In his film, 1989’s Do The Right Thing examined all of the above and was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1989. It was his third full-length feature, is one of the director's most daring and controversial achievements, presenting one sweltering day, which culminates in a riot in the Bedford Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn (Lee, Spike…). It was a story about the tension between different races in the neighborhood in New York; it showed all the anger and hate everyone has towards each other. It also expresses why they carry those type of emotion. Throughout the film, Lee uses canted frames, dolly shots, tight close ups, high and low angles, parallelism, source music as well as his mis-en-scene. Some of the famous scenes from this movie are close ups, he begins the camera from a long shot and quickly zooms in to the character talking about how they dislike another race. Many years later, this film is still praised for being beautifully directed. His aesthetic techniques are one of the aspects that made this film such a controversial success. Lee wanted his message to get across and he used dramatic and subtle techniques to achieve it (Spike Lee’s…