One of the most electrifying heroes of the twentieth century receives an appropriately sweeping screen biopic, rich in both historical insight and propulsive cinematic style, courtesy of visionary director Spike Lee. Built around an extraordinary performance from Denzel Washington, Malcolm X draws on the iconic civil rights leader’s autobiography to trace his journey of empowerment, from a childhood riven by white-supremacist violence to a life of petty crime to his conversion to Islam and rebirth as a fearless fighter for Black liberation, whose courage and eloquence inspired oppressed communities the world over. An epic of impeccable craft that was made with Lee’s closest creative collaborators and is buoyed by commanding performances from Delroy Lindo, Angela Bassett, Al Freeman Jr., and others, this is a passionate monument to a man whose life continues to serve as a model of principled resistance.
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Supplements
- Audio commentary from 2005 featuring director Spike Lee, Ernest Dickerson, editor Barry Brown, and costume designer Ruth E. Carter
- New conversation between Spike Lee and journalist and screenwriter Barry Michael Cooper
- New interview with actor Delroy Lindo
- New interview with composer Terence Blanchard
- Program about the making of the film, featuring Spike Lee, Ernest Dickerson, Barry Brown, Terence Blanchard, Ruth E. Carter, filmmaker Martin Scorsese, actor Ossie Davis, Reverend Al Sharpton, former Warner Bros. executive Lucy Fisher, producers Preston Holmes and Jon Kilik, production designer Wynn Thomas, casting director Robi Reed, and Malcolm X’s daughter Ilyasah Shabazz
- Malcolm X (1972), a feature-length documentary produced by Marvin Worth and Arnold Perl and directed by Perl, narrated by actor James Earl Jones
- Deleted scenes with introductions by Spike Lee
- Trailer
- An essay by Barry Michael Cooper, excerpts from Spike Lee's 1992 book By Any Means Necessary: The Trials and Tribulations of the Making of “Malcolm X” . . ., and Ossie Davis’s eulogy for Malcolm X

