
1963
Stop for Bud is Jørgen Leth's first film and the first in his long collaboration with Ole John. […] they wanted to "blow up cinematic conventions and invent cinematic language from scratch". The jazz pianist Bud Powell moves around Copenhagen -- through King's Garden, along the quay at Kalkbrænderihavnen, across a waste dump. […] Bud is alone, accompanied only by his music. […] Image and sound are two different things -- that's Leth's and John's principle. Dexter Gordon, the narrator, tells stories about Powell's famous left hand. In an obituary for Powell, dated 3 August 1966, Leth wrote: "He quite willingly, or better still, unresistingly, mechanically, let himself be directed. The film attempts to depict his strange duality about his surroundings. His touch on the keys was like he was burning his fingers -- that's what it looked like, and that's how it sounded. But outside his playing, and often right in the middle of it, too, he was simply gone, not there."

Bud Powell
Himself - Jazz Pianist

Dexter Gordon
Narrator (voice)

Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen
Himself

Jørn Elniff
Himself

Max Brüel
Himself

Project Florida

Workers Leaving the Lumière Factory

Night and Fog

Mild Madness, Lasting Lunacy

Oscar

Lambing

The Romance of Celluloid

It's in the Stars

Rock 'N' Roll Goldmine: The Sixties

Paparazzi

Annie Laurie

The Puppet Asylum

Karmen Gei

Spider-Man: All Roads Lead to No Way Home

Rod Stewart, le trublion de la pop anglaise

The Catastrophe Garden

Jasper in a Jam

Cormac McCarthy's Veer

The Conclave and Election of Pope Pius XII

The Blues Brothers