I wanted
to like Miles Ahead, I really did. I went to the movie anticipating a
wonderful cinematic experience, not my usual one of disappointment whenever the
topic is Black folks. I knew I would
love Don Cheadle’s performance and the fact that he had a hand in writing this
screenplay made me hopeful that it would be wonderful. Well, to say I was underwhelmed
is an understatement.
As a
diehard jazz fan, I hoped for more emphasis on Miles’ musical genius and less
on his pathological lifestyle. Yes, we all know Miles was fuckin’ nuts and was
a misogynistic narcissist, and I wouldn’t have minded being re-minded of that
but to be sledgehammered throughout the film about this aspect of who Miles was
just diminished the narrative’s goal of telling us Miles just wanted to control
his product. I don’t know if Don thought we wouldn’t keep watching if there
wasn’t excessive violence or what, but he really miscalculated some of us
audience member’s ability to engage a narrative that didn’t employ the usual
Hollywood bullshit! Since the story was a fictionalized account of Miles’ life
with references to real occurrences, I am assuming Cheadle had some creative
license to steer this story in whatever direction he saw fit. How disappointing that he steered it in the
path of sensationalism rather than intellectualism. Miles was one deep
muthafucka and this story could have been much more intriguing if Cheadle had
chosen to dig deeper into where Miles’ music came from and how it developed
rather than taking the easy way out and reducing the creative process to the
cliché of being guided by a muse i.e. a beautiful woman in this case. It didn’t
help my mood that the movie was preceded by a commercial for some luxury car
that had Muhammad Ali fighting himself to illustrate the point of striving to
be your best self juxtaposed against a white guy playing chess who was doing
the same (black man:savage brute; white man: intellectual).
Maybe I’m
just being too sensitive about racial shit and maybe I should not expect so
much from movies but I can’t help but wonder how a black man could not think
this film is doing Black people, Black culture and Black music a disservice. As
I said, no one thinks Miles Davis was a saint and no one believes he died of
natural causes but to spend over 2 hours driving home the point that his demons
were more relevant than his contribution to America’s classical music seems
like a colossal waste of film & time.
4 comments:
Hmmm....interesting viewpoint.
Wow... I've been very anxious to see the film... Even though I'm "Mad at Miles" ��
I saw it Sunday and I was smh!
I saw it Sunday and I was smh!
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