
SummaryAn Italian-American neighborhood in the Bronx is terrorized during David Berkowitz's (aka Son of Sam) 1977 murder spree.
Directed By:Spike Lee
Written By:Spike Lee, Victor Colicchio, Michael Imperioli
Summer of Sam
Metascore
Generally Favorable
67
User score
Generally Favorable
7.0
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
69% Positive
18 Reviews
18 Reviews
31% Mixed
8 Reviews
8 Reviews
0% Negative
0 Reviews
0 Reviews
100
This is a terrific movie: jolting, savage, horrifically funny, nightmarishly exciting but also brainy and compassionate.
80
Lee gives us cross-section of characters, almost none of whom escape the summer unchanged.
75
It is a dark, violent, sexually explicit motion picture that will surely offend timid viewers.
70
A tabloid slice of tabloid life, ragged, vivid, awkward and punchy all at once.
63
It's a kaleidoscope of ideas that range from exciting to silly and gaudy.
60
Spike Lee is a virtuoso filmmaker, a wizard at selling a sequence, but he'll never make an entirely coherent movie until he learns to go deeper into his subjects instead of wider with them.
50
If there's any moral to this sorry story, perhaps Lee's stealth-message is it: Even when it's not about race, it is.
User score
Generally Favorable
68% Positive
17 Ratings
17 Ratings
24% Mixed
6 Ratings
6 Ratings
8% Negative
2 Ratings
2 Ratings
Feb 1, 2015
9
Summer of Sam has a couple different meanings. It's not quite Son of Sam, the nickname of the serial killer the movie is ostensibly about. It's also an abbreviation for SOS, as in mayday. These are on purpose. Spike Lee centers a movie about paranoia, changing times, metaphorical dog collars, war, post trauma, stress, sexual revolutions, disco vs punk and scapegoats into one electric, charged, throbbing explosion of a movie. It's a bit indulgent, maybe doesn't completely add up, and isn't quite perfect in its period detail (enough about this particular punk scene being a year or two off, this is art!). The film revolves around these murders because they represent another movement in American history. One in which the hangover from Vietnam is finally fading, and what's left is the feeling that we have been used and abused. Like dogs, wearing the collar. Adrien Brody's punk rocker represents this rebellion against the collar, against the causeless wars and manipulation. Punk, gay and uninterested in conformity. John Leguizamo (with a performance that questions how he never quite became the star he should have been), still wears the collar, refuses to treat his wife properly and sleeps around. He treats her as an object to be on a pedestal, not one to be shamed and used like all those other "free love" types. This PTSD serial killer is hearing orders from a dog wearing its collar (literally, in one of a couple surreal sequences that clearly establish this film as metaphor and fever dream), just like Nam' and he can't stop killing. So blame the punks, the gays, the unorthodox priests, anyone but the master. You gotta fight the powers that be.
Nov 28, 2021
5
I didn't think the plot was very strong, or obvious, in this film. I didn't feel like I got much of an insight into the killer. The performances are ok but its mostly a film with lots of swearing, sex references and some violence. It didn't seem, to me, to equate to much. I did quite like the songs played in the soundtrack though. I wanted to watch it as I saw Adrian Brody is in it and I quite like films he's in. He seems to play a supposedly British punk rocker, which is amusing to see, certainly but I wouldn't call it an especially engrossing watch at all. It isn't even particularly scary. Its ok. Also the dialogue is a bit muffled and thus hard to follow in its entirety at times, with a lot of talk between urban/edgy people who can be highly strung. I wouldn't recommend this, no.




























