Newsnight Review discussed Spike Lee's film 25th Hour.
(Edited highlights of the panel's review)
MARK KERMODE:
With all of his films, there are elements that you
really like and other elements that you find
problematic. The good things about the
film are the central relationship between
the guy going down and his father, and his
family and girlfriends, who may or may
not have betrayed him. There is a great
maturity which is very well drawn. My
problem with it is I don't buy the post-
September 11th stuff, which has been
shoe-horned in afterwards. The novel was
written before that. He has now opened the
film with this vision of these memorial
beams of light in New York. There is a key
sequence in which a dialogue scene
happens in an apartment which overlooks
ground zero. One of the characters is made
into a firefighter who has lost friends. That
stuff, for me, felt bogus. He said he didn't
feel the story would make sense without it,
but those scenes were unnecessary. They
undervalued the great achievement of the
central character relationships. It really
demonstrated that he is much more than an
African American film maker. He can deal
with all these different cultural things
equally well.
MARK LAWSON:
Rosie, it's well known that the Disney
studio didn't want all this September 11th
stuff. He has the final cut so got it in. Do
you think that element worked?
ROSIE BOYCOTT:
I found it completely irrelevant to the
entire film. I didn't see really why it was
there, apart from almost to position the
film in a kind of dateline to say, "I have
made this yesterday," kind of sense.
MARK LAWSON:
His argument is that it changed New York
and if you make a contemporary film of
New York, you need that in?
ROSIE BOYCOTT:
I don't think it changed the story. It's the
story about one man. I found it
fantastically moving. There was no side-
taking or sense of criticism about what he
had done, about the fact he was going to
face this jail sentence. He does it with a
kind of nobility that was very moving. I
though the scenes with his father, when his
father hands him the slightly torn
photograph of him as a kid, it's almost
become sentimental, but it draws back
because it has such very powerful acting.
After I had seen a bit of the September
11th stuff, I just kind of found I ignored it
entirely in the film. It seemed to me, well,
it was there, but you could also have been
seeing the Empire State Building.
WILL SELF:
In fairness to Lee, no, not in fairness to
Lee, why be fair to him? He could have
done something with that September 11th
material. He would have had to say that the
central character was some sort of
personification of Manhattan, and his
downfall was in some sense in parallel
with the downfall of the city. He is clearly
not trying to do that. He seems to be
suffering from a problem which is that American artists,
faced with this extraordinary political and,
as it were, moral singularity, have felt
compelled to become journalists in some
way. They have somehow felt that art has
to respond to what's happening now
because it's an extraordinary event. I think
that's totally the wrong approach. I agree
with Rosie and Mark, that you really want
to leave that out and press on with the story
you have.
Actually, looking at the main narrative of
the film, that's problematic as well. I
noticed that it builds beautifully up until
this big nightclub sequence, where it's
revealed who in fact has betrayed him,
without giving it away, and then actually
the narrative tension sags noticeably.
ROSIE BOYCOTT:
Except for the moment when the decision
as to whether the father is going to drive
him to jail or not. Again, I found that
really very moving . The father is prepared
to do that. Did you think it was maudlin
in the sentimentality?
WILL SELF:
I did, but I don't mind that. I can go there. I
think it was a great example of what Lee is
like as a film maker. As Mark said
initially, fantastically patchy, but so much
swagger in that movie.