He Got Game is a 1998 drama-sports film directed by Spike Lee starring Denzel Washington and Ray Allen as a father and son trying to reconcile on the eve of the son's graduation from a Coney Island high school, and under pressure to decide which college basketball scholarship offer he will accept. Allen's character, named Jesus Shuttlesworth, is an extremely talented basketball player being pursued by the top college programs in the nation. Washington's character is a convicted felon serving time at the Attica Correctional Facility for accidentaly killing his wife (his son's mother) by pushing her while arguing with his son. The father is therefore temporarily released by the governor, an influential alum of one of the colleges Jesus is considering, so that he might direct his son to sign with the governor's college. He Got Game offers emotional looks into the varied topics of basketball (including urban dreams of professional success), the dynamics of the father-son relationship, the effects on young black men of growing up with absent fathers or parents, and the moral dilemma of choosing between material gain and the 'right' thing to do. The film features cameos by several well-known basketball players, coaches, and announcers. It opened to mixed reviews. Due to the dark and brooding undertone of the film, it often isn't included in praise with other "softer" portrayals of urban basketball such as "Coach Carter". The film includes several of Spike Lee's signature touches, including a monologue on social issues in the Black community and brief and graphic depictions of sex and violence. It does not, however, feature the "rolling camera" action, depicting a character lost in thought. Time Out London, in an otherwise generally favourable review, summed up with, "Most scenes play too long, with a surplus of ideas, textures, tones and characters, and after 134 minutes it's clear Lee's problem with closure hasn't gone away." Roger Ebert gave the film three-and-a-half-stars, and called it Lee's best film since Malcolm X. He was particularly encouraged by Lee's determination not to adhere to typical conventions. The soundtrack for He Got Game was a hybrid, composed of numerous orchestral pieces by Aaron Copland with songs created by the political rap group Public Enemy. It was released by Def Jam on April 21, 1998. He Got Game was produced on an estimated $25,000,000 budget. In the opening weekend of its release, it was shown on 1,319 screens, and took in $7,610,663 at the U.S. box offices. It would eventually gross a total of $21,554,585. |