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Jungle Fever
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Directed by Spike Lee.
Spike Lee defines "jungle fever" as sexual attraction between members of two races. In his film Jungle Fever, he examines the repercussions of an interracial affair upon two very distinct communities. Wesley Snipes is Flipper, a happily married and successful architect, and Annabella Sciorra is Angie, an office temp. When she starts working in Flipper's Manhattan office, one day they look at each other and are soon having sex over a blueprint-strewn desk. Their liaison causes an explosion on both homefronts. Flipper's family consists of his father Doctor Purify (Ossie Davis), a former preacher; his mother Lucinda (Ruby Dee); his violent, crackhead brother Gator (Samuel L. Jackson); and his wife Drew (Lonette McKee), whom he loves, despite his sexual attraction to Angie. Angie's family is a typical Italian-American household from Bensonhurst. She's engaged to Paulie Carbonne (John Turturro), who works in a deli owned by his father Lou (Anthony Quinn). When the two families find out about Flipper and Angie's affair, their shock leads to recriminations and racial animosity. ~ Paul Brenner, All Movie Guide
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CinemaRianCinemaRian Jungle Fever (1991, USA, Spike ...
by CinemaRian in CinemaRian Blog
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"I don't really know what Spike Lee is trying to say with Jungle Fever, his film about interracial romance and attraction. I'm not sure if this is a didactic "statement" movie or a De Sican "observation" movie. I mostly enjoyed while watching it, and think it has some important points, but too often meanders into uncessary subplots. The main story in a film with many is focused on Wesley Snipes (an really underrated actors) as "Flipper" Purify, a black man apparently happily married to a black woman (Lonette McKee) who works at an architectual firm. One day, out of the blue, he has an affair with his unmarried white secretary Angie (Annabella Sciorra), who has a casaul boyfriend (John Turturro) and lives with her family. The affair's cover is quickly blow and Flipper and Angie both get kicked out of their homes. Flipper's wife is doubly upset - both that he cheated on her, and the fact it was with a white woman, Angie's father (Frank Vincent) is just racist. There are many sub ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
is neutral about it.
Focused on interracial relationships, Jungle Fever deals less with race than with how and why relationships go sour -- usually because people get into them for the wrong reasons and with the wrong expectations. Race is the main problem in the short-lived romance of Flipper Purify (Wesley Snipes) and Angie Tucci (Annabella Sciorra), but mainly because they deny that race forms almost the whole basis of their attraction. On the other hand, the budding romance of Paulie (John Turturro) and Nilda (Phillis Stickney) makes clear that race isn't an issue if two people love each other. While Lee looks at romance at its best and worst, he also examines a family in collapse, as crack addict Gator (Samuel L. Jackson, in a remarkable performance that won a special award at the Cannes Film Festival) betrays his family's trust to support his habit. In short, like most of Spike Lee's best films, Jungle Fever has a lot more to say than a one-line description would lead you to believe, and, as always, Lee puts across his message with intelligence, skill, humanity, and occasional (and welcome) humor. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
 



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