Don Cheadle to direct Ewan McGregor and Zoe Saldana in the Miles Davis biopic Kill the Trumpet Player

After years of trying to get a film about Miles Davis made, Don Cheadle will star and make his directorial debut with KILL THE TRUMPET PLAYER. The film picks up additional talent in Ewan McGregor and Zoe Saldana. The screenplay was written by Cheadle along with Steven Baigelman. Cheadle has been linked to the film going back to 2006 and it is just now getting off the ground. At one point there was a film about Davis being developed by NOTORIOUS director George Tillman Jr. Cheadle was not involved in that project.

Here’s the brief synopsis for the film:

KILL THE TRUMPET PLAYER centers on a few dangerous days in the life of Miles Davis (Cheadle), as he bursts out of his silent period and conspires with a Rolling Stone writer (McGregor) to steal back his music.

Miles Davis is an icon in music with his varied styles of jazz through his career. The man had a tumultuous life involving all sorts of conflicts involving race, drugs, and more. Don Cheadle, however, does not like the term biopic in relation to KILL THE TRUMPET PLAYER.

“Let’s kill that term, OK? I hope with this film we can kill the biopic. This film won’t try to give a broad overview of Davis’ life and give short shrift to this man’s story,” he said at the time. “For us as creative people, the time of his life that was most interesting was the five years when he wasn’t playing, when he was silent. What was going on in his mind? And how did he come out of it and return to music?”

While a traditional biopic would have a lot of material to draw from in Miles Davis’ life, I like the idea of focusing on just a particular moment in his life. Not to short-change films like WALK THE LINE or RAY, but they are very by the numbers movies that hit the right notes. Cheadle could turn in a project that will be a big awards contender or at the very least an interesting experiment with the genre.

Source: The Hollywood Reporter

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Alex Maidy has been a JoBlo.com editor, columnist, and critic since 2012. A Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic and a member of Chicago Indie Critics, Alex has been JoBlo.com's primary TV critic and ran columns including Top Ten and The UnPopular Opinion. When not riling up fans with his hot takes, Alex is an avid reader and aspiring novelist.