seeking independence
by Douglas Messerli
Spike Lee (writer and director) She’s Gotta
Have It / 1968
In Spike Lee’s first feature film, shot on the
near impossibly small budge of 175,000, is a charming film about a black
woman’s self-empowerment in a world in which the men have always had the upper
hand with it comes to multi-sexual relationships.
Despite that powerful theme, however, Lee’s film does not preach to us,
but simply allows the woman, in this case the remarkably intelligent and
beautiful Nola Darling (Tracy Camilla Johns) to tell her own story and present
the trio (or would-be quartet, which includes Opal Gilstrap [Raye Dowell]) of
sexual encounters she has with three men, who all desire her, and one lesbian
friend, who would love to get her into bed.
Anyone, it appears, is welcome—as long as you have some special
personality trait that Nola enjoys.
Jamie Oversteet (Tommy Redmond Hicks) is an equally intelligent gentle
lover who is perhaps best suited to Nola’s own personality, but even he is kept
at a distance.
The least suitable is Greer Childs (John Canada Terrell), a successful,
if self-centered model who has become fairly wealthy. He takes Nola into a
world of fine dining and other areas of culture which she clearly enjoys.
Mars Blackmon (Spike Lee) is a kind of idiot motor mouth, but he’s funny
and makes Nola laugh in way only she can.
What the lovers of this story resent is that she has not given all her
love to one of them. Even though Nola tries to bring peace to her entourage, by
inviting them to her place for Thanksgiving dinner, they fight, destroying any
good that might have come out of the celebration.
As Nola makes clear in direct statements before the camera, that is what
her life is: a kind of celebration of womanhood, of a woman who does not want
to be tied down to one man.
Even after she dismisses Mars and Greer (the latter of who insists that
for Nola the three of them acted together as a kind of machine of 3 penises and
6 arms), choosing Jamie to be her companion, the relationship does not last
long.
For she refuses to be tied down to one man. The “she’s gotta to have it”
of the title is not as much about sex as it is about the independence Nola
continually seeks. Yes, she loves sex, but it is the friendships with her
lovers that she most cherishes, the special things she discovers in each of
them. And, in that sense, particularly in 1986 when this movie was first
released, that was a radical act. For any woman to declare that she wanted sex
without any of the strings attached was seldom permitted.
And that is why Lee’s rather modest film is so very fulfilling. It is
the woman in control here, not the men who surround and would fold her into
their singular lives.
You
can call her a freak, a nymphomaniac, whatever…. But she is still a force to be
reckoned with.
Los Angeles, June 13, 2020
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (June
2020).
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