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  • cableaddict3 January 2006
    Ughh.

    Being a professional musician, I suppose I can't give a standard review of this flick. Simply as a movie, I suppose it will pass the time. The acting is well done, and I guess there's some kind of conflict / resolution. Sort of.

    -But as a study of the life of a jazz musician, it couldn't be any more simplistic or cliché'd.

    My guess is that even non-musicians will find themselves saying, "you gotta' be kidding me" more than a few times.

    Besides that, there's very little action or interesting dialog, though I've seen worse.

    Watch it if there's absolutely nothing else on.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    I had to take umbrage with *Cliches R us*' review...since I'm also a musician who've played outside the mainstream for over thirty years, I think he's missed the boat on this one.

    THIS movie is kind of like a "Karate Kid" for aspiring musicians, and basically it's a great portrayal of the ultimate DEVOUTion one needs to be a TRUE artist.

    The greatest moment in the movie comes when Billy Dee is about to sell out for his woman and Arvo gets the 3/4 and 4/4 timing down using both hands...which really isn't that hard, but it does show a certain amount of dedication.

    What I liked best about this movie is that it will introduce the uninitiated to freestyle jazz, and hopefully there will be a revival thanks to Encore, and it might inspire a kid or two to aspire to get into something other than a faux gangsta rhyming over insipid beats. While it's not Pink Floyd's "The Wall," *Giant Steps* gives you a glimpse at the madness behind the music.
  • Giant Steps is a great independent Canadian film. Arvo Leak (played by the brilliant actor Michael Mahonen) is a young jazz-trumpet prodigy who fights conformity in his suburban home environment and finds salvation in the form of Slate Thompson (played by a sandpaper voiced and compelling Billy Dee Williams), a once great but declining jazz pianist who is searching for many of the same things that Arvo is also looking for. The interaction between these two actors is wonderful. There are moments of genuine emotion that even the biggest Hollywood budget couldn't buy. This film really hits home for all those who are stuck in the mire of contemporary culture and are searching out for something pure and honest, which can be found in what we know as modern jazz.

    If you enjoy pop-philosophy, be-bop, great dialogue and compelling performances, this film is for you. I don't know Toronto well but I think it's a good indicator of what the city was like in the early 90's, back in the days when one could still smoke in a bar or a club. For Canadian politics buffs, if you look carefully in the scene where Arvo follows Slate outside the music shop you can see a poster of current New Democratic Party leader Jack Layton who presumably was running for Toronto City Council.

    This really is a must see film for jazz buffs. Check out the tiny cameo by the legendary trumpeter Doc Cheatham, which is funny and moving all at the same time. Ranee Lee, the Canadian jazz singer, is also wonderful and brilliantly shows off her singing and acting chops.

    Ted Dykstra, playing Graeme Gaines, is brilliant as an uncompromising but violent and ill-tempered jazz drummer. The writer and director Don McKeller also has a tiny cameo in this film, years before he hit it big. Nicu Branzea plays Arvo's father and is quite compelling as a bitter, alcoholic ex-musician who has been struck by the slings and arrows that life has thrown at him. But he and Arvo come to understand one another and the two actors achieve a wonderful synthesis. Robyn Stevan, as Arvo's friend Leslie, is funny, upbeat, and brings a down to earth sense to the film that stops it from becoming too pretentious.

    I wish the soundtrack could be found for this film as some of the music really hits home. The great Canadian pianist Joe Sealey performed on some of the cuts. (Dig that version of Ornithology where Arvo is thrown in the deep end by Slate!) The music director, Eric Leeds, did an amazing job on this film.

    This film is witty and moving, it has a lot of soul and a hell of a beat. It's what great film making and jazz should be all about.