Customer Reviews
a dream of a dreamy biopic - By: Sebastian Palmer, 04 Nov 2008 
I saw this film on its theatrical release, way backin '88/89, as a part of a run of late night movies on jazz themes, screened at the Cambridge Arts Cinema, as it was then known. I was completely enthralled & enchanted. Some films are intensely & self-consciously didactic, or analytical, or escapist, romantic, challenging, soothing or whatever... This film seems to be a wonderfully un-self-conscious mixture of biography, homage, celebration, voyeurism & more besides, all delivered with a dream like whimsy, & an artistic eye for bleak, melancholy beauty. The music is fabulous, both old & new, the performance footage revealing & entertaining, & the panoply of talking heads have a lot of interesting things to say.
I finally got to own this great film on video, some years later, & have watched & enjoyed it again a number of times. Since the advent of DVD I've seen it once more at the new Arts Picture House (Cambridge - complete with after screening video link chat with Bruce Weber himself!), & generally hankered after seeing it released on DVD. I've not got it yet... but I'm excited, as I suspect my partner has it on my xmas wishlist. I just hope they've put some good extras on the disc! So, whilst I can't advise on the DVD benefits, I can heartily recommend the film as a dreamy work of beauty, that almost magically captures the tragic beauty of Baker's life & music.
This movie - my introduction to Chet Baker - made a fan out of me. The film draws more on his vocal work, rather than his trumpet playing, an imbalance I grew to appreciate as I got more familiar with his recorded legacy. Butin terms of great cinema, as opposed to a more scholarly form of balanced & historically accurate biography, the fact Weber leans on the vocal numbers is no real problem, if anything it simply helps strengthen the 'vibey-ness' of the film. Weber's penchant for hanging out with beautiful bozos, as well as the more articulate characters that litter the movie, which might irritate some, also helps create the dream-like aspect of this strange piece of art. Essays could easily be written on multifarious aspects of this picture, but ultimately it's a movie for the senses: so, regardless of whether you'd personally prefer a speed-ball or just a nice cup of tea, sit back, relax, & enjoy it!
Just great - By: Jaybird, 07 Aug 2008 
Bruce Weber's photography turns the drug & alcohol ravaged face of Chet Baker into a landscape to be explored, & then shows you him as a beautiful young James Dean lookalike.
The music is extraordinary, & carries the film through what might have been its more self indulgent moments. It is cleverly set into context by the commentary from all the talking heads.
Some of the speakers are knowledgeable & insightful, but there is plenty of pleasure is to be gained from listening to his various lovers & wives bitching about each other, which certainly ensures that this is no hagiography.
Perhaps the best bits are when Bruce shows Chet getting angry - when questioned by young fans comparing him unfavourably to Miles Davies, or when being asked to play over the conversation of clubbers.
In the end, you get an extraordinary picture of the man & his work.
Award winning biography. Doesn't get any better than this ! - By: P. Campbell, 29 May 2008 
At last - my prayers have been answered. I have had this on VHS since it came outin '88. Alot of fans have been waiting for the DVD release (not bootleg) to appreciate both the documentary & music qualities. For anyone with the slightest interestin modern music or cinematography, this is a must for your collection. It must have been very hard for Bruce Weber to portray one of his music idolsin such an honest way. But it works & allows an underlying story of the effects of heroin addiction to come through ( I won't say any more & let you find out yourself).
They should put a portrait of Chet aged 56in all schools. If that does put them off hard drugs, nothing will.
Order this now, before the rest of the 5 stars convince you.