64
Metascore
39 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- 83HitfixDrew McWeenyHitfixDrew McWeenyWhile there is an untruth at the heart of the film, it's in service of illuminating any number of smaller truths, and I find that approach fascinating.
- 70The Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyThe Hollywood ReporterDavid RooneyThe abstraction of the approach perhaps limits the scope of Miles Ahead as an acting showcase, though in Cheadle's fully inhabited characterization, he nails the subject's soft, nicotine-scratched rasp and his eccentric irritability and paranoia with discerning understatement.
- 70Screen DailyGraham FullerScreen DailyGraham FullerFirst-time feature director Don Cheadle has made an invigoratingly bold attempt to structure his film about Miles Davis as an extended visual and narrative equivalent of modal jazz.
- 70New York Magazine (Vulture)David EdelsteinNew York Magazine (Vulture)David EdelsteinThis is probably Cheadle’s most electrified performance since the one that made him a star, as the incorrigibly homicidal Mouse in "Devil in a Blue Dress."
- 67The PlaylistRodrigo PerezThe PlaylistRodrigo PerezMiles Ahead is well-intentioned and ambitious, but ultimately uneven, as it cannot redefine the structures its so desperately wants to break down.
- 60VarietyNick SchagerVarietyNick SchagerDon Cheadle flails about trying to channel the spirit of late jazz-trumpeting legend Miles Davis in Miles Ahead, a biopic that rejects typical genre conventions to the point of chasing itself down lame, tangential paths.
- 60The GuardianJordan HoffmanThe GuardianJordan HoffmanCheadle’s got the cred, and the period evocation is tremendous. It’s just that I’m not sure he has all that much to say
- 58ConsequenceDominick Suzanne-MayerConsequenceDominick Suzanne-MayerIn fits and starts, the film matches the fire of its lead performance. Miles Ahead is far from a traditional, boilerplate music biopic, for better and worse alike.
- 50Slant MagazineElise NakhnikianSlant MagazineElise NakhnikianLess a character study than an impressionistic portrait of a troubled artist's internal chaos, it supplies just enough Miles Davis to leave us jonesing for more.