Everybody Digs Bill Evans 2026

Directed by Grant Gee Rhythms

Grant Gee was awarded Best Director at the Berlinale for this intense, fragmentary and inventive portrait of Bill Evans, in an interval of the American jazz great’s career when he grappled with grief and opioid addiction.

Ireland In English
102 minutes
TBC

Director

Producer

Alan Maher, Janine Marmot

Screenplay

Owen Martell, Mark O’Halloran

Cinematography

Piers McGrail

Editor

Adam Biskupski

Production Designer

Ellen Kirk

Music

Roger Goula

Cast

Anders Danielsen, Bill Pullman, Barry Ward, Laurie Metcalf, Valene Kane

Festivals

Berlin 2026

Awards

Best Director, Berlin International Film Festival 2026

Elsewhere

Sometimes an intermission is part of the music. That’s what American jazz pianist Bill Evansis told in a music biopic that, unconventionally, focuses on a period of his life when hestopped playing. It’s the first fiction feature of British filmmaker Grant Gee, renowned formusic videos, and documentaries including 2007’s Joy Division and 2012’s moody Suffolk walking tour Patience (after Sebald).

Adapted from Owen Martell’s novel Intermission, in which Evans was written as if he were a ghost, the film was shot mostly in high-contrastblack and white. In smoky bars and living rooms, Evans contends with the death of his trio’sbassist in a 1961 car accident days after they live-taped two of the most revered jazz recordsof all-time in New York. He decamps to Florida to shake a debilitating heroin habitand co-dependent chaos with partner Ellaine, only to land in the midst of a blue-collar familyplagued by their own demons.

Norwegian actor and frequent Joachim Trier collaborator Anders Danielsen Lee brings a piercing, on-edge quality as a musician trapped betweenprecision and collapse.

- Carmen Gray