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Image courtesy of Apple Films. |
Spike Lee's winning streak continues with "Highest 2 Lowest," an engrossing remake of Akira Kurosawa's "High and Low" that marks the director's fifth collaboration with Denzel Washington. Strangely enough, a recent film to which I might draw some slight comparisons is "Weapons" in that the film switches tones successfully and ends up becoming a lot more than from where it originally set out.
At the film's beginning, Washington plays David King, a record executive whose visage has graced the front of every major magazine and who, in the early 2000s, was known to have the "best ears in the business" due to his ability to find talent. When we first meet him, he's still a big player in the industry, but his best days are, perhaps, behind him and he's in the middle of selling his company, Stackin' Records, to a corporate entity that he fears will dismantle all that he's built.
Adding to his troubles is the sudden kidnapping of his basketball star son, Trey (Aubrey Joseph), by a menacing individual who threatens to kill the young man during phone calls for ransom money. The police are brought in and, at first, they spend a lot of time harassing Paul Christopher (Jeffrey Wright), David's right-hand man and chauffeur, because of his past criminal associations and time served.
But, much like Kurosawa's film, there's a twist - and I wouldn't read any further if you don't want to hear more: The kidnappers accidentally took the wrong person. Trey is returned, while Paul Christopher's son, Kyle (Elijah Wright), is the one being held. David must then grapple with whether he should pay the $17.5 million to the kidnappers to save Kyle, knowing full well that he needs the money to buy out his company to prevent its sale as well as to not breach a contract that could lead to legal troubles for him.
The first half of the film contains a fair amount of long shots, distancing us somewhat from the characters. The filmmaking is sleek as the camera glides around David's expensive New York penthouse, and there is more than a little melodrama - David and his wife, Pam (Ilfenesh Hadera) being upset about their son seemingly being kidnapped, the drama between Paul Christopher and the cops, and the fraught moments between David, his family, and his chauffeur about whether to spring for Kyle's release.
But the film switches into a different gear about halfway through the picture as David and the cops set up a money drop with the kidnappers. Perhaps Martin Scorsese is the only other director who can show as much love visually to New York City as Spike Lee, and there's an incredible series of moments as David goes on foot through the city's Puerto Rican Day festival - where Rosie Perez, Anthony Ramos, and various Puerto Rican musicians portray themselves as a massive crowd full of people dance in the streets - carrying the bag of money and boards a train for the drop.
The film becomes more of a thriller after another great twist later in the film having to do with David's reputation as having the "best ears in the business." This leads him to the recording studio of an aspiring rapper, Yung Felon (A$AP Rocky), who might have something to do with the kidnapping. There's a great tete a tete between Yung Felon and David in a recording studio that might come across as a rap battle, though it's not as simplistic as it sounds.
Lee has been on a roll in recent years. His "BlacKKKlansman" was my favorite film of 2018, while "Da 5 Bloods" was in my top five two years later. His David Byrne concert film, "American Utopia," was energetic and his latest is also solid. The film marks his third remake - following an "Oldboy" reimagining and "Da Sweet Blood of Jesus," which was a riff on the 1970s blaxploitation picture "Ganja & Hess" - and it's easily his best of the bunch.
Washington and Lee's collaborations rank up there with some of the best modern filmmaking duos - Scorsese and Robert De Niro and Ethan Hawke and Richard Linklater. "Highest 2 Lowest" marks the best role for Washington in a Lee film since the 1992 masterpiece "Malcolm X." This is a solid film that features terrific cinematography, is a wonderful attempt at capturing New York City's vibe, is a well-made thriller, and is an interesting take on the value of art - in this picture, particularly Black art.
There's a compelling sequence late in the film in which A$AP Rocky's rapper and Washington's producer get into a debate about good money vs. bad money as well as fads vs. art that lasts. A$AP's character notes how he has become popular due to his notoriety and that we are currently living in an attention economy, meaning he who gets the most attention gets the most money. This certainly also applies to our politics. Lee does a masterful job of slipping a profound debate on the value of art into a film that's essentially a thriller and a remake. I'm glad to see him on such a roll as of late and look forward to whatever he does next.