Tag: do the right thing

  • Every Spike Lee Movie Ranked from Worst to Best

    Oscar® nominee Spike Lee arrives on the red carpet of The 91st Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 24, 2019. Credit/Provider: Kyusung Gong / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.
    Oscar® nominee Spike Lee arrives on the red carpet of The 91st Oscars® at the Dolby® Theatre in Hollywood, CA on Sunday, February 24, 2019. Credit/Provider: Kyusung Gong / ©A.M.P.A.S. Copyright: ©A.M.P.A.S.

    Spike Lee is one of the most accomplished and important filmmakers of his generation.

    Lee began his career with such acclaimed films as ‘Do the Right Thing‘, ‘Mo’ Better Blues‘, ‘Jungle Fever‘, ‘Clockers‘, and ‘Malcolm X‘, and in recent years as helmed modern classics like ‘Inside Man‘, ‘Da 5 Bloods‘ and ‘BlacKkKlansman‘, for which he won Best Adapted Screenplay.

    His latest movie, ‘Highest 2 Lowest‘, which marks his fifth collaboration with Denzel Washington, opens in theaters on August 15th before debuting on Apple TV+ on September 15th.

    In honor of ‘Highest 2 Lowest’, Moviefone is counting down every film Spike Lee has ever directed from worst to best, including his latest.

    Let’s begin!


    25. ‘Bamboozled‘ (2000)

    Damon Wayans in 'Bamboozled'. Photo: New Line Cinema.
    Damon Wayans in ‘Bamboozled’. Photo: New Line Cinema.

    Frustrated when network brass reject his sitcom idea, producer Pierre Delacroix (Damon Wayans) pitches the worst idea he can think of in an attempt to get fired: a 21st century minstrel show. The network not only airs it, but it becomes a smash hit.

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    24. ‘Joe’s Bed-Stuy Barbershop: We Cut Heads‘ (1983)

    Zack Homer (Monty Ross) takes over managing the barbershop after Joe (Horace Long) is killed for trying to rip off his “investor”, Mr. Lovejoy (Tommy Redmond Hicks). All Zack wants to do is run a traditional barbershop giving traditional haircuts, but modern styles have passed him by and business is slow. One evening, Mr. Lovejoy shows up to offer Zack the same deal he gave to Joe. It could turn his business around, but what will he have to give in return?

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    23. ‘Chi-Raq‘ (2015)

    A modern day adaptation of the ancient Greek play Lysistrata by Aristophanes, set against the backdrop of gang violence in Chicago.

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    22. ‘Da Sweet Blood of Jesus‘ (2015)

    Dr. Hess Green (Stephen Tyrone Williams) becomes cursed by a mysterious ancient African artifact and is overwhelmed with a newfound thirst for blood. Soon after his transformation he enters into a dangerous romance with Ganja Hightower (Zaraah Abrahams) that questions the very nature of love, addiction, sex, and status.

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    21. ‘Red Hook Summer‘ (2012)

    When his mom deposits him at the Red Hook housing project in Brooklyn to spend the summer with the grandfather he’s never met, young Flik (Jules Brown) may as well have landed on Mars. Fresh from his cushy life in Atlanta, he’s bored and friendless, and his strict grandfather, Enoch (Clarke Peters), a firebrand preacher, is bent on getting him to accept Jesus Christ as his personal savior. Only Chazz (Toni Lysaith), the feisty girl from church, provides a diversion from the drudgery. As hot summer simmers and Sunday mornings brim with Enoch’s operatic sermons, things turn anything but dull as people’s conflicting agendas collide.

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    20. ‘Get on the Bus‘ (1996)

    A scene from 'Get on the Bus'. Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.
    A scene from ‘Get on the Bus’. Photo: Sony Pictures Releasing.

    Several Black men take a cross-country bus trip to attend the Million Man March in Washington, DC in 1995. On the bus are an eclectic set of characters including a laid-off aircraft worker, a man whose at-risk son is handcuffed to him, a black Republican, a former gangsta, a Hollywood actor, a cop who is of mixed racial background, and a white bus driver. All make the trek discussing issues surrounding the march, including manhood, religion, politics, and race.

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    19. ‘Miracle at St. Anna‘ (2008)

    Miracle at St. Anna chronicles the story of four American soldiers who are members of the all-black 92nd “Buffalo Soldier” Division stationed in Tuscany, Italy during World War II.

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    18. ‘She Hate Me‘ (2004)

    Fired from his job, a former executive (Anthony Mackie) turns to impregnating wealthy lesbians for profit.

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    17. ‘Girl 6‘ (1996)

    A struggling actress (Theresa Randle) in New York City takes a job as a phone sex operator.

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    16. ‘Summer of Sam‘ (1999)

    During the summer of 1977, a killer known as the Son of Sam (Michael Badalucco) keeps all of New York City on edge with a series of brutal murders.

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    15. ‘Oldboy‘ (2013)

    Josh Brolin in 'Oldboy'. Photo: FilmDistrict.
    Josh Brolin in ‘Oldboy’. Photo: FilmDistrict.

    A man (Josh Brolin) has only three and a half days and limited resources to discover why he was imprisoned in a nondescript room for 20 years without any explanation.

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    14. ‘Crooklyn‘ (1994)

    From Spike Lee comes this vibrant semi-autobiographical portrait of a school-teacher (Alfre Woodard), her stubborn jazz-musician husband (Delroy Lindo) and their five kids living in ’70s Brooklyn.

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    13. ‘School Daze‘ (1988)

    Fraternity and sorority members clash with other students at a historically black college during homecoming weekend.

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    12. ‘Mo’ Better Blues‘ (1990)

    Talented but self-centered trumpeter Bleek Gilliam (Denzel Washington) is obsessed with his music and indecisiveness about his girlfriends Indigo (Joie Lee) and Clarke (Cynda Williams). But when he is forced to come to the aid of his manager and childhood friend, Bleek finds his world more fragile than he ever imagined.

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    11. ‘She’s Gotta Have It‘ (1986)

    The story of Nola Darling’s (Tracy Camilla Johns) simultaneous sexual relationships with three different men is told by her and by her partners and other friends. All three men wanted her to commit solely to them; Nola resists being “owned” by a single partner.

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    10. ‘Highest 2 Lowest‘ (2025)

    Denzel Washington in 'Highest 2 Lowest'. Photo Credit: David Lee.
    Denzel Washington in ‘Highest 2 Lowest’. Photo Credit: David Lee.

    When a titan music mogul (Denzel Washington), widely known as having the “best ears in the business”, is targeted with a ransom plot, he is jammed up in a life-or-death moral dilemma.

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    9. ‘Da 5 Bloods‘ (2020)

    Four African-American Vietnam veterans (Delroy Lindo, Clarke Peters, Norm Lewis and Isiah Whitlock Jr.) return to Vietnam. They are in search of the remains of their fallen squad leader and the promise of buried treasure. These heroes battle forces of humanity and nature while confronted by the lasting ravages of the immorality of the Vietnam War.

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    8. ‘He Got Game‘ (1998)

    A basketball player’s father (Denzel Washington) must try to convince him to go to a college so he can get a shorter prison sentence.

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    7. ‘Clockers‘ (1995)

    Strike (Mekhi Phifer) is a young city drug pusher under the tutelage of drug lord Rodney Little (Delroy Lindo). When a night manager at a fast-food restaurant is found with four bullets in his body, Strike’s older brother (Isaiah Washington) turns himself in as the killer. Detective Rocco Klein (Harvey Keitel) doesn’t buy the story, however, setting out to find the truth, and it seems that all the fingers point toward Strike & Rodney.

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    6. ‘Jungle Fever‘ (1991)

    A successful and married black man (Wesley Snipes) contemplates having an affair with a white girl (Annabella Sciorra) from work. He’s quite rightly worried that the racial difference would make an already taboo relationship even worse.

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    5. ‘Inside Man‘ (2006)

    Denzel Washington and Jodie Foster in 'Inside Man'.
    (L to R) Denzel Washington and Jodie Foster in ‘Inside Man’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    When an armed, masked gang enter a Manhattan bank, lock the doors and take hostages, the detective (Denzel Washington) assigned to effect their release enters negotiations preoccupied with corruption charges he is facing.

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    4. ‘BlacKkKlansman‘ (2018)

    Colorado Springs, late 1970s. Ron Stallworth (John David Washington), an African American police officer, and Flip Zimmerman (Adam Driver), his Jewish colleague, run an undercover operation to infiltrate the Ku Klux Klan.

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    3. ‘25th Hour‘ (2003)

    In New York City in the days following the events of 9/11, Monty Brogan (Edward Norton) is a convicted drug dealer about to start a seven-year prison sentence, and his final hours of freedom are devoted to hanging out with his closest buddies and trying to prepare his girlfriend (Rosario Dawson) for his extended absence.

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    2. ‘Malcolm X‘ (1992)

    A tribute to Malcolm X (Denzel Washington), the controversial black activist and leader of the struggle for black liberation. He hit bottom during his imprisonment in the ’50s, he became a Black Muslim and then a leader in the Nation of Islam. His assassination in 1965 left a legacy of self-determination and racial pride.

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    1. ‘Do the Right Thing‘ (1989)

    (L to R) Richard Edson, John Turturro and Spike Lee in 'Do the Right Thing'. Photo: Universal Pictures.
    (L to R) Richard Edson, John Turturro and Spike Lee in ‘Do the Right Thing’. Photo: Universal Pictures.

    Salvatore “Sal” Fragione (Danny Aiello) is the Italian owner of a pizzeria in Brooklyn. A neighborhood local, Buggin’ Out (Giancarlo Esposito), becomes upset when he sees that the pizzeria’s Wall of Fame exhibits only Italian actors. Buggin’ Out believes a pizzeria in a black neighborhood should showcase black actors, but Sal disagrees. The wall becomes a symbol of racism and hate to Buggin’ Out and to other people in the neighborhood, and tensions rise.

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  • Ernest R. Dickerson Talks ‘Juice’

    'Juice' director Ernest R. Dickerson
    ‘Juice’ director Ernest R. Dickerson

    The groundbreaking 1992 movie ‘Juice,’ directed by Ernest R. Dickerson and starring Tupac Shakur and Omar Epps, will celebrate its 30th anniversary this year by releasing a 4K UHD Blu-ray on January 11th. The movie stars Epps as Q, a teen living in Harlem with dreams of becoming a DJ, when his best friend, Bishop (Shakur), convinces him to take part in a robbery that goes wrong.

    Dickerson began his career as a cinematographer working with director Spike Lee on such iconic films as ‘She’s Gotta Have It,’ ‘School Daze,’ ‘Do The Right Thing,’ ‘Mo’ Better Blues,’ ‘Jungle Fever,’ and ‘Malcolm X.’ After co-writing and directing his first film, ‘Juice’ in 1992, Dickerson went on to direct ‘Surviving the Game’ with Ice-T, ‘Bulletproof’ with Adam Sandler, and ‘Bones’ starring Snoop Dogg. He’s also directed dozens of popular television programs including ‘Heroes,’ ‘The Wire,’ ‘The Walking Dead,’ ‘Dexter,’ ‘House of Cards,’ and ‘Bosch.’

    Moviefone recently had the pleasure of speaking with director Ernest R. Dickerson about the 30th anniversary of ‘Juice.’ He discussed writing the movie, getting it made, casting Tupac Shakur and Omar Epps, and how working as a cinematographer for Spike Lee prepared him to direct his first film.

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    You can read the full interview below, or watch a video of the interview above.

    Moviefone: To begin with, ‘Juice’ was your first feature film as a director, what is it like to see that the film is still beloved and relevant 30 years later?

    Ernest R. Dickerson: I’m pleasantly surprised. You always hope that your film is going to have longevity when you make it, but you don’t give it that much thought because you’re just trying to get the film made in the first place. But to see that 30 years later, the themes of the film are still relevant today is sobering. But I’m gratified, I’m happy that it’s lasted, and I’m glad a lot of younger people are able to see it.

    When you’re growing up, whether you’re Black, White, Latino, Asian, Indian, you reach a point in your life when you’re wondering what kind of power or influence do you have on your life, on where your life is going to go, and on your environment? What kind of juice do you have? Historically, it’s part of human nature that when you reach a point in your life, you wonder what that is.

    The forces that influence the decisions that you make to take your life ultimately into the directions that it goes, a lot of time, it’s affected by peer pressure. That’s one of the main themes in the movie, the effects of peer pressure. It can steer you in the right direction, or it can steer you in the wrong direction. And sometimes the quest for power, the quest for juice in your own life can take you in the wrong direction.

    Our main character, Q, is finding his juice. He’s finding juice through music. His mother probably couldn’t afford to buy musical instruments for him, but he was able to take old turntables and use those as musical instruments as a scratch and mix artist, and that’s where he’s finding his juice.

    But Bishop, played by Tupac, he takes a wrong turn in trying to find juice. To him, it’s emulating the gangs that he sees in the neighborhood. That’s where the drama comes from, that division that’s going in two different directions, and the peer pressure that sometimes pulls you in the wrong direction. So, I think it’s as prevalent today as it ever has been.

    MF: How did you come up with the idea for the screenplay, and how did you develop it and eventually get it made?

    ERD: Gerard Brown and I wrote the script in the early 1980s. I wrote it after I had graduated from NYU Film School around 1981. Before I started working, I started writing the script. Actually, it’s an idea that I had had for a long time. But, when I had a summer job and I had to be there at seven o’clock in the morning, I’d see these kids that looked like they’ve been hanging out on the bus all night long. I was just wondering, “What kind of adventures do they get into?” I always thought, “Oh, God, there’s a movie there.”

    Then years later, I started writing ‘Juice’. But in 1981, nobody wanted to make it. I took it around and I showed it to some people. They considered it to be too dark, and too much of a rough film. My agent, even he said that there was no way I was going to get this movie made, and ‘Juice’ wound up sitting on the shelf for many years. Then finally around 1991, Gerard got a new agent, She wanted to see what he had written as a screenplay, and he showed her ‘Juice.’ She was amazed that we weren’t able to get this movie made. Then she took it to several different studios that automatically wanted to make it.

    When Gerard and I wrote ‘Juice,’ the idea was to use it to premier ourselves as the writer-director team. So, when it went to the different studios and they gave me a list of the directors they wanted to bring in, it was a three page list, and my name was the last one on the third page. Then we started getting notes from the different studios, they wanted to turn it into a comedy. They thought that it would play better as a coming of age comedy, starring young actors who were more well-known on television at that time. Gerard and I, we didn’t like the direction it was going in, we just said, “No,” and we took the script back.

    We could have sold it and made a lot of money, but it would’ve meant putting our names on something that we didn’t like, that we wouldn’t have been proud of. You got to wake up and look at yourself in the mirror in the morning. So, we took it back, we said, “Well, that was that.” Then I got a phone call out of the blue, from a young man named David Heyman (‘Gravity, ‘Once Upon a Time in Hollywood’), who was looking with a couple of partners of his for their first film as producers. They had gotten a copy of the script and they read it. David called me up and asked me to meet with them to tell them the film that I wanted to make.

    We met, and I said, “Well, there’s nobody that we know of who can act in this film.” I said, “It’s got to be shot on location. It takes place in Harlem so we got to shoot it in Harlem, it’s got to be raw, and it’s got to be real. I really think we got to go after unknown actors to really make it feel as realistic as possible.” After saying that, he said he liked it and he asked me if I wanted him to get funding for it. I said, “Yeah.” So, that’s how that started, and then we started going after young unknowns and we shot it all in Harlem.

    (L to R) Khalil Kain, Tupac Shakur, Omar Epps, and Jermaine Hopkins in 'Juice.'
    (L to R) Khalil Kain, Tupac Shakur, Omar Epps, and Jermaine Hopkins in ‘Juice.’

    MF: Can you talk about the first time you met Tupac Shakur? What was he like as a person then, and what was he like as an actor on set?

    ERD: We found him purely by accident. He came in with someone else. He came in with a guy who came in to read. Tupac didn’t come in to read. He was hanging out with his friend, and I was getting desperate because I wasn’t finding the right actor for Bishop. I said, “Well, what about you, man? You want to read?” He said, “Yeah.”

    He ultimately read the part, auditioned and knocked it out the box. It was interesting because later on we found out that he had trained as an actor at the High School of the Performing Arts in Baltimore, and he got the job because he understood the pain underneath the anger that Bishop had. He knew that. What was really interesting, you could tell that Tupac was a student of human nature, he was a student of people, and he would talk to people.

    When we started making the movie, if he saw somebody that looked like they were really going through some serious problems in their life, or somebody that just looked interesting, even on the street, he would go over and start talking to them. He always had a notebook, and he was always writing stuff down. I like to think that in talking with people and writing, I think what he was writing became his music that he ultimately shared with the rest of the world.

    But he was just really open. He was open to the people in the neighborhood. The whole film we shot in Harlem, and folks in the neighborhood would come around and watch us shoot, and he would spend time talking to them. I think the that’s why he was so successful as a rapper and why there’s so much truth in what he put out as a rapper. Because he was a student of human nature, and he knew the forces that affected people and the decisions that they made or weren’t able to make in their lives.

    MF: When you did finally get to make ‘Juice’ in 1991, hip-hop was emerging as the dominate form of music, and you cast a lot of hip-hop artists in the movie including Tupac, Queen Latifah, Eric B., and members of Cyprus Hill. That is something that wouldn’t have happened had the movie been made in 1981. Do you think it was a case of “the right place at the right time?”

    ERD: Yeah, it was the right place at the right time. It was interesting because I had just met Queen Latifah when I shot ‘Jungle Fever.’ She had that great scene in Sylvia’s where she played the waitress. She’s my homegirl, she’s from Newark, New Jersey, and it’s interesting because in the script, that part was originally written for Afrika Bambaataa. He was not available, and Latifah was, and had gotten a little bit of the bite of the acting bug having done ‘Jungle Fever.” She was available and we were able to get her.

    The other people we were able to get, part of that came from the influence of Keith and Hank Shocklee. They were the masterminds behind Public Enemy‘s sound, and were also doing the musical score for the film. So, just finding those folks was really interesting because they liked what the film was about and they saw that there was a universality to what our story was all about. So, I like to think that they just wanted to be part of it because of that.

    MF: What qualities did you see in Omar Epps that made you think he was the right young actor to play Q?

    ERD: There was a soulfulness that Omar had and still has, and it’s in the eyes. There was an innocence, but a toughness that was really important, you know? He was 17, a senior in high school, and trying to decide what his juice was going to be, where he was going to go. He was part of a little musical group, so he was at one point thinking that his future might lie in music.

    I think he had dabbled in a little bit of theater in the neighborhood or something like that, but I guess ‘Juice’ helped make up his mind for him. Because he did such a beautiful job. You could see everything that he was thinking and what was going through his mind, it was all on his face, and that was the beauty of what he brought to the film.

    MF: Finally, you began your career as a cinematographer working with Spike Lee. What did you learn about directing from that experience that prepared you to make ‘Juice?’

    ERD: Well, what’s interesting is that a lot of the films that I did as a cinematographer, the directors also acted in them. My very first professional film was ‘The Brother from Another Planet.’ and John Sayles played one of the bounty hunters who’s after Joe Morton, the alien in the film. In film school, Spike never acted in his films, but he did it in ‘She’s Gotta Have It’ because the original actor fell out at the last minute and he couldn’t find anybody else, so he decided to take on that role. It put him in a position where from then on the deals that he made for the films, he had to act in them.

    So, whenever that happens, it forces the cinematographer to be the co-director, because I have to be his eyes while he’s in front of the camera. I’ve got to let him know what I see in and what he’s doing, and if it’s working, and the people around him as well.

    It really opened my eyes and gave me a whole brand new respect for acting. When we did ‘School Daze,’ which is the film after ‘She’s Gotta Have It,’ after shooting I would spend a lot of time talking with the actors like Giancarlo Esposito. We would talk in the hotel bar, and I would talk to him about what I saw him doing, his motivation, and what his character was doing.

    It’s something that continued in Spike’s films all the way through. I even worked with the Chinese director, Peter Wang on ‘The Laser Man,’ and he acted in that. So, a lot of times I was forced into this position of being a co-director, so being able to talk with actors was something I think I got from that.

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  • Paul Benjamin, Actor in ‘Do the Right Thing,’ Passes Away at 81

    Paul Benjamin, Actor in ‘Do the Right Thing,’ Passes Away at 81

    via Spike Lee/Instagram

    Director Spike Lee shared the sad news that Paul Benjamin, one of the “cornermen” in Lee’s landmark 1989 film “Do the Right Thing,” has passed away.

    Lee shared this photo of Benjamin to Instagram, writing, “I’m sad to write that the great actor PAUL BENJAMIN (Who Played ML, {Far Left} one of the cornermen, passed this past Friday, 2 days before The 30th Anniversary of DO THE RIGHT THING. Rest In Paradise. Born 1/1/38. Died 6/28/19.”

    No other details about Benjamin’s death were immediately available.

    In “Do the Right Thing,” Benjamin played ML alongside Frankie Faison as Coconut Sid and Robin Harris as Sweet Dick Willie. The trio gathered every day on the corner and served as a sort of Greek chorus, commenting on the events of the day.

    His other noteworthy roles included a bank robber who rips off the mafia in “Across 110th Street” (1972), the father of a folk singer (Roger E. Mosley) in “Leadbelly ” (1976), the embittered prisoner English in “Escape From Alcatraz” (1979) opposite Clint Eastwood, and Henry, the owner of the model train hobby shop in “The Station Agent” (2003).

    Paul Benjamin in ‘Escape From Alcatraz’ (Paramount)

    His many other films include “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” “Rosewood,” and the blaxploitation films “The Education of Sonny Carson” and Pam Grier’s “Friday Foster.” Benjamin made his film debut playing a bartender in “Midnight Cowboy” (1969).

    Robert Townsend, who directed Benjamin in 1991’s “The Five Heartbeats,” also paid tribute to the actor. He tweeted: “I am so sad to hear about the passing of Paul Benjamin.He was a brilliant actor and I had the pleasure to work with him on THE FIVE HEARTBEATS he played Eddie’s father. My prayers go out to his family at this time. Rest in paradise, King.”

    “ER” fans may also remember him as homeless man Al Ervin, who appeared on several episodes of the hit NBC series, including the pilot and some of Anthony Edwards’ last episodes.

    [Via THR]