Passing Strange

2008 Documentary

Oscar-nominated filmmaker Spike Lee turns his camera toward the stage for this filmed performance of the acclaimed Broadway musical by singer/songwriter Stew and his creative partner Heidi Rodewald. Developed at the Sundance Theater Lab, the story follows a young black man from Los Angeles as he attempts to make sense of the conflicted cultural signals constantly bombarding him from all sides. Raised in a religious household somewhere south of Interstate 10, the frustrated adolescent feels suffocated by his mother's fixation on family ties, her unwavering devotion to the church, and her unapologetically bourgeois aspirations in life. He longs to experience something "real" in life, ultimately making the decision to follow in the footsteps of James Baldwin and Josephine Baker by traveling to Europe and exploring the world. From outrageous Amsterdam to ultra-militant Berlin, the impressionable wanderer experiences misadventures with sex, drugs, politics, and art as his eyes are opened ever wider to the world around him. more..

Director: Spike Lee

Reviews

  • I can't single out a performance. This is a superb ensemble, conveying hat joy actors feel when hey know they're good in good material. This is not a traditional feature, but it's one of Spike Lee's best films.

    Roger Ebert - The Chicago Sun-Times

    19 January 2013

  • A show not simply preserved by Mr. Leeâ??s camera, but brought, somehow, to its fullest, strangest, most electrifying realization.

    A.O. Scott - The New York Times

    19 January 2013

  • In directing the film, Lee allows the show's inherent vitality to carry the doc, relying on Stew's charismatic stage presence, the cast's absorbing performances and the production's effective combination of minimal staging and impressive lighting design to convey the musical's energetic celebration of artistic discovery.

    - The Hollywood Reporter

    19 January 2013

  • Passing Strange conjures a rare kind of theatrical magic with its emotionally raw, frequently euphoric portrait of the artist as a young man.

    - Village Voice

    19 January 2013

  • As for Lee, he clearly relates to this material and the questions of political, musical and family identity he himself raised in films as diverse as "Malcolm X," "Mo' Better Blues" and "Crooklyn."

    Peter Travers - Rolling Stone

    19 January 2013

Awards

  • Best Director

    Black Reel Awards (2010)

     
  • Outstanding Directing in a Motion Picture (Theatrical or Television)

    Image Awards (2010)