Be | Kind Rewind
The store, run by Mr. Fletcher (Danny Glover), is a monument to an older economy—one based on physical rental, late fees, and local ownership. The city’s plan to replace it with luxury condos or a big-box retailer represents the erasure of local memory. Significantly, Mr. Fletcher’s backstory is that he was a jazz musician. Jazz, like “sweding,” is an art of improvisation and reinterpretation. The store is his last tangible connection to a creative, pre-gentrified past.
When Mike and Jerry begin renting out “sweded” films, they inadvertently transform the store from a passive archive (a place that stores other people’s art) into an active production studio (a place that makes its own art). The local community becomes invested not in the Hollywood originals but in the local, flawed versions. The store’s survival is no longer about commerce but about cultural centrality. As geographer David Harvey argues, gentrification is a “class struggle over the production of space.” By filling their space with homemade artifacts, the characters win a moral victory over the forces of abstract capital, even if the building’s physical future remains ambiguous. Be Kind Rewind
Released at the cusp of the streaming revolution—Netflix launched its streaming service in 2007— Be Kind Rewind feels almost prophetic. The film’s central catastrophe (the magnetic erasure of every VHS tape in a store) mirrors the real-world obsolescence of physical media. Protagonists Mike (Mos Def) and Jerry (Jack Black) respond not by despairing but by producing amateur, low-budget remakes of Hollywood blockbusters like Ghostbusters and RoboCop . They call these creations “sweded” films. The store, run by Mr
This collective creation inverts the intellectual property regime that Hollywood defends fiercely. When a corporate lawyer threatens to sue Mr. Fletcher for copyright infringement, the community rallies, arguing that their films are not piracy but “tributes” or “parodies.” Legally, this is weak, but ethically, the film makes a powerful case: culture belongs to those who actively engage with it, not to those who passively consume it. The film advocates for a “use-based” theory of culture, echoing Lawrence Lessig’s Free Culture (2004), which argues that the consolidation of copyright stifles creativity. By physically remaking 2001: A Space Odyssey with a cardboard monolith and a man in a monkey suit, the characters reclaim the story from Warner Bros. and place it back into the hands of the community. Significantly, Mr
Be Kind Rewind is not a nostalgic film. Nostalgia mourns the past. Gondry’s film is inventive ; it uses the past as raw material for the future. The final shot, where the characters ride their bicycles past the construction site of the new condos, does not show the store surviving. It shows the idea of the store surviving in the community’s practice.