Let's Get Lost (Blu-ray)
Traveling with the elusive jazz vocalist and trumpeter Chet Baker, Bruce Weber weaves together the life story of a jazz great. The film uses excerpts from Italian B movies, rare performance footage, and candid interviews with Baker, musicians, friends, battling ex-wives, and his children in what turned out to be the last year of his life. Winner of the 1989 Critics Prize at the Venice Film Festival and nominated for an Academy Award, Let's Get Lost has become an important document in the career of the filmmaker on the life of a jazz legend. Since its release in 1989 Let's Get Lost has introduced a whole new generation of jazz enthusiasts to the timeless talent of the late Chet Baker.
- Short Films by Bruce Weber: Backyard Movie, Beauty Brothers, Gentle Giants, Liberty City is Like Paris to Me, The Teddy Boys of the Edwardian Drape Society, Wine and Cupcakes
- Theatrical Trailer
- Bruce Weber - Director
- Chet Baker - Himself
- Vera Baker - Herself
- Carol Baker - Herself
Reviews
"The finest jazz movie ever made."
"Watching Let's Get Lost, shot in a liquid black-and-white, we are lost in a monotonal, gorgeously shot reverie about Chet Baker, the jazz trumpeter whose alabaster-smooth, pretty face and plaintive tones broke hearts."
"A shimmeringly decadent and fascinating portrait of the West Coast jazz legend Chet Baker."
"A stark, haunting and often dryly funny portrait of an all-American hipster-heel in twilight."
"A gorgeous gravestone for the Beat Generation's legacy of beautiful-loser chic."
"Weber's documentary serves up an exquisite fusion of filmmaking style and subject matter to serve up a film that captures the essence of cool."
"A wide-eyed love letter to a jazz great."
"It's a stunner, and it's not like any film you've ever seen."
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