To those ends, the way his film translates its themes of absentee fathers, over-policing, urban divestment, systemic abuse and gentrification has been viewed by some as didactic. Mike notes, “If push came to shove, though, I’d take 2 Fast 2 Furious over this earnest after school special,” while Asjad writes, “A lot of the times it’s just characters explaining stuff in these expository kind of dialogues rather than letting it come through impressionistically.” Jordan concludes, “It’s definitely obvious this is a first time writer/director here. It doesn’t match the technical and dramatic sharpness of Do the Right Thing. Yet that doesn’t mean that Singleton doesn’t have as much to say and he articulates what he’s saying surprisingly well considering.”
To Jordan’s point, it is of course worth noting that Singleton, fresh out of USC, made Boyz n the Hood when he was only 23 years old. The film catapulted him to a Cannes premiere, and minted him as not only the first Black person nominated for Best Director at the Academy Awards but also the youngest director overall to be recognized. To date, he remains one of only six Black directors nominated in the category: Lee Daniels, Steve McQueen, Barry Jenkins, Jordan Peele and Spike Lee following in his footsteps. (No Black woman has ever been nominated.)
Singleton’s youth continues to surprise many newcomers to the picture. “How does a 22-year-old director already have such poetic license over the implicit and explicit,” asks Jos. “A 23-year-old made this movie. I’m 22. Yesterday I had a hard cider and then it made me throw up so I called my mom and she told me to get ginger ale so I GoPuffed it to myself and [watched] SpongeBob until I was calm enough to go to sleep. So,” Sarah playfully observes.