Макс — сын Гуфи, он учится в обычной американской школе. Макс влюбляется в свою одноклассницу Роксанну, которая кажется ему самой красивой и самой лучшей на свете. Он хочет произвести на Роксанну впечатление, и придумывает всевозможные способы, чтобы выделиться. Гуфи по мере возможностей помогает своему сыну. В итоге девушка всё-же влюбляется в Макса.
Макс — сын Гуфи, он учится в обычной американской школе. Макс влюбляется в свою одноклассницу Роксанну, которая кажется ему самой красивой и самой лучшей на свете. Он хочет произвести на Роксанну впечатление, и придумывает всевозможные способы, чтобы выделиться. Гуфи по мере возможностей помогает своему сыну. В итоге девушка всё-же влюбляется в Макса.
It's got that Purple Rain feeling through and though. And it's got The Kid, too! For the first time since Purple Rain, Prince is back as The Kid. And where he goes , there's music! With Thieves in the Temple, New Power Generation, Elephants and Flowers and more red-hot Prince tunes from the Platinum-selling Graffiti Bridge soundtrack. What time is it? Party time! Morris Day and the Time play Release It, Shake! and more. And you'll also see and hear George Clinton, Tevin Campbell, Robin Power, Mavis Staples and other hot performers, too. Graffiti Bridge is where the movie meets the music. Cross over on it now.
The extraordinary life of Quincy Jones -- one of the 20th century's most influential and talented composers, musicians and music producers -- provides the basis of this offbeat, free-form documentary tribute. With little regard for formal timelines and traditional documentary biography methods, the film is an amazing patchwork of personal insights featuring a constellation of music stars including his long-time friend Ray Charles, Miles Davis, Frank Sinatra, Herbie Hancock, Ella Fitzgerald, Michael Jackson, Aretha Franklin, Dizzy Gillespie and rappers Big Daddy Kane and Flavor Flav, as well as politicians, filmmakers and other important people. Some of the most moving scenes involve Jones returning to his childhood home in Chicago and recounting honest and painful memories from his childhood. Jones does not shy from discussing everything -- from his mother's mental illness, to his marital problems, to his serious health conditions. He also looks frankly at his career.