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Mo Better Blues
Description
Jazz trumpeter Bleek Gilliam makes questionable decisions in his professional and romantic lives.
Jazz trumpeter Bleek Gilliam makes questionable decisions in his professional and romantic lives.
Actors:
Joe Seneca,
Steve White,
Linda Hawkins,
Rubén Blades,
Herbert Daughtry,
Zakee Howze,
Charlie Murphy
Joe Seneca
14 January 1919, Cleveland, Ohio, USA
Steve White
March1961
Linda Hawkins
Rubén Blades
16 July 1948, Panama City, Panama
Herbert Daughtry
13 January 1931, Savannah, Georgia, USA
Zakee Howze
Charlie Murphy
12 July 1959, New York City, New York, USA
Country:
United States
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DVDLaser
June 14, 2007
Spike Lee's film is filled with promising ideas and moments of technical virtuosity.
September 22, 2008
Full of wonderful music, grand visuals, and melodramatic plot twists, the movie is laced with very funny moments, as well as interesting insights into the world of jazz and the plight of the dedicated musician.
February 09, 2006
Despite stylish camerawork and sturdy acting, this lengthy indulgence succeeds neither as jazz movie nor as cautionary tale.
October 23, 2004
Mo' Better Blues is not a great film, but it's an interesting one, which is almost as rare.
September 22, 2008
It's tight, suspenseful, funny and packed with great music.
September 22, 2008
Personal rather than social issues come to the fore in Mo' Better Blues, a Spike Lee personality piece dressed in jazz trappings that puffs itself up like Bird but doesn't really fly.
September 22, 2008
Denzel, Wesley and Co are fine, but Mo' Better Blues hits too many bum notes.
New York Times
May 20, 2003
From characters to camera angles, this story of a self-absorbed jazz trumpeter is one long cliche, the kind that might make his most loyal admirers wince and wonder, 'Spike, what happened?'
June 24, 2008
Centering on the career of a jazz musician (well played by Denzel Washington, just before he became a star), this mid-range picture has nice production values but the drama is too diffuse, lacking the edge of Spike Lee's more overtly political works.
September 22, 2008
Though it's full of striking visual ideas and actorly turns, it never fully convinces.
Rolling Stone
May 12, 2001
For the only time in his remarkable career, Spike Lee has failed to tell it like it is.

