn't like I went in a fu**ing cocoon and just hid there and didn't make my art.

  • If people go to IMDB, they will see that I'm very comfortable with independent cinema, and doing studio films too. For me this is not an either/or situation.

  • If you can't take a hit, you're not going to last long, that's for sure.

  • If you have a talented family, you should be shot if you don't use them.

  • I'm a storyteller, and there's some genres I like. I don't think I'm ever going to do science fiction, but I want to do a musical one day. I want to tell stories, I don't really try to get boxed in by a specific genre.

  • I'm always open to new, innovative stuff and people trying to do stuff in a different way. I knew that the theatrical release would be like getting on the launch pad for Amazon Prime but I was okay with that because I think what Jeff Bezos and Ted Hope are doing is innovative.

  • I'm always open. I try not to have a closed mind. In fact the only reason why I'm able to continue to make films since 1986 is I have been adaptable. If I weren't flexible I sure wouldn't be making films this many years as I've been doing it. I've been making a film a year almost since 1986 and that's hard. That ain't easy.

  • I'm an independent filmmaker with complete creative control of my films. I hire who I want. I have final cut. But at the same time, I go directly to Hollywood for financing and distribution. I find it's best for me to work within the Hollywood system.

  • I'm not the go-to guy. Everybody is trying to tell their story and have different ways of telling it.

  • I'm surprised that Hollywood and networks have not been diverse as other industries.

  • It gets dangerous when you start allowing people to validate your work...

  • It is really important that young people find something that they want to do and pursue it with passion. I'm very passionate about filmmaking. It's what I love to do.

  • I've always tried to - when I've been able to - support young artists, no matter what medium.

  • I've got "Sometimers." Sometimes I remember and sometimes I forget.

  • I've never seen black men with fine white women. They be ugly. Mugly dogs.

  • Most human beings will not stand in front of a stage and tell you about the bad things they did.

  • My people, my people, what can I say; say what I can. I saw it but didn't believe it; I didn't believe what I saw. Are we gonna live together? Together are we gonna live?

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