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Ron Stallworth : That Nigger detective, did you ever did you ever get his name? David Duke : No. I don't think I Ron Stallworth : Are-uh you sure you don't know who he is? Are-uh you absolutely sure? David Duke : Wind chime? Sign In. Play trailer Biography Comedy Crime.

Director Spike Lee. Top credits Director Spike Lee. See more at IMDbPro. Trailer Clip A Guide to Spike Lee Joints. Can Oscars Avoid Hostless Disaster of ? The Rise of John David Washington. Interview Video Photos Top cast Edit. Alec Baldwin Dr. Kennebrew Beauregard as Dr. Kennebrew Beauregard. Isiah Whitlock Jr. Turrentine as Mr. Arthur J. Damaris Lewis Odetta as Odetta. Ato Blankson-Wood Hakeem as Hakeem. Spike Lee. More like this. Watch options. Storyline Edit. In the early s, Ron Stallworth is hired as the first black officer in the Colorado Springs, Colorado police department.

Stallworth is initially assigned to work in the records room, where he faces racial slurs from his coworkers. Stallworth requests a transfer to go undercover, and is assigned to infiltrate a local rally at which national civil rights leader Kwame Ture birth name Stokely Carmichael is to give a speech. At the rally, Stallworth meets Patrice Dumas, the president of the black student union at Colorado College. While taking Ture to his hotel, Patrice is stopped by patrolman Andy Landers, a corrupt, racist officer in Stallworth's precinct, who threatens Ture and sexually assaults Patrice..

Infiltrate hate. Biography Comedy Crime Drama. Did you know Edit. Trivia The real Ron Stallworth had originally wanted Denzel Washington to play him, but was ecstatic to find out his son got the role. Goofs If the members want to hide the real purpose of "The Organization", there is no explanation to show a newspaper advertising with the name "Ku Klux Klan".

Quotes Ron Stallworth : [answering a phone call from Duke] Mr. David Duke : Oh. David Duke : Shoot. User reviews Review. Top review. One hell of a movie. Spike Lee has created an almost unimaginably uneven career in films, but it has never been in doubt, that he is one of the most talented American filmmakers of his generation. And should you have forgotten that, now you can remind yourself by watching the amazing "BlacKkKlansman", which won the Grand Prix at Cannes in May.

Lee tackles head-on the contemporary hot topics of racism, the police killing black Americans, and white supremacy to create an overwhelming pamphlet about the American identity - which has been hurled into a state of great confusion after the last presidential election.

Movies don't come much more political as this one. In a way, "BlacKkKlansman" is a companion piece to "The Post" - a movie that similarly discussed the current political climate in a 70's setting - but with loads more of blackness, humour, anger and attitude. It's a better movie, too.

Though not perfect. Form-wise, "BlacKkKlansman" is sometimes paced oddly and feels needlessly long: not overlong, exactly, because you're not going to be bored for a minute. Visually it could have used a little more of the delicious textures typical of those 70's blacksploitations it makes references to. However, for how long will Ron and Flip be able to keep going their increasingly dangerous charade? A semi-fictionalized account of Ron Stallworth , the first black officer hired in the Colorado Springs Police Department in , is presented.

His hiring in what was the still highly anti-black racist mentality of the force was to diversity it outwardly. Always wanting to be a policeman, Ron never embraced the black stereotype, he largely coming across as white except for his physical black characteristics. Not enjoying the menial tasks of the records room where he is initially assigned and where he is often bombarded with racial slurs by his fellow officers, he is able to convince his superiors that his unique attributes are better suited to undercover work.

Those superiors want to assign him infiltrate a black activist student union group led by Patrice Dumas, they who are bringing in a black leader speaker, Kwame Ture, Ron's assignment to ensure that no radical activities take place especially during what is anticipated as the highly charged talk. In addition to this assignment, Ron, on a whim in answering a newspaper ad via a telephone call, is able to infiltrate the local chapter of the KKK, a subsequent call which makes its way to the national grand wizard himself, David Duke.

His one big mistake in the telephone calls: using his real name. Ron thinks he has a way around this error by having one of his fellow undercover cops, Flip Zimmerman, to be "Ron Stallworth" in any meeting with the KKK, despite they sounding nothing alike.

Much like Ron in not being typically "black", Flip, ethnically Jewish, was never devoted to his faith. This undercover work in its entirety places Ron's life in a precarious balance as he begins to embrace issues of his blackness, especially as it relates to Patrice.

Sign In. Edit BlacKkKlansman Jump to: Summaries 6 Synopsis 1. The synopsis below may give away important plot points. Getting Started Contributor Zone ». Edit page. Top Gap. See more gaps ». Create a list ». For dad to watch.



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