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Spike Lee backs Obama, sees "Chocolate City"

SILVER SPRING, Maryland
Fri Jun 20, 2008 3:07pm EDT
Director Spike Lee watches the Los Angeles Lakers play the Boston Celtics in Game 3 of the NBA Finals basketball championship in Los Angeles, June 10, 2008. REUTERS/Jeff Haynes

SILVER SPRING, Maryland (Reuters) - Director Spike Lee, whose movies often cast a sharp eye on U.S. racial politics, predicted a presidential victory for black Democrat Barack Obama that would mark a "new day" for the United States.

U.S.  |  Entertainment  |  Barack Obama  |  People

"It's going to be before Obama, 'B.B.,' and after Obama -- 'A.B.' -- and some folks need to get used to this," Lee said. "And I'm going to be at the inauguration -- getting my hotel reservation now."

The director of films including "Do The Right Thing," and "Malcolm X," spoke on Thursday evening at the Silverdocs film festival outside Washington. The festival is one of the major showcases for nonfiction films.

Silverdocs honored Lee for his documentaries including "When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts," about Hurricane Katrina, and the Oscar-nominated "4 Little Girls," about the fatal 1963 bombing of a black church in Birmingham, Alabama, a milestone in the civil rights movement.

Lee said that like Katrina in 2005, the levee breaches now flooding the Upper Midwest were a sign of misplaced priorities by the national government. "That's going to change, though," he said. "We need a real Chocolate City," an apparent reference to the prospect of the United States under Obama, who would be the first U.S. black president if elected in November.

The term "Chocolate City" has been used affectionately by African-Americans to refer to Washington and other predominantly black cities, and was the title of a 1975 album by the funk band Parliament. Former New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin was criticized for racial divisiveness after Katrina for urging residents to rebuild a "chocolate New Orleans."

Lee later explicitly endorsed Obama, as someone who would set the right course. "It's not an if ... he changes the world. He changes how the world looks at the United States," Lee said.

It would be good for artists, too, who he said reflect the atmosphere around them. "It's going to be a new day. Not just a new day, a better day."

Despite his affection for Obama and film subjects reflecting U.S. race, politics and culture, Lee said he was not making a documentary of the Illinois senator's campaign. His longtime film editor, Sam Pollard, was, however, working on an Obama documentary produced by Edward Norton, he said.

He said his own future documentary projects include a movie for ESPN about Kobe Bryant, in which the Los Angeles Lakers basketball star was filmed by 30 cameras during a game last April. It was inspired by a similar movie made of French and Real Madrid soccer star Zinedine Zidane. "I liked it. I said, this would work better with basketball," Lee said.

Similarly, Lee said he was also turning basketball great Michael Jordan's last year with the Chicago Bulls into a documentary.

Reuters/Nielsen



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