Born To Be Blue - Movie Review

  • 29 July 2016

Rating: 3.5 out of 5

Writer-director Robert Budreau takes a stylised approach to this biopic of the legendary jazz artist Chet Baker, combining the achingly soulful music with an equally resonant performance from Ethan Hawke. Sometimes, the film's artistic flourishes seem to strain to cover up the usual narrative of a musical artist's life. But Baker's story has a striking emotional layer to it that holds the attention. And by focussing on a pivotal period in his life, Budreau draws out some lovely themes.

It opens in 1966 Los Angeles, where Chet is starring in a movie about his life. One actress, Jane (Carmen Ejogo), is playing all of the women he loved, and of course he's now pursuing her as well. There's also the problem that he's not quite sure if he's still a heroin junkie or if he's just playing himself when he was one. Then he gets in a street fight in which thugs knock out his front teeth, and everyone tells him he will never play his trumpet again. But he tenaciously sets out to regain his embouchure, even as his parole officer (Tony Nappo) refuses to give him a break. He decides to take Jane to visit his parents (Stephen McHattie and Janet-Laine Green) back home in Oklahoma, and rebuild his life from there. Then back in California, he approaches his music producer friend Dick (Callum Keith Rennie) to help him make a comeback.

Hawke brings a terrific earthy charm to the role, conveying Baker's effortless musical gifts as well as his inner steeliness in the face of injury and addiction. The darker sides of Baker's personality simmer in the background, increasing his allure. And Ejogo is terrific opposite him. Jane is a woman who sees everything that Baker is, and she knows that she has limits to what she will let him get away with. It's easy for the audience to root for them to succeed as a couple, even though every other musical biopic has told us that a happy ever after probably isn't on the cards.

The film is drenched in Baker's music, and Budreau adds several clever visual touches, such as using black and white clips from the movie within the movie as flashbacks. Every scene pulses to the rhythms of the music, especially the performance and recording session sequences, which vividly capture the exhilaration a musician feels when he hits the perfect note. In the end, the film remains on the surface, never trying to understand Baker's deeper demons. But its haunting textures linger like a favourite song.

Rich Cline

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Image caption Born to Be Blue

Facts and Figures

Year: 2015

Genre: Dramas

Run time: 97 mins

In Theaters: Wednesday 30th March 2016

Production compaines: New Real Films, Lumanity Production

Reviews

Contactmusic.com: 3.5 / 5

IMDB: 7.6 / 10

Cast & Crew

Director: Robert Budreau

Producer: Robert Budreau, Leonard Farlinger, Jennifer Jonas, Jake Seal

Screenwriter: Robert Budreau

Starring: Ethan Hawke as Chet Baker, Carmen Ejogo as Jane/Elaine, Callum Keith Rennie as Dick, Stephen McHattie as Dad, Janet-Laine Green as Mom, Tony Nappo as Officer Reid, Janine Theriault as Florence, Katie Boland as Sarah, Dan Lett as Danny Friedman, Sophia Walker as Real Sophia, Joe Condren as Actor Dick, Kevin Hanchard as Dizzy Gillespie, Drew Davis as Beau, Charles Officer as Bowling Alley Dealer

Also starring: Jennifer Jonas