TY - ADVS AU - Lee,Spike AU - Kilik,Jon AU - Wayans,Damon AU - Glover,Savion AU - Smith,Jada Pinkett AU - Davidson,Tommy AU - Rapaport,Michael AU - Kuras,Ellen AU - Pollard,Sam AU - Blanchard,Terence AU - Carter,Ruthe AU - Kempster,Victor ED - New Line Cinema Corporation, ED - Forty Acres & a Mule Filmworks, ED - Criterion Collection (Firm), TI - Bamboozled T2 - Criterion collection SN - 9781681437019 PY - 2020/// CY - [New York, N.Y.] PB - The Criterion Collection KW - Blackface entertainers KW - Drama KW - Minstrel shows KW - African Americans on television KW - African Americans in television broadcasting KW - Mass media and race relations KW - United States KW - Satirical films KW - lcgft KW - Comedy films KW - Musical films KW - Show business films KW - Feature films KW - Fiction films KW - Video recordings for the hearing impaired N1 - Title from credits; Originally released as a motion picture in 2000; Wide screen (1.77:1); Special features: audio commentary from 2001 featuring Lee; In conversation: Spike Lee with film programmer and critic Ashley Clark; Manray & Womack (new interviews with choreographer and actor Savion Glover, actor Tommy Davidson); Ruth E. Carter (interview with costume designer Ruth E. Carter); On Blackface and minstrel show (a new interview program featuring film and media scholar Racquel Gates); The making of "Bamboozled" (2001), a documentary featuring Lee, Glover, Davidson, actors Jada Pinkett Smith, Michael Rapaport, and Daman Wayans, and other members of the cast and crew; deleted scenes; music videos for the Mau Maus' "Blak iz blak" and Gerald Levert's "Dream with no love" and alternate parody commercials created for the film; post gallery and trailers; Director of photography, Ellen Kuras ; editor, Sam Pollard ; original score, Terence Blanchard ; choreography, Savion Glover ; costume design, Ruth Carter ; production design, Victor Kempster; Damon Wayans, Savion Glover, Jada Pinkett-Smith, Tommy Davidson, Michael Rapaport; MPAA rating: R; for some violence and strong language N2 - Under pressure to help revive his network's low ratings, television writer Pierre Delacroix hits on an explosively offensive idea: bringing back blackface with "The New Millennium Minstrel Show." The white network executives love it, and so do audiences, forcing Pierre and his collaborators to confront their public's insatiable appetite for dehumanizing stereotypes ER -