Thus,
I took to heart Lee’s recent criticism of Clint Eastwood for failing to use
black actors in Flags of OurFathers and its companion piece, Letters from Iwo Jima (both 2006). In
fact, some 900 blacks participated in this bloody World War II battle, including
my late uncle, Lonnie Brake, a U.S. Marine from
On
the whole, though, Eastwood has an admirable record in employing blacks for
juicy roles in the 26 movies he’s directed or produced since 1971. In my view,
Lee was off base in giving the impression that Eastwood’s body of work is
racist. That is simply not the case. Lee was correct, however, in pointing out
that Eastwood’s omission in Flags of Our
Fathers only reinforces the idea that black contributions to
According
to Lee, in Eastwood’s telling of
Responded
Eastwood: “A guy like him should shut his face. Has he ever studied history?”
Eastwood said he was well aware that there was a small detachment of black
troops on
“The
story is [about] the famous flag-raising picture, and they didn’t do that,” he
continues. “If I go ahead and put an African-American actor in there, people’d
go ‘This guy’s lost his mind.’ I mean, it’s not accurate.”
Lee
countered: “The man is not my father and we’re not on a plantation… Come on,
Clint, come on. He sounds like an angry old man there.” Then he suggested that Flags ofOur Fathers be rewritten to feature a black character.
This
was not the first time Lee has complained about the storied actor-director. In
1987, he griped about the fact that Eastwood directed Bird, the searing, true-life flick about saxophonist Charlie
Parker. Lee apparently felt the story needed a black director.
“Why
would a white guy be doing that?” Eastwood asked rhetorically. “I was the only
guy who made it, that’s why. He [Lee] could have gone ahead and made it.
Instead he was making something else. When I do a picture and it’s 90% black,
like Bird, I use 90% black people.”
Eastwood
has cast many talented black actors in his films, including Scatman Crothers,
Laurence Fishburne, Morgan Freeman, Danny Glover, Lisa Gay Hamilton, Albert
Popwell, Mario Van Peebles, Courtney B. Vance, Isaiah Washington and Forest
Whittaker, in such films as PlayMisty For Me (1971), Sudden Impact (1983), Heartbreak Ridge (1986), Bird (1988), Unforgiven (1992), Space
Cowboys (2000), Mystic River
(2003) and Million DollarBaby (2004).
Ironically,
Lee, who has directed some 20 movies, came under racial fire himself in 1999 in
the wake of his Summer of Sam, the
chilling tale of the Son of Sam murders in
And
some Italians took Lee to task for so-called “insensitive” portrayals of this
ethnic group. This, despite the fact that Lee employed two Italian-American
screenwriters—Victor Colicchio and Michael Imperioli—to make sure what was
presented on screen was on target for that era in New York (mid-1970s).
Not
only that, Lee was beaten-up big time by Bill O’Reilly during a 1999 appearance
with Colicchio and Imperioli on Fox News Channel’s “The O’Reilly Factor.” In
the surly host’s strongly stated view, Summer
of Sam had no redeeming features.
Bottom
line: No matter who makes
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