'Miles Ahead': Don Cheadle Turns in 'Virtuoso Performance'

"You can smell the cigarettes, booze and perspiration" in the film.

— -- Four out of five stars

Rated - R

Davis and Brill embark on an adventure that involves a crooked music producer and a certain promising young trumpet player. We get flashbacks within a flashback as we witness Davis’ courtship and marriage to ex-wife Frances Taylor (Emayatzy Corinealdi), a world-renowned dancer who gave up her career for Miles. Corinealdi is a graceful force here who commands empathy.

Whether what we see unfold actually happened is beside the point. "Miles Ahead" has the feel of a jazz riff played to feel as though it may have been improvised, as if Cheadle and co-writer Steve Baigelman made it up as they were going along, and still hit all the right notes.

Cheadle’s Davis is so real you can smell the cigarettes, booze and perspiration. His descent into drug abuse and alcoholism, coupled with his self-imposed exile from society and music, is his self-punishment for destroying the love he had with Taylor.

In a career full of terrific performances, including his Oscar-nominated work in 2004’s "Hotel Rwanda," Cheadle gives us his best with "Miles Ahead."