Screening | Film/Video

The Spook Who Sat by the Door

Sam Greenlee's explosive novel The Spook Who Sat by the Door yielded one of the most radical indie films of the 1970s! 
 

Two Black men playing pool in a pool hall. One man is bent over shooting, the other is standing nearby watching.
Date
Feb 22, 2025
Cost
$5.00 - $10.00
Time
7 p.m. ET
Location
Wexner Center for the Arts

Film/Theater

In Ivan Dixon’s The Spook Who Sat by the Door, a white senator up for reelection hopes to curry favor with Black voters by creating a program to recruit African American agents into the CIA (Ivan Dixon, 1973). The program, of course, is rigged to the point that none of the applicants have a chance of landing the job—except one. Dan Freeman (Lawrence Cook), an undercover Black nationalist who plans to take full advantage of his training by returning to his inner-city Chicago neighborhood to train a guerilla army to fight for liberation and freedom. Dixon is best known from his role on Hogan’s Heroes and in the 1964 indie film Nothing But a Man.  


Dixon’s daughter Doris Nomathandé Dixon joins Heather Linville of the Library of Congress for a conversation about the film and its preservation following the screening. (102 mins., 35mm) 

See the complete 2025 Cinema Revival lineup. 

Introduced by Doris Nomathandé Dixon and Heather Linville, Library of Congress.