Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Netflix greenlights Spike Lee’s foray into series TV

netflix greenlights spike lee tv adaptation 1
Drew Gurian / Red Bull Content Pool
With just 12 days of filming and $175,000 on hand, Spike Lee unleashed his first feature-length film, She’s Gotta Have It, in 1986. Thirty years later, the director is bringing the movie to the small screen, marking his foray into series television.

Netflix has greenlighted a 10-episode-long adaptation of the film, according to the Hollywood Reporter, which Lee will direct and executive produce with his wife, producer Tonya Lewis Lee. The streaming service has not announced plans for the project past the first season, but one would imagine that if the series is well-received, Lee could pursue a second season.

The original movie grossed more than $7 million at the U.S. box office, a hefty haul at the time for a low-budget, first-time indie filmmaker, especially given the film’s controversial plotline and themes. She’s Gotta Have It explored black female empowerment in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, a topic many would argue mainstream Hollywood has still largely avoided, following the coattails of movements like #OscarsSoWhite and the rare portrayal of black sexuality on the big screen.

The film specifically explored the double standard of promiscuity — men are celebrated for polygamy, while women are shamed for sexual freedom, especially in the black community.

Related: Joseph Gordon-Levitt wrestled with Edward Snowden’s legacy before meeting him in person

The New York Times wrote that the film “ushered in the American independent film movement of the 1980s. It was also a groundbreaking film for African-American filmmakers and a welcome change in the representation of blacks in American cinema, depicting men and women of color not as pimps and whores, but as intelligent, upscale urbanites.”

But while Lee has been celebrated for his adaptation of black female empowerment, the film has also been challenged, as Jezebel noted. This criticism has come most notably from bell hooks, the author, feminist, and social activist, who wrote that Lee “challenges and critiques notions of black male sexuality while presenting a very typical perspective on black female sexuality. His imaginative explorations of black male psyche is far more probing, far more expansive, and finally much more interesting than his exploration of black femaleness.”

With the release of the Netflix adaptation set after the original’s 30-year anniversary, bell hooks — and other feminists and social activists — would hope that with Tonya Lewis Lee joining the director at the helm, this version will better reflect what we consider true equality in 2016.

Harrison Kaminsky
Harrison’s obsession in the tech space originated in his father’s electronics store in Denville, New Jersey, where he…
Netflix’s Castlevania series should be your next dark-fantasy fix
Collage of the main cast of Castlevania season 3 on Netflix.

While the infamous "video game curse" is still prevalent today in modern-day adaptations, Netflix's Castlevania animated series was arguably the first to break that pattern. It originally premiered in 2017 with a brief, four-episode-long first season, but the impact that it had seemed to finally tap into the potential of video game series adapted for TV and/or film.

The jury is still out on whether live-action productions could do justice to their source material -- though, perhaps HBO's The Last of Us could produce that first major shift -- but the animation medium looks to have unlocked something. With fantasy cemented as a pop culture staple thanks to the likes of House of the Dragon and The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, Castlevania is an excellent animated dark-fantasy series to binge. From its stylish anime inspiration to its stunningly animated set pieces, it chases that genre high.
The perfect blend of Western style with Japanese anime

Read more
Treason trailer features Charlie Cox in Netflix’s MI6 series
Charlie Cox stands against the wall in a scene from Treason.

Netflix has released the first trailer for Treason, an espionage thriller set in the world of MI6. The limited series features Charlie Cox as Adam Lawrence, a British intelligence officer thrust into command after a failed assassination attempt against the chief of MI6.

Treason | Official Trailer | Netflix

Read more
Resident Evil review: Netflix series aims high, falls short
A hooded figure holding a bloody chainsaw stands amid prison cells in a scene from the Resident Evil series.

It can't be easy to be a fan of the Resident Evil franchise.

On one hand, you have a groundbreaking, generation-spanning Resident Evil game franchise with a rich (albeit wildly complicated) lore that shows no signs of slowing down. On the other hand, all of that popularity has spawned countless, low-quality spin-offs attempting to capitalize on the Resident Evil brand without channeling much (if any) of the franchise's appeal.

Read more