Making “Do the Right Thing“ (1989) dir. St. Clair Bourne

For eight weeks during the summer of ‘88, sharp-eyed documentary filmmaker St. Clair Bourne filmed the making of Spike Lee’s soon-to-be classic Do The Right Thing as the film’s production occupied a block in Bed-Stuy. It is Bourne’s custom to encounter individuals on an equal footing and let them speak. Doing so, he lets truth spill over onto the streets he shoots. Over the course of Lee’s shoot, Bourne acted on this very custom, engaging his subjects in a sustained conversation that flowed from critique to celebration, always seeking collectivity and change. In chronicling the construction and dismantling of Lee’s sets, Bourne speaks to how a film shoot can turn an entire neighborhood upside down. Forthrightly, he asks the majority Black and working-class neighborhood what the staging of Do the Right Thing means for them to mixed responses. “The movie itself is not going to bring patrolmen on the corner; it’s not going to bring us a spotlight,” says one man. While, another block resident praises the positivity of the crew for inspiring a resident struggling with addiction to “uplift herself.” “I got into film because I would look at documentaries on CBS about the civil rights movement, and they would just miss things. They’d never talk to the Black audience–it was always a white guy talking to what he assumed was a white audience, about ‘those people.’ Well, I was ‘those people’ and thought, ‘How come you’re talking about me as if I’m not in the room? And on top of that, you’re lying!’” ST. CLAIR BOURNE Bourne sides with his subjects, whether they be Irish Catholics under threat of violence or Bed-Stuy residents concerned that their children won’t be able to play outside during the summer because of an ongoing shoot. That’s not to say his lens is inherently contrarian, as Bourne makes sure to spotlight joys to avoid more dour documentaries about the Black experience. Such ebullience is noticeable throughout Making Do the Right Thing, particularly during a block party featuring none-other than honorable guest Melvin Van Peebles or at wrap, when crew members gather to celebrate both the film and the community by popping open a bottle of champagne. In showing both the highs and the lows of daily struggle, his resolve “to be humanistically political” shines through.
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