HOLLYWOOD HAS US all summed up," complains the bus
driver in Spike Lee's Get on the Bus, a film commemorating
the one-year anniversary of the Million Man March. "Yeah,"
replies his young passenger, "we're reduced to the four R's:
rape, rap, robbery and riot." Nothing could be further from
the truth in this film, a road movie about a disparate
group of African American men traveling from Los Angeles to Washington,
D.C., to attend the rally organized by Louis Farrakhan. What we
are in for, in fact, is a feel-good voyage of political and personal
discovery that has more in common with a group therapy session
than it does with Blaxsploitation, action movies and mainstream
Hollywood racial stereotypes.
Screenwriter Reggie Rock Bythewood (one of the underwriters of
this production, along with Danny Glover, Wesley Snipes and Johnnie
Cochran, among others), has essentially adopted the formula for
a one-act play, with almost all of the action taking place on
one set--the bus, with the occasional rest stop and restaurant.
He has also written a political story that at times resembles
the stiff, polemical Soviet dramas from the 1970s (celebrating
the joys of working in a collective shoe-factory, for example).
Thus, we have an assortment of politically-situated types crammed
onto the Spotted Owl liner: an absentee father and his delinquent
son, a gay Republican, a bi-racial (as he says) cop, a Muslim,
an old-timer. The bulk of the movie consists of these men arguing
and, in the process, presenting various social and political points
of view.
It doesn't sound like a lot of fun, but Get On the Bus
is a lot more entertaining that its description would imply. First
of all, it is a relief, after months of lightweight summer movies,
to see a film that intelligently puts political and personal values
on the table. The question of whether the bad weathermen will
lick the good weathermen, or if the boy will get the girl, pale
next to a lively discussion of what it means to be an African-American
man in the 1990s. Secondly, Spike Lee is one of the most stylistically
energetic directors around, and it's always a thrill to see what
he'll do next. Here, he's expanded the experiments with light
and color he began with Clockers and Girl 6, creating
grainy, sharply contrasting sequences that resemble pointillist
paintings--and which are startlingly beautiful. And lastly, some
of the quarrels, events and discussions in Get On the Bus
are vital, engaged and moving.
Some are, but not all. Unfortunately, a few of the conflicts
have the tinny, salubrious feel of an ABC After School Special,
and certain issues are touched on in an aggressively brusque way.
Screenwriter Bythewood seems most comfortable discussing the more
standard issues of masculinity: fathering, bonding with other
men and dealing with women. The story of the father (Thomas Jefferson
Byrd) and his son Smooth (a terrific performance by De'aundre
Bonds) is particularly engrossing and well-developed; the scenes
of the whole bus bonding by singing songs are infectious and have
a great, genuine feel. But a gay couple discusses the intricacies
of being gay African Americans as if they were on a talk show,
then quarrel as though they were conducting a business transaction.
The issue of the exclusion of women at the Million Man March is
neatly swept aside in a flirty discussion with a pair of beautiful
women at a rest stop; and the more unsavory questions about Farrakhan's
character are also neatly disposed of by a white, Jewish bus driver
(Richard Belzer), who is conveniently a closet racist.
--Stacey Richter
Capsule Reviews
Get On the Bus 
Get On the Bus 
Other Films by Spike Lee
Clockers 
Four Little Girls 
Girl 6 
He Got Game 
Summer of Sam 
Film Vault Suggested Links
The Last Temptation of Christ 
The People vs. Larry Flynt 
Chronicle of a Disappearance 
Related Merchandise
Search for related videos at Reel.com
Search for more by Spike Lee at Reel.com
Search for related books at Amazon.com
Search for related music at Amazon.com
Rate this Film
If you don't want to vote on a film yet, and would like to know how
others voted, leave the rating selection as "Vote Here" and then click the
Cast Vote button.
|