With Spike Lee's 'BlacKkKlansman,' Focus Features' Strategy to Reinvent Its Roster Becomes Clear
Spike Lee soaked up the love at his exuberant “BlacKkKlansman” afterparty on the beach at Cannes. “It’s not comedy, it’s humor,” he reminded me. He knows he’s back in top form, returning to the glory days of “Do the Right Thing,” which 27 years ago memorably lost the Palme d’Or to “sex, lies and videotape.”
For any movie to turn out well is a “miracle,” Lee admitted at the Tuesday morning Cannes press conference. The project lined up perfectly. Under their Universal deals, “Get Out” producers Jason Blum and Jordan Peele worked with QC Entertainment to develop a memoir about how African-American Colorado Springs police officer Ron Stallworth infiltrated the Ku Klux Klan. Peele considered directing it, but they decided to first try Spike Lee.
“If there’s a dream director to do this project, Spike’s the guy,” said Focus Features chairman Peter Kujawski at his Cannes office at the Carlton Hotel. “That collective of producers, including Jason, then went and had the conversation with Spike, who immediately read it and said, “Yep. I see what this can be.’”