14 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :- spike lee "joint"? police procedural? Clockers brings the best of both worlds, 16 December 2001
Author:
mikel weisser from west coast of AZ
When Spike Lee applies his formidable talents to a genre piece like Richard
Price's best selling drug noir novel, "Clockers," you might wonder what kind
of hybrid you'll get. Lee is justly famous for his incendiary agitprop
films of ideas which dissect race relations and urban living, sometimes at
the expense of cohesive storytelling; but working with source material as
thought provoking a novel as "Clockers," which is set in Lee's home base of
"Crooklyn," er, i mean Brooklyn, Spike finds the right mix of action, angst,
and intellectualism for his strengths to shine. "Clockers" are petty drug
dealers who work around the clock pushing their wares. When one turns up
dead and a stand up citizen steps up to take the fall, a homicide detective
begins unraveling the complex dynamics of life and dealing in the 'hood.
Lee gets his usual gritty street landscape to work with and Price gets a
director with a cinematic eye (thanks to standard Lee lens-er, Malik Hassan
Sayeed)and a playwright's heart. Central character brothers Isaiah
Washington and Mekhi Phifer (in his star making role) turn in complex
credible performances but are easily outshone by the astonishingly strong
acting out of Harvey Keitel, Delroy Lindo, Regina Taylor (who won awards for
her work here), Keith David, and Lee regulars John Turturro and Thomas Byrd.
Lindo is particularly impressive. This film may have been too gritty for
general audiences with its brutal depiction of urban violence and emotional
brutality. And it may have been a bit too stylized for the Saturday night
drive-in set wanting a brainless shoot 'em up; but for those interested in
quality film making on a hugely important issue that also functions as an
engaging who done it, Spike Lee does it up royal in this, perhaps Lee's
most, accessible film.
13 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- A good moral tale about drugs and NYC, 19 November 2001
Author:
bob the moo from Birmingham, UK
Strike (Phifer) works as a drug runner (clocker) in a NY ghetto for dealer
Rodney (Delroy Lindo). When someone kills one of Rodney's enemies Detective
Klein (Keitel) investigates. Strike's brother Victor (Washington) confesses
but suspicion points to Strike. Klein suspects that Victor is covering for
his brother and begins to put the heat on Strike for more
information.
The main plot is a form of crime thriller, with Keitel playing the cop
trying to uncover the truth behind the murder. However the plot is not what
this film is about - this is basically a film about the effects on drugs on
the NY ghettos. Strike is the "average black man", while his protégé, Tyrone
(Peewee Love) is "black youth". The film tries to show the forces placed on
them by their situation, their role models and the few options they have in
life. Rodney represents the draw of selling drugs, of quick money while
policemen Andre (Keith David) and Klein represent his conscience trying to
get him to do the right thing - Andre and Tyrone's mother (Regina Taylor)
particularly doing right by your own community.
The message is at times forced, Keitel's sequence towards the end is very
clever cinematically but feels a bit like a sermon, but at other times we're
allowed to work it out ourselves. Strike is not judged but allowed to be
pulled by the situation around him, his sickness representing the sickness
of his situation. Through him we see the pressures that are on him to act
like his peers and the bad role-models he has in his life. In Shorty we see
the same things affect the next generation and, while his aping of Strike is
clumsy, you again see how the lack of good role-models reduces the options
for an otherwise intelligent kid. The best thing about the comparison of
Lindo and Keitel is that neither is judged - both are allowed to show
themselves as appealing, Lindo appears as a parent, almost seeking the best
for all his workers and Keitel is allowed to be an honest cop with a good
moral code. However both are also seen in a bad light, Lindo brings out the
violence, pressure and treachery of his character - a man who is really out
for himself while the way Keitel pressures Strike is seen as bad as Rodney's
pressure and reveals a racist angry streak within himself. We are left
wondering how anyone can survive between the two.
Phifer is good as Strike and manages to avoid just doing a ghetto-movie type
of performance, he makes you believe that he is trapped in a no-win
situation. Isaiah Washington gives another in a string of strong
performances as the honest man trying to get by. Lindo is great as drug
dealer Rodney, mixing paternal aspirations with moments of sudden
viciousness. Keitel and John Turturro act below their station and aren't
given much to work with, Keitel especially doesn't always manage to carry
the moral core of the story without preaching. Two small roles of interest
are Tom Byrd as Errol who has plays the fallen dealer with AIDS, however not
enough is explained about his character, also Michael Imperioli (better
known as Chris in The Sopranos) plays bent cop Jo-Jo. Peewee Love stands out
as Shorty/Shorty, sucked into a world that lacks choice.
The film looks great, the whole thing has a bright colourful sheen on it
that is very attractive to look at. Combined with Lee's stylish director it
makes for a beautiful film - although some scenes are shot differently and
on different stock, to make a point, although I'm not sure what that point
is. The music is as good as most of Lee's movies, a mix of soul and hip hop,
it is better than many ghetto films that just assume that the hip hop is all
that's needed to help the mood.
This is a good example of the lack of options that exist in the ghetto and,
besides some very obvious preaching, it makes it's point without shouting it
at the audience. The only failing is that Lee bottles it near the end,
delivering a sentimental ending of hope that is unfortunately not the truth
in many cases.
12 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- Another great film from Spike Lee., 17 March 2005
Author:
camcmahon from United Kingdom
I've just finished this film and I thought it was excellent. I've never
read the book, and based on other people's comments it sounds like it
might be a hard book to adapt for the screen, what with it (apparently)
dealing with a lot of abstract issues. However, looking at this film
from the standpoint of having never read the book I thought the story
was brilliant, it engrossed me to the end. Mekhi Phifer was great, he
played the part well, personally I thought he conveyed a wide range of
emotions and all of them very well. There was some great character
development, especially on the part of Delroy Lindo (another great
performance).
Lee did a good job in his portrayal of the drug culture in the
projects, as well as taking a look into the police's side of the story.
The story interested me from the beginning and I didn't feel my
interest waver once, in fact is grew steadily throughout the film. The
images of dead bodies shown at the beginning made a strong starting
point, and served as an immediate reminder that the themes dealt with
in the film are occurring all the time.
On a side note, I thought the resemblance of Shorty's game 'Gansta' to
today's GTA: San Andreas was pretty funny.
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- Lee's most underrated film, without a doubt, 14 April 2001
Author:
Chike Jeffers (chikejeffers@hotmail.com) from Toronto, Ontario
It angers me how overlooked this film is.
It is not an easy film. It is bleak and at times very off-putting.
Actually, if you are a thinking, caring person, this is movie is overall
heart-breaking.
But it is brilliant and, for the person who truly tries to understand it, a
compelling, insightful look at the problems killing black America today.
The only reason for the film's lack of recognition I can imagine is that its
subject matter had been examined a number of times before. But the
inescapable fact is that this one of the best examinations of the subject
matter there has been on screen - on par with "Boyz N The
Hood".
And it is FAR from uncreative. In fact, on one level, it is not a "hood"
movie, but a whodunit. The mystery aspect of the plot is very interesting.
But there are other, more important layers. It is the story of the
confusion and crisis of a young man's life. Most importantly, it is a
brutal look at drugs, guns, and life in the projects. It is a movie asking
why so many young black men are dying in the streets.
The lead character Strike has a stomach problem. It might be an ulcer or
something like that. I believe it is a metaphor. Just as heat represented
racial tension in Lee's masterpiece "Do The Right Thing", Strike's sickness
represents the illnesses plaguing the ghetto: drugs, guns,
liquor.
Like DTRT, this film looks at community. The mothers, the cops, the young
people, the kids, the men trying to make a living - there is eloquent
commentary in "Clockers" on the situations of all. In Spike's movies,
paying a little attention is rewarding. A good essay could be written on
what I call the Spike Summarization technique. This is when Spike
compresses a serious debate or concern in the black community into a few
expressive moments of action or dialogue. There are better examples in
other movies, but it manifests in "Clockers" a few times. A bunch of kids
are sitting in front of Rodney's (Delroy Lindo) shop; one of the kids is
rapping while the others pay attention. The two sides to the coin: we feel
the artistry and skill of the moment, the continuation of a rich tradition
of oral art; we're also struck by the cruelty and coldness in the kid's
violent lyrics, and we think about where that comes from.
Stylistically, this movie is a huge success. The cinematography is amazing,
and I wonder what must be wrong with my tastes when I'm floored by a film
like this and find visually bland a more oft-praised classic. The projects
become blinding panoramas, landscapes which add tons of meaning to the
poignant ending (I won't reveal it here). The sound is great; many films of
this nature use hip hop in the soundtrack to produce certain effects, but
"Clockers" does it in a more methodical way which jars some people, but
contributes to the film's meaning.
I could say more about the film, but I encourage you to just see it, along
with the rest of Spike's oeuvre. He's not a perfect filmmaker, and some of
his best films are marred by elements that don't work, but I feel his
consistency in terms of delivering brilliance is not below most of the
cinema's most celebrated auteurs.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :- Perfect movie, 10 December 2002
Author:
garage5inc from Virginia
Clockers refers to drug dealers who work around the clock on an organized
schedule. The movie takes place in no other city than New York, Spike
Lee's
trademark as a director. Strike (Phiefer) is a clocker who works with his
friends in the park selling high potency drugs to neighborhood people,
under the command of Rodney, the drug dealer of the area. Rodney tells
Strike if he wants to get off the benches he should kill a man named
Daryl
who is selling ounces and making lots of cash, Strike considers it, but
he
isn't a killer. That night Strike's brother Victor comes into the bar and
is
mentally upset and talks to Strike. A little later Daryl is killed by
four
gunshots, one in the leg, one in the head, one in the chest, and one
caught
between his teeth. Spike Lee shows off the gritty urban street crime life
here perfectly. Harvey Keitel and John Turturro play homicide detectives
who
take the case, and the clockers are the main suspects.
Clockers is a surreal look at the drug buisness, friendship, descision
making, and death in the city. This movie has a flawless cast, the
clockers,
the detectives, and Rodney and Harold the dealers are perfect. The script
is
great too, as it has suprises, good dialogue, action, and setting. The
direction is almost perfect, especially the last scene with the train,
Spike
Lee is one of the most underrated directors ever. This movie is made to
please, action lovers will find it interesting, and film buffs should
find
it fascinating! Keep an open mind from beginning to end and analyze ever
scene with its content. Great movie 10/10
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Lee's most mature work, 27 May 1999
Author:
Eric Beltmann (beltmann@execpc.com) from West Bend, WI
In 1995 I considered Spike Lee's gritty CLOCKERS one of the year's best
films; recently I spotted its video in a clearance bin and picked it up.
Upon re-viewing, I am struck again by its complexity. It is the first
urban
drama to depict inner-city race relations with the intricacy such a
pervasive cultural issue demands. On the surface it resembles a whodunit,
but its main concern is how drugs and violence contaminate entire
communities, dramatized in the collapse of one African-American youth's
life. (He chokes up blood the way some of us sweat.) This process is
observed by a predominantly white police force that makes hollow attempts
to
keep order, and refuses to intervene with the community's gradual
decline.
Instead of characters with overt prejudices and plain racial
allegiances-characters that are sterile symbols of bigotry rather than
credible humans guilty of it-Lee gives us characters of casual racism.
Most
representative of this is Harvey Keitel's Rocco Klein, a white detective
who
cannot understand the culture surrounding him, which is a culture of
narcotics, violence, and black-on-black crime. On his beat, drugs are
less
a problem than a lifestyle, murder resolves the tiniest of disagreements,
and young mothers valiantly but vainly battle the influence young dealers
have on their sons. Klein views the inner-city with contempt, but deep
down
he knows all the whores and dealers are human beings, too.
Klein is introduced at the scene of a homicide, where the police handle
the
gruesome death with a clinical sense of detachment, cracking bad jokes and
asking the bloodied corpse questions. Is it just a job, or is it racism?
For Klein, it's both: he needs the gallows humor to psychologically deal
with this culture of depravity. What's fascinating about CLOCKERS is
Lee's
willingness-and guts-to present Klein, despite his prejudice, as the
film's
hero. Lee understands that casual racism is simply endemic and
inescapable
in American culture. What he appreciates is Klein's ability to transcend
his own prejudice and finally do the right thing.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :- Absolutely stunning Inner-City drama, 27 May 2003
Author:
intentiv from Canada
This movie is very misunderstood. I've heard people call it
stereotypical, but this is only because they missed the obvious. The
stereotypical aspect people see is all part of the story. The white
police stereotypically harassing the street dealers is only
stereotypical because society so commonly commits the very same
actions. The movie is all about blame, who society blames, who society
would like to blame, and sometimes whomever can be blamed. In actuality
the movie has an extremely tense message about accepting ones own
blame, while all throughout the movie blame is wrongly placed on nearly
everyone. To avoid spoiling the movie I won't be overly specific but by
the end of the movie Spike Lee had painted Injustice onto the screen.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :- A Review For Clockers (some spoilers), 24 October 2001
Author:
dee.reid from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Strike(Mekhi Phifer) is a "clocker" or 24-hour drug dealer. Strike, along
with five other clockers: Scientific(Sticky Fingaz), Go(Fredro Starr),
Horace(E.O. Nolasco), Stan(Lawrence B. Adisa), and Skills(Hassan Johnson)
all work the benches inside the housing projects in New York City. They are
constantly being harassed by the police who often come and search them for
any drugs they may have in their possession. Strike who is getting tired
and stressed out from working the benches, asks his boss Rodney(Delroy
Lindo) to see if he can move up to a better position in the New York drug
trade. Rodney tells Strike the only way to do it is if he kills another
clocker named Darryl Adams(Steve White) who works as the night manager at
Ahab's Burger, a local restaurant. So one night, Strike patiently waits for
Darryl to come out from the Ahab's, but Strike decides to into a local bar.
Sometime later, Darryl is found dead, the victim of an apparent street
crime. This introduces us to NYPD Homicide Detectives Rocco Klein(Harvey
Keitel) and Larry Mazilli(John Turturro). When they arrive at the crime
scene, they find the officers joking around as they search Darryl's bloody
corspe for any evidence. The police soon after gather enough evidence to
pin the perpetrator of the crime on Strike. Before they can arrest him
though, Strike's decent and hard-working brother, Victor(Isaiah Washington)
turns himself into the police as the murderer. Rocco doesn't believe
Victor's story since he doesn't believe Victor had any real reason to murder
Darryl. But he does believe however, that since Strike went bad and did
have a motive to kill Darryl and Victor remained a good person, that Strike
is the real murderer, but can he prove it?
This is in fact Spike Lee's most underrated film, even more underrated than
his epic Malcolm X. Clockers offers an inside look into the world of black
on black crime. What's even more disturbing about Clockers is that it opens
up playing Marc Dorsey's song "People In Search Of A Life" while showing us
bloody crime scene photos. I heard that Spike Lee said he did this for "the
maximum effect". I guess that means he wanted show us the true nature of
street crime and the effect it has on the community where they happen.
Mekhi Phifer makes an impressive film debut as Strike, the lead clocker. He
isn't necessarily a bad person nor is he a good person either. His
influence on Tyrone Jeeter(Pee Wee Love) a young boy whom Strike takes under
his wing, is frightening, as well as it is disturbing. Tyrone begins the
same sort of transformation that Strike went through after Rodney got a hold
of him. As Strike tells Tyrone about Errol Barnes, "Oh, don't think that
just cuz your a kid and all, that he won't smoke you. Why just last year I
heard he caught himself a 10-year old." A striking moment in the movie that
shows street crime can happen to anyone, even kids.
Keith David gives a terrific, yet under-used performance as Andre The Giant,
a local housing police officer who tries unsuccessfully to keep Tyrone from
becoming like Strike.
I think one of the most over-looked performance here however is Thomas
Jefferson Byrd who plays Errol Barnes, a middle-aged man who is dying of
AIDS. He is Rodney's right-hand man and is also a known child murderer.
***SPOILERS AHEAD*** Spike Lee also creates a sort of ironic twist-of-fate
for Errol towards the end of the movie.
Clockers is a very disturbing film that should have gotten more attention
from critics as well as the movie public.
I loved this movie and I never get tired of watching it.
Clockers gets a 10/10
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :- Spike Lee's early film is solid, 22 September 2006
Author:
PersianPlaya408 from Milpitas, California
Spike Lee's urban drama about a drugpusher who the police become
suspicious towards after a man is found with 4 bullets in him in their
neighborhood. This is a good early film from Spike Lee, he later built
on this film's theme with much better films in He Got Game and The 25th
Hour. But this one was also solid, with some very good performances and
certain very good scenes. The screenplay was pretty good, based on
Price's own book, and i liked Phifer, Turturro and Keitel a lot in
this. Good cinematography from Malik Hassan Sayeed and editing from
Smuael D. Pollard. Terence Blanchard's score is also not bad. overall a
solid mid 90s film from Spike Lee.--- IMDb Rating: 6.8, my rating: 8/10
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :- gritty, truthful crime drama that takes formula and makes it gripping and incendiary, 19 April 2007
Author:
Filmjack3 from United States
I was glad to see on the special edition DVD of Spike Lee's Do the
Right Thing to see how he answered the question asked at Cannes as to
why there weren't drugs portrayed in the film; his answer, simply, was
that there wasn't enough space dramatically, that it would be too much
to fit drugs into a story already loaded with racism in a small
neighborhood. But, as he followed, he could use what it means to have
drugs in an urban environment, and what it does to the people, and have
that as a stand-alone movie. He followed this up, in part, with the
Samuel L. Jackson storyline in Jungle Fever, and thanks to Richard
Price's novel and original script, he has here what might be his answer
to that question. It's not a very great movie, perhaps, because by this
time Spike Lee has so much invested in the style of his cinematic
theatrics, of how the nature of the camera itself related to those of
the characters, that it comes close to going over substance. But it's
is a worthy attempt at putting into context, via the conventions of
genre going back to the 40s, as to what makes or breaks the ties
between drug dealers and their workers, and how the workers (or
'Clockers' as per the title of the movie) go about their business in
the streets.
Clockers has a main plot that pushes along, as the murder by multiple
gun-shots of a Darryl, black fast-food worker, who was also apart of
the crew of Rodney (Delroy Lindo), call into question who might have
done it. At first, it seems pretty open and shut, as Victor (Isaiah
Washington) comes forth and admits he did it in self-defense. Rocco
Klein (Harvey Keitel) doesn't buy it, seems too easy, so he asks
around, digs deeper, and sees that his brother, Strike (Mekhi Pfeifer)
seems to be much more of the guilty party, by way of how he handles
himself in the streets, his repore with Rodney, and as having more
motive to kill Darryl. It's through this that Lee then branches it out
to make it as much as character as about plot, where the ties between
certain characters, like Strike and Tyrone, a pre-teen who looks up to
Strike like a surrogate father, are mostly defined by how the
neighborhood works out in the open. The clockers are bunch of would-be
gang-bangers who talk a lot of talk, but haven't walked nearly as much
as Earle, best friend of Rodney's and psychopathic murder, or Rodney
himself, who has that veneer of being like the one you can trust the
most- half surrogate father as well and half good cop/bad cop boss-
until he gets crossed.
Although Price's material, which comes through with the energy and
occasional wit, is noticeable throughout, it's really Spike Lee as
director and many of the actors who make this a consistently watchable
movie. Lee is never one to be too subtle with the camera, and he has
variations with how he deals with the material to make it very
observant but also subjective. Early on, for example, we see the
clockers making their deals in the park in long-shot, shaky, as if
Lee's filming it far away for a reality TV show. But then we also see
the 360 degree camera moves as Klein questions Strike. There's many
camera moves that are practically trademark Lee shots, especially with
the lighting, as Klein questions Tyrone, or when we see a flashback to
Victor having to deal with some clockers. It's all very flamboyant and
meant to call attention to the material, and aside from a few unneeded
music choices (it's the only time you'll hear Seal in a drug dealer
crime movie), he's on top of things. Meanwhile, the performances are
all top-notch, usually, as Keitel and particularly Lindo play their
characters so well by pretty much being how we think the actors
'really' are, even though they're not. Pfeifer has a little trickier a
time with his performance, because he usually is on a very similar
note: I didn't do nothing, is his usual beat. His character also has
the intriguing qualities that mark him as something of an outsider
however in he might be: his stomach virus, which is never resolved but
always looming over him, and his love of electric train-sets.
And all the while, Clockers succeeds in presenting a time and place
where there should be little to no hope, and it makes the cops and
criminals both pretty well-rounded when compared to other genre films.
The cops are meant to be the good guys, but there's also a steady
conflict between Klein and his partner: why should Klein care so much
as to who did it or why (Strike also asks this question towards the
end, in one of the best scenes in the film)? And Strike and Rodney are
not cut-outs from black exploitation flicks, but with more of a push
and pull tie that is always a threat, never a comfort. There are little
details that help make Lee's film interesting when it veers into being
like a television serial; the white yuppies who get entangled in the
case; the over-protective but very smart cop (Keith David, always a
pro) who also tries to play surrogate father to Tyrone, albeit without
the same care, however negative, as Strike has; the brief shots of the
drug addicts with their habits on display, as we only need to see it
for less than a minute to get the nature of the bottom of the food
chain, which is total despair. Lee's film, however, isn't really
disparaging as it has moments of hope, yet a hope meant to be in
understanding that there's no easy way out of all of this.
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Clockers (1995)
14 out of 14 people found the following comment useful :-

spike lee "joint"? police procedural? Clockers brings the best of both worlds, 16 December 2001
Author: mikel weisser from west coast of AZ
When Spike Lee applies his formidable talents to a genre piece like Richard Price's best selling drug noir novel, "Clockers," you might wonder what kind of hybrid you'll get. Lee is justly famous for his incendiary agitprop films of ideas which dissect race relations and urban living, sometimes at the expense of cohesive storytelling; but working with source material as thought provoking a novel as "Clockers," which is set in Lee's home base of "Crooklyn," er, i mean Brooklyn, Spike finds the right mix of action, angst, and intellectualism for his strengths to shine. "Clockers" are petty drug dealers who work around the clock pushing their wares. When one turns up dead and a stand up citizen steps up to take the fall, a homicide detective begins unraveling the complex dynamics of life and dealing in the 'hood. Lee gets his usual gritty street landscape to work with and Price gets a director with a cinematic eye (thanks to standard Lee lens-er, Malik Hassan Sayeed)and a playwright's heart. Central character brothers Isaiah Washington and Mekhi Phifer (in his star making role) turn in complex credible performances but are easily outshone by the astonishingly strong acting out of Harvey Keitel, Delroy Lindo, Regina Taylor (who won awards for her work here), Keith David, and Lee regulars John Turturro and Thomas Byrd. Lindo is particularly impressive. This film may have been too gritty for general audiences with its brutal depiction of urban violence and emotional brutality. And it may have been a bit too stylized for the Saturday night drive-in set wanting a brainless shoot 'em up; but for those interested in quality film making on a hugely important issue that also functions as an engaging who done it, Spike Lee does it up royal in this, perhaps Lee's most, accessible film.
13 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-
A good moral tale about drugs and NYC, 19 November 2001
Author: bob the moo from Birmingham, UK
Strike (Phifer) works as a drug runner (clocker) in a NY ghetto for dealer Rodney (Delroy Lindo). When someone kills one of Rodney's enemies Detective Klein (Keitel) investigates. Strike's brother Victor (Washington) confesses but suspicion points to Strike. Klein suspects that Victor is covering for his brother and begins to put the heat on Strike for more information.
The main plot is a form of crime thriller, with Keitel playing the cop trying to uncover the truth behind the murder. However the plot is not what this film is about - this is basically a film about the effects on drugs on the NY ghettos. Strike is the "average black man", while his protégé, Tyrone (Peewee Love) is "black youth". The film tries to show the forces placed on them by their situation, their role models and the few options they have in life. Rodney represents the draw of selling drugs, of quick money while policemen Andre (Keith David) and Klein represent his conscience trying to get him to do the right thing - Andre and Tyrone's mother (Regina Taylor) particularly doing right by your own community.
The message is at times forced, Keitel's sequence towards the end is very clever cinematically but feels a bit like a sermon, but at other times we're allowed to work it out ourselves. Strike is not judged but allowed to be pulled by the situation around him, his sickness representing the sickness of his situation. Through him we see the pressures that are on him to act like his peers and the bad role-models he has in his life. In Shorty we see the same things affect the next generation and, while his aping of Strike is clumsy, you again see how the lack of good role-models reduces the options for an otherwise intelligent kid. The best thing about the comparison of Lindo and Keitel is that neither is judged - both are allowed to show themselves as appealing, Lindo appears as a parent, almost seeking the best for all his workers and Keitel is allowed to be an honest cop with a good moral code. However both are also seen in a bad light, Lindo brings out the violence, pressure and treachery of his character - a man who is really out for himself while the way Keitel pressures Strike is seen as bad as Rodney's pressure and reveals a racist angry streak within himself. We are left wondering how anyone can survive between the two.
Phifer is good as Strike and manages to avoid just doing a ghetto-movie type of performance, he makes you believe that he is trapped in a no-win situation. Isaiah Washington gives another in a string of strong performances as the honest man trying to get by. Lindo is great as drug dealer Rodney, mixing paternal aspirations with moments of sudden viciousness. Keitel and John Turturro act below their station and aren't given much to work with, Keitel especially doesn't always manage to carry the moral core of the story without preaching. Two small roles of interest are Tom Byrd as Errol who has plays the fallen dealer with AIDS, however not enough is explained about his character, also Michael Imperioli (better known as Chris in The Sopranos) plays bent cop Jo-Jo. Peewee Love stands out as Shorty/Shorty, sucked into a world that lacks choice.
The film looks great, the whole thing has a bright colourful sheen on it that is very attractive to look at. Combined with Lee's stylish director it makes for a beautiful film - although some scenes are shot differently and on different stock, to make a point, although I'm not sure what that point is. The music is as good as most of Lee's movies, a mix of soul and hip hop, it is better than many ghetto films that just assume that the hip hop is all that's needed to help the mood.
This is a good example of the lack of options that exist in the ghetto and, besides some very obvious preaching, it makes it's point without shouting it at the audience. The only failing is that Lee bottles it near the end, delivering a sentimental ending of hope that is unfortunately not the truth in many cases.
12 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

Another great film from Spike Lee., 17 March 2005
Author: camcmahon from United Kingdom
I've just finished this film and I thought it was excellent. I've never read the book, and based on other people's comments it sounds like it might be a hard book to adapt for the screen, what with it (apparently) dealing with a lot of abstract issues. However, looking at this film from the standpoint of having never read the book I thought the story was brilliant, it engrossed me to the end. Mekhi Phifer was great, he played the part well, personally I thought he conveyed a wide range of emotions and all of them very well. There was some great character development, especially on the part of Delroy Lindo (another great performance).
Lee did a good job in his portrayal of the drug culture in the projects, as well as taking a look into the police's side of the story. The story interested me from the beginning and I didn't feel my interest waver once, in fact is grew steadily throughout the film. The images of dead bodies shown at the beginning made a strong starting point, and served as an immediate reminder that the themes dealt with in the film are occurring all the time.
On a side note, I thought the resemblance of Shorty's game 'Gansta' to today's GTA: San Andreas was pretty funny.
11 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-
Lee's most underrated film, without a doubt, 14 April 2001
Author: Chike Jeffers (chikejeffers@hotmail.com) from Toronto, Ontario
It angers me how overlooked this film is.
It is not an easy film. It is bleak and at times very off-putting. Actually, if you are a thinking, caring person, this is movie is overall heart-breaking.
But it is brilliant and, for the person who truly tries to understand it, a compelling, insightful look at the problems killing black America today. The only reason for the film's lack of recognition I can imagine is that its subject matter had been examined a number of times before. But the inescapable fact is that this one of the best examinations of the subject matter there has been on screen - on par with "Boyz N The Hood".
And it is FAR from uncreative. In fact, on one level, it is not a "hood" movie, but a whodunit. The mystery aspect of the plot is very interesting. But there are other, more important layers. It is the story of the confusion and crisis of a young man's life. Most importantly, it is a brutal look at drugs, guns, and life in the projects. It is a movie asking why so many young black men are dying in the streets.
The lead character Strike has a stomach problem. It might be an ulcer or something like that. I believe it is a metaphor. Just as heat represented racial tension in Lee's masterpiece "Do The Right Thing", Strike's sickness represents the illnesses plaguing the ghetto: drugs, guns, liquor.
Like DTRT, this film looks at community. The mothers, the cops, the young people, the kids, the men trying to make a living - there is eloquent commentary in "Clockers" on the situations of all. In Spike's movies, paying a little attention is rewarding. A good essay could be written on what I call the Spike Summarization technique. This is when Spike compresses a serious debate or concern in the black community into a few expressive moments of action or dialogue. There are better examples in other movies, but it manifests in "Clockers" a few times. A bunch of kids are sitting in front of Rodney's (Delroy Lindo) shop; one of the kids is rapping while the others pay attention. The two sides to the coin: we feel the artistry and skill of the moment, the continuation of a rich tradition of oral art; we're also struck by the cruelty and coldness in the kid's violent lyrics, and we think about where that comes from.
Stylistically, this movie is a huge success. The cinematography is amazing, and I wonder what must be wrong with my tastes when I'm floored by a film like this and find visually bland a more oft-praised classic. The projects become blinding panoramas, landscapes which add tons of meaning to the poignant ending (I won't reveal it here). The sound is great; many films of this nature use hip hop in the soundtrack to produce certain effects, but "Clockers" does it in a more methodical way which jars some people, but contributes to the film's meaning.
I could say more about the film, but I encourage you to just see it, along with the rest of Spike's oeuvre. He's not a perfect filmmaker, and some of his best films are marred by elements that don't work, but I feel his consistency in terms of delivering brilliance is not below most of the cinema's most celebrated auteurs.
7 out of 8 people found the following comment useful :-

Perfect movie, 10 December 2002
Author: garage5inc from Virginia
Clockers refers to drug dealers who work around the clock on an organized schedule. The movie takes place in no other city than New York, Spike Lee's trademark as a director. Strike (Phiefer) is a clocker who works with his friends in the park selling high potency drugs to neighborhood people, under the command of Rodney, the drug dealer of the area. Rodney tells Strike if he wants to get off the benches he should kill a man named Daryl who is selling ounces and making lots of cash, Strike considers it, but he isn't a killer. That night Strike's brother Victor comes into the bar and is mentally upset and talks to Strike. A little later Daryl is killed by four gunshots, one in the leg, one in the head, one in the chest, and one caught between his teeth. Spike Lee shows off the gritty urban street crime life here perfectly. Harvey Keitel and John Turturro play homicide detectives who take the case, and the clockers are the main suspects.
Clockers is a surreal look at the drug buisness, friendship, descision making, and death in the city. This movie has a flawless cast, the clockers, the detectives, and Rodney and Harold the dealers are perfect. The script is great too, as it has suprises, good dialogue, action, and setting. The direction is almost perfect, especially the last scene with the train, Spike Lee is one of the most underrated directors ever. This movie is made to please, action lovers will find it interesting, and film buffs should find it fascinating! Keep an open mind from beginning to end and analyze ever scene with its content. Great movie 10/10
4 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-
Lee's most mature work, 27 May 1999
Author: Eric Beltmann (beltmann@execpc.com) from West Bend, WI
In 1995 I considered Spike Lee's gritty CLOCKERS one of the year's best films; recently I spotted its video in a clearance bin and picked it up. Upon re-viewing, I am struck again by its complexity. It is the first urban drama to depict inner-city race relations with the intricacy such a pervasive cultural issue demands. On the surface it resembles a whodunit, but its main concern is how drugs and violence contaminate entire communities, dramatized in the collapse of one African-American youth's life. (He chokes up blood the way some of us sweat.) This process is observed by a predominantly white police force that makes hollow attempts to keep order, and refuses to intervene with the community's gradual decline.
Instead of characters with overt prejudices and plain racial allegiances-characters that are sterile symbols of bigotry rather than credible humans guilty of it-Lee gives us characters of casual racism. Most representative of this is Harvey Keitel's Rocco Klein, a white detective who cannot understand the culture surrounding him, which is a culture of narcotics, violence, and black-on-black crime. On his beat, drugs are less a problem than a lifestyle, murder resolves the tiniest of disagreements, and young mothers valiantly but vainly battle the influence young dealers have on their sons. Klein views the inner-city with contempt, but deep down he knows all the whores and dealers are human beings, too.
Klein is introduced at the scene of a homicide, where the police handle the gruesome death with a clinical sense of detachment, cracking bad jokes and asking the bloodied corpse questions. Is it just a job, or is it racism? For Klein, it's both: he needs the gallows humor to psychologically deal with this culture of depravity. What's fascinating about CLOCKERS is Lee's willingness-and guts-to present Klein, despite his prejudice, as the film's hero. Lee understands that casual racism is simply endemic and inescapable in American culture. What he appreciates is Klein's ability to transcend his own prejudice and finally do the right thing.
3 out of 3 people found the following comment useful :-
Absolutely stunning Inner-City drama, 27 May 2003
Author: intentiv from Canada
This movie is very misunderstood. I've heard people call it stereotypical, but this is only because they missed the obvious. The stereotypical aspect people see is all part of the story. The white police stereotypically harassing the street dealers is only stereotypical because society so commonly commits the very same actions. The movie is all about blame, who society blames, who society would like to blame, and sometimes whomever can be blamed. In actuality the movie has an extremely tense message about accepting ones own blame, while all throughout the movie blame is wrongly placed on nearly everyone. To avoid spoiling the movie I won't be overly specific but by the end of the movie Spike Lee had painted Injustice onto the screen.
2 out of 2 people found the following comment useful :-

A Review For Clockers (some spoilers), 24 October 2001
Author: dee.reid from United States
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Strike(Mekhi Phifer) is a "clocker" or 24-hour drug dealer. Strike, along with five other clockers: Scientific(Sticky Fingaz), Go(Fredro Starr), Horace(E.O. Nolasco), Stan(Lawrence B. Adisa), and Skills(Hassan Johnson) all work the benches inside the housing projects in New York City. They are constantly being harassed by the police who often come and search them for any drugs they may have in their possession. Strike who is getting tired and stressed out from working the benches, asks his boss Rodney(Delroy Lindo) to see if he can move up to a better position in the New York drug trade. Rodney tells Strike the only way to do it is if he kills another clocker named Darryl Adams(Steve White) who works as the night manager at Ahab's Burger, a local restaurant. So one night, Strike patiently waits for Darryl to come out from the Ahab's, but Strike decides to into a local bar. Sometime later, Darryl is found dead, the victim of an apparent street crime. This introduces us to NYPD Homicide Detectives Rocco Klein(Harvey Keitel) and Larry Mazilli(John Turturro). When they arrive at the crime scene, they find the officers joking around as they search Darryl's bloody corspe for any evidence. The police soon after gather enough evidence to pin the perpetrator of the crime on Strike. Before they can arrest him though, Strike's decent and hard-working brother, Victor(Isaiah Washington) turns himself into the police as the murderer. Rocco doesn't believe Victor's story since he doesn't believe Victor had any real reason to murder Darryl. But he does believe however, that since Strike went bad and did have a motive to kill Darryl and Victor remained a good person, that Strike is the real murderer, but can he prove it?
This is in fact Spike Lee's most underrated film, even more underrated than his epic Malcolm X. Clockers offers an inside look into the world of black on black crime. What's even more disturbing about Clockers is that it opens up playing Marc Dorsey's song "People In Search Of A Life" while showing us bloody crime scene photos. I heard that Spike Lee said he did this for "the maximum effect". I guess that means he wanted show us the true nature of street crime and the effect it has on the community where they happen.
Mekhi Phifer makes an impressive film debut as Strike, the lead clocker. He isn't necessarily a bad person nor is he a good person either. His influence on Tyrone Jeeter(Pee Wee Love) a young boy whom Strike takes under his wing, is frightening, as well as it is disturbing. Tyrone begins the same sort of transformation that Strike went through after Rodney got a hold of him. As Strike tells Tyrone about Errol Barnes, "Oh, don't think that just cuz your a kid and all, that he won't smoke you. Why just last year I heard he caught himself a 10-year old." A striking moment in the movie that shows street crime can happen to anyone, even kids.
Keith David gives a terrific, yet under-used performance as Andre The Giant, a local housing police officer who tries unsuccessfully to keep Tyrone from becoming like Strike.
I think one of the most over-looked performance here however is Thomas Jefferson Byrd who plays Errol Barnes, a middle-aged man who is dying of AIDS. He is Rodney's right-hand man and is also a known child murderer. ***SPOILERS AHEAD*** Spike Lee also creates a sort of ironic twist-of-fate for Errol towards the end of the movie.
Clockers is a very disturbing film that should have gotten more attention from critics as well as the movie public.
I loved this movie and I never get tired of watching it.
Clockers gets a 10/10
3 out of 4 people found the following comment useful :-

Spike Lee's early film is solid, 22 September 2006
Author: PersianPlaya408 from Milpitas, California
Spike Lee's urban drama about a drugpusher who the police become suspicious towards after a man is found with 4 bullets in him in their neighborhood. This is a good early film from Spike Lee, he later built on this film's theme with much better films in He Got Game and The 25th Hour. But this one was also solid, with some very good performances and certain very good scenes. The screenplay was pretty good, based on Price's own book, and i liked Phifer, Turturro and Keitel a lot in this. Good cinematography from Malik Hassan Sayeed and editing from Smuael D. Pollard. Terence Blanchard's score is also not bad. overall a solid mid 90s film from Spike Lee.--- IMDb Rating: 6.8, my rating: 8/10
1 out of 1 people found the following comment useful :-

gritty, truthful crime drama that takes formula and makes it gripping and incendiary, 19 April 2007
Author: Filmjack3 from United States
I was glad to see on the special edition DVD of Spike Lee's Do the Right Thing to see how he answered the question asked at Cannes as to why there weren't drugs portrayed in the film; his answer, simply, was that there wasn't enough space dramatically, that it would be too much to fit drugs into a story already loaded with racism in a small neighborhood. But, as he followed, he could use what it means to have drugs in an urban environment, and what it does to the people, and have that as a stand-alone movie. He followed this up, in part, with the Samuel L. Jackson storyline in Jungle Fever, and thanks to Richard Price's novel and original script, he has here what might be his answer to that question. It's not a very great movie, perhaps, because by this time Spike Lee has so much invested in the style of his cinematic theatrics, of how the nature of the camera itself related to those of the characters, that it comes close to going over substance. But it's is a worthy attempt at putting into context, via the conventions of genre going back to the 40s, as to what makes or breaks the ties between drug dealers and their workers, and how the workers (or 'Clockers' as per the title of the movie) go about their business in the streets.
Clockers has a main plot that pushes along, as the murder by multiple gun-shots of a Darryl, black fast-food worker, who was also apart of the crew of Rodney (Delroy Lindo), call into question who might have done it. At first, it seems pretty open and shut, as Victor (Isaiah Washington) comes forth and admits he did it in self-defense. Rocco Klein (Harvey Keitel) doesn't buy it, seems too easy, so he asks around, digs deeper, and sees that his brother, Strike (Mekhi Pfeifer) seems to be much more of the guilty party, by way of how he handles himself in the streets, his repore with Rodney, and as having more motive to kill Darryl. It's through this that Lee then branches it out to make it as much as character as about plot, where the ties between certain characters, like Strike and Tyrone, a pre-teen who looks up to Strike like a surrogate father, are mostly defined by how the neighborhood works out in the open. The clockers are bunch of would-be gang-bangers who talk a lot of talk, but haven't walked nearly as much as Earle, best friend of Rodney's and psychopathic murder, or Rodney himself, who has that veneer of being like the one you can trust the most- half surrogate father as well and half good cop/bad cop boss- until he gets crossed.
Although Price's material, which comes through with the energy and occasional wit, is noticeable throughout, it's really Spike Lee as director and many of the actors who make this a consistently watchable movie. Lee is never one to be too subtle with the camera, and he has variations with how he deals with the material to make it very observant but also subjective. Early on, for example, we see the clockers making their deals in the park in long-shot, shaky, as if Lee's filming it far away for a reality TV show. But then we also see the 360 degree camera moves as Klein questions Strike. There's many camera moves that are practically trademark Lee shots, especially with the lighting, as Klein questions Tyrone, or when we see a flashback to Victor having to deal with some clockers. It's all very flamboyant and meant to call attention to the material, and aside from a few unneeded music choices (it's the only time you'll hear Seal in a drug dealer crime movie), he's on top of things. Meanwhile, the performances are all top-notch, usually, as Keitel and particularly Lindo play their characters so well by pretty much being how we think the actors 'really' are, even though they're not. Pfeifer has a little trickier a time with his performance, because he usually is on a very similar note: I didn't do nothing, is his usual beat. His character also has the intriguing qualities that mark him as something of an outsider however in he might be: his stomach virus, which is never resolved but always looming over him, and his love of electric train-sets.
And all the while, Clockers succeeds in presenting a time and place where there should be little to no hope, and it makes the cops and criminals both pretty well-rounded when compared to other genre films. The cops are meant to be the good guys, but there's also a steady conflict between Klein and his partner: why should Klein care so much as to who did it or why (Strike also asks this question towards the end, in one of the best scenes in the film)? And Strike and Rodney are not cut-outs from black exploitation flicks, but with more of a push and pull tie that is always a threat, never a comfort. There are little details that help make Lee's film interesting when it veers into being like a television serial; the white yuppies who get entangled in the case; the over-protective but very smart cop (Keith David, always a pro) who also tries to play surrogate father to Tyrone, albeit without the same care, however negative, as Strike has; the brief shots of the drug addicts with their habits on display, as we only need to see it for less than a minute to get the nature of the bottom of the food chain, which is total despair. Lee's film, however, isn't really disparaging as it has moments of hope, yet a hope meant to be in understanding that there's no easy way out of all of this.
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