Bird with Forest Whitaker: DVD Cover
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Bird Director: Clint Eastwood Cast: Forest Whitaker, Diane Venora, Michael Zelniker, Sam Wright

DVD - 2 Disc Set Learn more

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  • DVD Release Date: 07/22/2008
  • Original Release: 1988
  • Rating: Rated R
  • Sales Rank: 11,767

Viewer Rating: (1 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Performances" See All

 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
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Scenes

Features

Music-only audio track; Theatrical trailer

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Bird
1. Early Days [1:59]
2. Lester Leaps In [2:10]
3. After-Hours Humoring [5:09]
4. Bad Medicine [1:57]
5. The Substitute is Pain [3:03]
6. If I'm Straight [3:26]
7. Special, Creative Man [2:05]
8. Mayor of 52nd Street [2:49]
9. Kansas City [4:00]
10. You'll Dig Him [2:59]
11. With Dizzy at 4 a.m. [3:17]
12. In Pursuit of Chan [4:04]
13. "You Stop Reading My Mind" [5:11]
14. Esteves and Mrs. Berg [3:40]
15. Mounted Homecoming [2:21]
16. Chan's Revelation [3:45]
17. Contributing Factors [1:00]
18. Bebop Invades... [4:58]
19. Calling on Stravinsky [2:24]
20. Bebop Banned [2:11]
21. Recording Studio [3:50]
22. A Reunion and a Ride [4:37]
23. "Don't Ever Leave..." [2:14]
24. Glory in France [3:12]
25. Junkies Abroad [2:58]
26. Society Gig [3:49]
27. South With Albino Red [5:44]
28. Now's the Time [6:17]
29. The Fix: Bird's Fault [4:42]
30. Back at Birdland [2:48]
31. Rodney Busted [3:30]
32. Laura Montage [3:50]
33. "You Have a Daughter" [3:21]
34. Not the Way it Works [2:40]
35. His Song [2:35]
36. Paradise [1:40]
37. Martyr in the Making [2:45]
38. Telegrams [5:44]
39. Inside the Melody [4:29]
40. Moving Out of the City [3:31]
41. Rock 'N' Roll [4:02]
42. Showing Up Eventually [3:01]
43. Hating to Hang Up [3:27]
44. Nica's Doorstep [2:45]
45. Balancing Act Over [3:07]
46. Coroner's Report [1:08]
47. Coda, Dedication and End Credit [5:59]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Forest Whitaker stars as the brilliant jazz saxophonist Charlie "Bird" Parker in this elegiac biopic. Director Clint Eastwood pays full homage to Parker's musical genius, but also devotes ample time to the musician's twin demons--drugs and alcohol-which accelerated his death at the age of 34. In his struggles to gain widespread acceptance for his music, "Bird" is forever stymied by his own self-destructiveness, and forever bailed out by the love of his life, Chan Richardson Parker (Diane Venora). The film bemoans the decline of the brand of jazz fathered by Parker, which came to be replaced by more conventional material -- as illustrated by the "descent" into the mainstream of Parker's mentor Buster Franklin. Also starring in Bird is Samuel E. Wright as Dizzy Gillespie. That's the real Charlie "Bird" Parker on the film's soundtrack, though most of the background music has been re-orchestrated. Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

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Customer Reviews

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  • Ratings: 1Reviews: 1

"Bird Lives"...sort of !by Anonymous

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April 06, 2009: Mr.Eastwood who directed "Bird" is a devoted jazz fan using jazz in the soundtrack of several of his earlier films. He has had a long collaboration with ex-Kentonite Lennie Niehaus in the musical scoring of several of his projects."The Gauntlet" for example featured alto saxophonist Art Pepper and other prominent West Coast jazzmen throughout.

This hommage to Charlie "Bird" Parker acknowledged to be a giant figure in 20th. century contemporary music, is a dark film literally as their often appears to be minimal lighting adding to the somber mood of the story line. Forest Whitaker is convincing in his portrayal but, the criticism by those who actually knew Parker personally was that he was portrayed solely as a tragic one dimensional figure leaving us with an incomplete study of this complex, articulate, highly intelligent, towering musical genius who changed improvised music (jazz if you must) forever much as did Louis Armstrong and Lester Young before him. Dizzy Gillespie collaborated with Parker surely but "Bird" codified the language. Those of us familiar with the life of Charles Christopher Parker would have wished for a more factual story line but, Mr.Eastwood is to be commended for dealing with the subject knowing it would have a limited commercial audience and was free to take artistic license. Perhaps it will make some viewers curious to discover the "real" Bird (Parker's actual solos were incorporated in the soundtrack) through his recordings which in the end is what it's all really about. Indeed, "Bird Lives".

I Also Recommend: Bird: The Complete Charlie Parker on Verve, Complete Savoy Live Performances: Sept. 29, 1947-Oct. 25, 1950, The Complete Savoy and Dial Master Takes.