"Mo' Better Blues" , underrated but acclaimed director Spike Lee's fourth film, is both a confident personal ode to the art of jazz and it's roots in the African American experience, and a personal portrait of the artist and his struggle with mainstream acceptance. But wait , I said underrated, and I want to expound upon and qualify that statement, even though I really shouldn’t have to. Starting with the fact that I believe that every black director that ever existed is in some way underrated, and definitely those who have arrived to the point that their films received any widespread recognition and/or acclaim. Blackness is in and of itself in America “otherness”, and so too are black achievements. There is no space where black achievement or experience doesn’t live in and unto its own in America, and Hollywood is no outlier here. In fact they’ve been a willing accomplice, through propaganda, and discrimination. This inherent loneliness of blackness in America, is not without its merits, separation can be a great muse for creation, and the need to create, the necessity - the mother of invention, and we all know black people have created, and invented quite a lot here in the wilderness. But any isolation one cannot choose to depart or return from is confinement, it is a prison. Like all prisons, this prison restricts movement, and constricts the soul and in the case of the artist a great deal of things but none with a more insidious effect on the soul than the limitation and restriction of audience, bias, and imposed inferiority. The artist longs for an audience, and beyond the audience, recognition, art for art’s sake is romantic , but mostly a reaction to commercialization and exploitation. It is important here because there is a connection, because Lee’s Film is largely about the struggle of the central character (Bleek Gilliam as played by Denzel Washington) with obsession, and possession. Whether conscious or unconscious, Bleek’s own frustration with this isolation materializes in a drunken conversation between our two main protagonist, Bleek and the other Alpha in the band “Shadow” (Wesley Snipes). In essence Bleek’s argument is born of an obsession with/of possession, (who owns Jazz) and of audience, (who sees it, curates it). Shadow on the other hand exposes Bleek’s own hypocrisy calling out Bleek’s own exploitative actions, as well as his obsession with possession. Bleek rigidly defines the boundaries of the art refusing it and anyone around him any room, any air, any growth. In a way Bleek has become institutionalized. He understands his art only from within the walls of his isolation…