
Harvard-educated biotech executive John Henry Jack Armstrong gets fired when he informs on his bosses, launching an investigation into their business dealings by the Securities & Exchange Commission. Branded a whistle-blower and therefore unemployable, Jack desperately needs to make a living. When his former girlfriend Fatima, a high powered businesswoman--and now a lesbian--offers him cash to impregnate her and her new girlfriend Alex, Jack is persuaded by the chance to make... (Full plot summary below)
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Harvard-educated biotech executive John Henry Jack Armstrong gets fired when he informs on his bosses, launching an investigation into their business dealings by the Securities & Exchange Commission. Branded a whistle-blower and therefore unemployable, Jack desperately needs to make a living. When his former girlfriend Fatima, a high powered businesswoman--and now a lesbian--offers him cash to impregnate her and her new girlfriend Alex, Jack is persuaded by the chance to make easy money. Word spreads and soon Jack is in the baby-making business at $10,000 a try. Lesbians with a desire for motherhood and the cash to spare are lining up to seek his services. But, between the attempts by his former employers to frame him for security fraud and his dubious fathering activities, Jack finds his life, all at once, becoming very complicated.
Leave your thoughts about She Hate Me.
| ColeSmithey.comCole Smithey"She Hate Me" is just as tongue-tied as its ridiculous title. |
| Philadelphia Daily NewsGary ThompsonLee seems to have no idea where he wants this satire to go. |
| San Jose Mercury NewsGlenn LovellIt's a muddled, overlong, politically incorrect satire that goes wrong in so many ways it's hard to know where to begin dismantling the thing. |
| Entertainment WeeklyOwen GleibermanShe Hate Me manages to be at once racist, homophobic, utterly fake, and unbearably tedious. This time, it's Spike Lee who's doing the bamboozling. |
| Chicago TribuneMichael WilmingtonA daring, entertaining, but somewhat disappointing affair, something of an overreacher despite Lee's usual pyrotechnics and a brilliant cast. |
| San Diego Union-TribuneDavid ElliottUsing sex so amusingly, Lee makes satire sexy. |
| Jam! MoviesBruce KirklandA uniquely insane film which should be experienced and needs to be seen to be believed. |
| Chicago Sun-TimesRoger EbertIt is exciting to watch this movie. It is never boring. Lee is like a juggler who starts out with balls and gradually adds baseball bats, top hats and chainsaws. It's not an intellectual experience, but an emotional one. |
| Christian Science MonitorDavid SterrittThis intensely topical satire tackles a wide range of important issues, from corporate whistle-blowing to the toll sexual license takes on stable family structures. |
| Critic DoctorPeter SobczynskiDeeply offensive, staggeringly unfunny, pretentious and, at 140 minutes, about 135 minutes too long... |