Spike Lee Shares Why He Still Loves Making Films

spike lee
NEW YORK, NEW YORK – APRIL 04: Spike Lee attends Variety’s 2023 Power of Women presented by Lifetime at The Grill on April 04, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Slaven Vlasic/FilmMagic)

​Spike Lee is still passionate about filmmaking.

​Speaking with E! News, the Oscar winner shared why he still loves his craft.

​”Look at the work,” he said, “Look at them joints. And look at them Spike Lee joints.”

​Lee made his 1986 feature film debut with She’s Gotta Have It. A landmark of independent cinema that redefined,  the film centers Black female agency and urban romance. It follows Nola Darling, a free-spirited Brooklyn artist who juggles three very different suitors at the same time

​“My community’s been honoring me by going to my films since She’s Gotta Have It way back in 1986,” he explained. “Next year’s gonna be the 40th anniversary.”

​After directing 25 feature films and 12 documentaries, Lee says he still has more to do.

​“There are a lot of films I have not made yet,” he continued, “but it’ll get done.”

​Lee recently received the Career Achievement Award at the Critics’ Choice Association’s 8th annual Celebration of Black Cinema and Television.

​Lee praised Ryan Coogler for his directorial work on Sinners during his speech.

“They’re never going to invite me to another screening because I was acting like I was courtside at The Garden,” Lee said.

​Lee then showed his displeasure with the Academy for snubbing Delroy Lindo over the years.

​”F**k the Academy, they can kiss my Black ass two times,” Lee said.

​Lee’s latest film, Highest 2 Lowest, reunited him with long-time collaborator Denzel Washington. A modern “reinterpretation” of Akira Kurosawa’s 1963 classic High and Low, the story centers on David King (Washington), a powerhouse New York City music mogul at the height of his career. The plot ignites when a kidnapper, played by A$AP Rocky, abducts a child in a case of mistaken identity. Instead of King’s own son, they take the son of King’s loyal chauffeur (Jeffrey Wright).