slide_advantage_redoux Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 (edited) Someone in another message board asked why there is no planned film on the horizon based on the life of Miles Davis. Good question, but I guess that potential investors wouldn't see it as a potential money maker. If such a film were to be produced: Who would you nominate to play Miles? Who would play Teo Macero? Who would play Gil Evans? et al? This was intended to be in Artists area. Would an adminstrator please move the topic! Edited October 9, 2006 by slide_advantage_redoux Quote
Free For All Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 There is an article in the October JazzTimes about the marketing of the Davis estate and seems like a movie project is being pursued. Wasn't there some talk about Don Cheadle wanting to play Miles? Quote
brownie Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 Would be a tough choice for Miles. Anybody but Denzel Washington... In view of what he did for Ray Charles, Jamie Fox might be interesting. Teo Macero would be a natural for Jon Lovitz. Gil Evans might be Clint Eastwood! Quote
wesbed Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 Wasn't there some talk about Don Cheadle wanting to play Miles? Don Cheadle would be perfect to play Hank Mobley. Quote
Free For All Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 Hey Wes! Nice to hear from you! How about James Cromwell as Gil? Quote
7/4 Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 Teo Macero would be a natural for Jon Lovitz. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 I'd prefer someone "prettier" for Miles. Lovitz and Cromwell are great choices. Quote
JSngry Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 I'd prefer someone "prettier" for Miles. Cicely Tyson! Quote
7/4 Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 Diana Ross would be better. She looks just like Miles. I know, I heard him play in times square in the late '80s. Quote
allblues Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 If this is who will play Miles, not who should play him: Vince Wilburn. Quote
mikeweil Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 .... no matter how many threads there were before: Wallace Roney!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Quote
medjuck Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 Leslie Nielson for Gil. (And they were both born in Canada.) Quote
AllenLowe Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 sorry guys, here's the cast: Miles: Owen Wilson Mrs. Miles Davis: Paris Hilton Gil Evans: Gary Coleman Old Man Time: Chesty Morgan Hip Young Woman Standing Outside of Birdland: Brittany Spears Cop who Beats up Miles Outside of Birdland: Mel Gibson White Guy who Helps Miles When the Chips are Down, Thus Saving his Life: Steve Guttenberg. White Girl Who Shows Miles that Love is Still Possible, Thus Saving his Life: Heather Locklear Young Woman Who Takes her Clothes Off in the Last Scene, Thus Saving this Movie: Carmen Elektra you gotta be daring - it IS a jazz film, and you have to bring in the people - and that covers every possible demographic - Quote
DatDere Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 The suggestions from the earlier thread, to cast Ice Cube as Cannonball Adderley and Snoop Dogg as Sam Rivers, were golden... Quote
Free For All Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 (edited) Old Man Time: Chesty Morgan Are you saying Allen's other choices made more sense to you? Edited October 9, 2006 by Free For All Quote
clifford_thornton Posted October 9, 2006 Report Posted October 9, 2006 The suggestions from the earlier thread, to cast Ice Cube as Cannonball Adderley and Snoop Dogg as Sam Rivers, were golden... Awesome... Quote
Guest youmustbe Posted October 10, 2006 Report Posted October 10, 2006 No, no....Wanda Sykes as Miles is Perfect! Damn, I shoulda, coulda, thought of it but didn't!!!! And Danny DeVito as George Wein. Quote
JSngry Posted October 10, 2006 Report Posted October 10, 2006 Give it to Pixar and have Ralph Bakshi direct it. Then we could have some fun. Quote
brownie Posted November 19, 2006 Report Posted November 19, 2006 Miles Davis movie projects are shaping up! From The New York Times today: WRESTLING WITH MILES DAVIS AND HIS DEMONS By PAT H. BROESKE Published: November 19, 2006 LOS ANGELES FIFTEEN years after his death Miles Davis has been enjoying a comeback tour. A new marketing campaign, capitalizing on what would have been his 80th birthday earlier this year, has been touting Davis, the trumpeter, bandleader and jazz legend, as “the original icon of cool.” His music is being repackaged and (of course) remixed. And, as befits a musical giant, his life story — one that has long eluded Hollywood — appears finally to be headed for the big screen. In the wake of “Ray” and “Walk the Line,” musical biographies that did well in recent awards seasons, filmmakers have lined up to portray Marvin Gaye, Charley Pride, Janis Joplin and Bob Dylan. Now, with a pair of potentially competing projects, it’s Miles Davis’s turn. The poet and writer Quincy Troupe, who was Davis’s collaborator, friend and protégé, has adapted a screenplay from his 2000 memoir, “Miles and Me.” “It’s about a friendship — a hard-won friendship — between two black men, both of them artists,” Mr. Troupe explained. “Through that friendship, the film will explore Miles’s life.” The producer Rudy Langlais said independent financing for “Miles and Me” is in place through Patriot Pictures and Beacon Pictures, and talks are under way with actors and filmmakers. “We will be up and running next year,” predicted Mr. Langlais, whose credits include “The Hurricane,” about the controversial criminal case involving the boxer Hurricane Carter, and television movies about the Atlanta child murders and the gang leader Stanley Tookie Williams. “Quincy saw through Miles’s veneer,” Mr. Langlais explained. “You’ll see a film that approaches the inner life of Miles Davis. We’re aiming for the truths of Miles — his fears, his terrors, his demons.” Meanwhile an “authorized” biopic is being developed by the Davis estate, which comprises some (but not all) of his children, a musician nephew and a brother-in-law. Don Cheadle has been mentioned in reports as a possible star, though a representative for the actor declined to comment. This project — on which Mr. Troupe, who collaborated with Davis on his 1989 autobiography, was previously a consultant — has seen several producers and screenwriters come and go. Davis has proved a challenging subject, in part because his career spanned almost half a century and diverse musical styles, and was populated by a somewhat incongruous roster of musical greats. The short list includes Charlie Parker, John Coltrane, Cannonball Adderley, Bill Evans, Sonny Rollins, Thelonious Monk, Gil Evans, Quincy Jones and Herbie Hancock, as well as Jimi Hendrix and Prince. The jazz scene has also been problematic for filmmakers, whose forays have often been off-key. Some have delved into the dark, addictive side (as Clint Eastwood did with “Bird,” or Bertrand Tavernier with “ ’Round Midnight”). Others have dwelled on atmosphere (as did Spike Lee, with “Mo’ Better Blues”), sometimes at the expense of story line. But the most difficult factor may well be Davis himself. The Prince of Darkness, as he became known, ranted so much about race and prejudice that some acquaintances believed he was the one with racial prejudice. (Though, as Mr. Troupe noted, Davis never balked at working with white musicians. And he was romantically involved with several white women.) He often performed with his back to his audience, and berated fans who dared approach him. Famously fond of cool cars and hot women, Davis had an erratic personal life that included heroin addiction, cocaine addiction, pimping and spousal abuse. “I actually left running for my life — more than once,” his former wife Frances Davis recalled in a telephone interview. A onetime Broadway dancer, she said her own career faltered after she left the hit musical “West Side Story” because Davis told her, “A woman should be with her man.” She now says any screen depiction must be truthful about both his artistry and his rage. “There’s got to be full treatment of his genius, as well as his shortcomings,” she said. A Davis film, with Wesley Snipes mentioned as the star, was first attempted by the former CBS Records chief executive Walter Yetnikoff, who played a role in encouraging Davis to record his landmark jazz-rock album “Bitches Brew” in 1970. Mr. Yetnikoff acquired the rights to Davis’s life and music, as well as to his autobiography. “But I didn’t know what I didn’t know,” Mr. Yetnikoff said in an interview. “And I didn’t know how to make a movie.” When he allowed his option to lapse, the producer Marvin Worth (“Lenny,” “Malcolm X”) took the project to Columbia Pictures. But it came to a halt with Mr. Worth’s death in 1998. Two years later Mr. Troupe published his own book about Davis, and the rights to that book were purchased by Mr. Langlais. For both producer and writer, the project represents the final chapter of a journey that began more than two decades ago, when Mr. Langlais, who was then executive editor of Spin magazine, assigned Mr. Troupe to interview Davis. Mr. Troupe was 14 in 1954, when he first met Mr. Davis at a downtown St. Louis jazz club. (Mr. Troupe is from St. Louis; Davis is East St. Louis’s most famous homegrown celebrity.) In the late ’70s the two men briefly met again, through a mutual friend, when both were living on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. It was 1985, when Mr. Troupe got the assignment for Spin, and he went to Davis’s brownstone, he recalls, “my little tape recorder in my hand.” The meeting got off to a shaky start when Davis asked, “How’d you get your hair like that?” and proceeded to play with one of Mr. Troupe’s dreadlocks. The writer slapped away his hand. “I told him I was there to conduct an interview, not to have my own personal space invaded,” he said. “And Miles, well, he looked pretty shocked.” Davis went on to spew some colorful language before calming down and asking what Mr. Troupe wanted to know. “And I spent 10 hours with him,” he said. “Then I went back the next day and spent another 10 hours. I told my wife, ‘Something’s happening here.’ ” Mr. Troupe eventually turned in a 45-page article, which Spin printed in two lengthy installments. The next year Mr. Troupe received a call from a representative for Simon & Schuster: Miles Davis wanted him to work with him on his autobiography, extending a relationship that was to last until Davis’s death in 1991, at 65. As Mr. Troupe sees it now, the angry image that was often associated with Davis actually masked a gentle soul. “Miles Davis was not the monster everybody made him out to be,” he said. “Miles Davis was a very shy guy who created a persona, a kind of hostile persona, to keep people away from him.” Mr. Troupe has often described Davis as an “unreconstructed black man,” unapologetic and proud. “Miles did not want to smile. He was not going to be Louis Armstrong,” he said. “As far as Miles being racist, the last woman he was with was Jewish.” That woman was Jo Gelbard, an artist who taught Davis how to paint. They later collaborated (acrylics and mixed media) and became lovers. He was in her arms when he died. Afterward the estate tried to wrest control from her of the paintings that she and Davis had made together. After seven years in court she prevailed. Ms. Gelbard’s relationship with Davis is the subject of a book she is now selling online. “There was a lot more soul to Miles than has been previously depicted” in other books, Ms. Gelbard said in a telephone interview from New York. Apprehensive about Hollywood’s take, she said, “If they don’t find some light in his life, it will be just another black junkie Harlem-nights movie.” “Yes, he was complex,” she said. “And I don’t negate the violence.” But, she added, “there should be some forgiveness and insight into him as a human being. “It’s time to say he was a genius, and thank you for the music.” Quote
7/4 Posted November 19, 2006 Report Posted November 19, 2006 I don't think it can all be covered in one film. Maybe Miles needs the mini-series or Lord of the Rings treatment. Quote
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