Let's Get Lost 4K 1988

Without a doubt the most famous movie about Chet Baker. This incredibly harmonious black-and-white movie tells about the creative path of the maestro from the 50s of the last century to the last days of his life. Interviews with friends, relatives, a lot of archival records, photos, and of course Chet Baker himself, who as a cruel idea of the director gives us an opportunity to compare him at the beginning of his musical career - when he was fabulously popular, driving women crazy - his fashionable appearance (James Dean style), manner of dressing (tight white T-shirt) and behaving as if embarrassed. When he played the trumpet in a way that made the ladies weep, and when he sang, the same ladies lost their senses. And he's at the end-after he has a heroin addict friend in his life, after he's already spent years in a world of drug-induced oblivion, ending up in police and prison, after his face was mangled in one of the fights. Maybe because the movie was made a few months before the musician's death, throughout the whole movie, one can't help feeling that the director, as if sensing Chet's close passing, gives him a chance to say goodbye.