Bob Dylan in Film - No Direction Home and A Complete Unknown
hive-121744·@stortebeker·
0.000 HBDBob Dylan in Film - No Direction Home and A Complete Unknown
I recently saw the new dramatic biography **A Complete Unknown** about Bob Dylan's rise to fame in the 1960's. It was not as bad as many had claimed, at least I quite liked it. However it wasn't nearly as amazing as the documentary **No Direction Home** released ten years ago. But since both films tell the same story, each one in its own way, I think the two really complement each other quite well, so I decided to write about both in this same post. <center>https://resizing.flixster.com/OyjyzGyrLrkpBKsgbe2Ec3MCQvg=/fit-in/705x460/v2/https://resizing.flixster.com/-XZAfHZM39UwaGJIFWKAE8fS0ak=/v3/t/assets/p90298_v_h9_aa.jpg</center> [image source](https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/1148076-no_direction_home_bob_dylan) ## The Bob Dylan Phenomenon In 1961 a young guy from Minnesota hitchhiked to New York City. In his hands he carried a guitar and in his mind a world of poetry, conceived from various aspects of American folk life. He broke into the folk-music scene, which at that time was highly popular, and managed to transform it within a few short years, along with transforming himself, his own music, and in fact the overall culture of the United States. For this he earned heaps of scorn, but also unprecedented amount of praise, reaching heights of acclaim that was even too much for him. https://www.egofm.de/content/cache/blog/15328/df1/c010e48701f28b2d/a-complete-unknown-searchlight_c_01.jpg [image source](https://www.egofm.de/blog/like-a-complete-unknown-das-bob-dylan-biopic) Both movies illustrate this story very well. The **documentary by Martin Scorsese** does this beautifully by letting the personages tell their own stories in interviews. Also the **dramatized musical biography by James Mangold** does an excellent job at this, using the means of historical fiction. In my impression both films are two sides of the same coin, and should ideally be watched right after each other. This is underscored by the fact that the title of both movies are from the chorus of Dylan's famous song **Like A Rolling Stone**. <center>https://i.ytimg.com/vi/ooU0xz3P5RI/hq720.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEhCK4FEIIDSFryq4qpAxMIARUAAAAAGAElAADIQj0AgKJD&rs=AOn4CLA6rYsQMrkEXkQ7aoJZNE1_YW6bzA</center> [image source](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ooU0xz3P5RI) ## On the Shoulder of Giants *"Where do these songs come from?"* people kept wondering, since Dylan's lyrics tended to be so simple, yet so profound, capturing exactly what so many people had been feeling. To go beyond the surface, both films paid a great deal of attention to examining Bob Dylan's influences. In doing this, the documentary spends a lot of time introducing the favorite musicians Dylan liked to listen to as a kid, from *Odetta* to the *New Lost City Ramblers*. Many of these influences also come to word, such as *Liam Clancy* or *Pete Seeger*. His most notable influence, however, is undisputably **Woody Guthrie**, which the Mangold's dramatization highlights in the beginning: Dylan meets Woody and Pete Seeger at the hospital, where he performs his *Song to Woody* he wrote for and about his idol. Though this does not accurately reflect historical events, for me it felt just perfect in paying homage to Woody Guthrie. <center>https://d1nslcd7m2225b.cloudfront.net/Pictures/480xany/2/6/3/1443263_hospitalscene_382909_crop.jpeg</center> [image source](https://www.screendaily.com/features/james-mangold-breaks-down-four-key-scenes-from-a-complete-unknown-our-special-effect-is-timothee-chalamet/5201763.article) More importantly, both films use these influential musicians to set the scene of the early 1960's in the US, on the brink of the Civil Rights Movement, as well as the cultural transformation that the coming of age of the Baby Boom generation would bring about. ## Taking the Folk Scene by a Storm Greenwich Village in New York City was a vibrant hot-spot for music, poetry, and arts in general, with "folk" being particularly popular. The idea that songs would be shared by various artists, and interpreted again and again in different ways until nobody remembered or even cared about the original creator, was the most natural thing in the world in ancient past. But in the age of powerful recording companies and record sales it had to be rediscovered and held high in a kind of "back to the roots" movement. This was the attitude that the folk music scene of the time adhered to, which inadvertently led to a good amount of purism and snootiness. <center>https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F2d35fc5b-65c7-4708-aaef-9f4f477de202_620x360.jpeg</center> [image source](https://carlwilson.substack.com/p/a-few-things-i-complete-unknow-for) When Bob Dylan entered this scene, he immediately created a fair amount of waves, at first in the most positive manner. He seemed to have, in some mysterious way, tapped into the source of all those the old-time feelings that came across in traditional folk songs... but were curiously highly relevant to present day issues. His renditions of the old folk repertoire sounded great, but his originals struck a powerful chord with his contemporaries. https://decider.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/NO-DIRECTION-HOME-BOB-DYLAN.jpg?quality=75&strip=all&w=1200 [image source](https://decider.com/2020/05/24/no-direction-home-bob-dylan-netflix/) It was thus that Dylan was brought to the forefront of the Civil Rights Movement, as many of his songs directly addressed racial inequalities in American society. His most important anthem became **Blowin' in the Wind**, which he played at demonstrations, such as the famous *March on Washington* in 1963. Often he would perform together with **Joan Baez**, who had already been a famous folk singer when Dylan first arrived in New York. The two became not only partners in music, but started a relationship, which is artistically illustrated in *A Complete Unknown*, while *No Direction Home* lets both of them relate the story from their own perspectives. https://media.newyorker.com/photos/6761b7cf62e1c4705c992bef/master/w_2560%2Cc_limit/Brody-A-Complete-Unknown.jpg [image source](https://www.newyorker.com/culture/the-front-row/a-complete-unknown-shears-off-vital-details-in-the-life-of-a-colossal-complicated-artist) ## Becoming the Electric Judas If you are familiar with *Blowin' in the Wind* you probably understand my personal feeling about that song: At first it is breathtaking with its true words and its melancholic tune, but after the tenth time of listening it becomes a bit annoying. It's way too simple musically, and once the novelty of its lyrics has worn off, it starts feeling increasingly cheesy. So imagine how Dylan felt about it, especially when everyone kept requesting this one song, even though he had a whole list of new ones that went even deeper in their lyrical imagery. https://compote.slate.com/images/6d9c9f3f-640a-4c5c-8e41-1cbef8ac069e.jpeg?crop=1560%2C1041%2Cx0%2Cy0 [image source](https://slate.com/culture/2024/12/bob-dylan-movie-complete-unknown-timothee-chalamet.html) Not only that, but he was expanding musically as well. Being an old fan of rock'n roll, he soon put together an electric band with whom he kept stretching the limits of both folklore and rock music, going into completely new directions. This stirred up the major controversy around him, which ended up defining him and his career, dividing it up into the acoustic folk and the electric rock periods. It is also this controversy that both films use as their major themes. Most notably is the exclamation of **"Judas!"** by someone in the audience in one of his shows, to express the fans' displeasure of him going electric. https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/12/95789000.jpg?quality=75&strip=all&w=1200 [image source](https://nypost.com/2024/12/23/entertainment/how-timothee-chalamet-mastered-the-music-of-bob-dylan-in-a-complete-unknown/) But it was not only his fans that didn't like his new style. At the 1964 Newport Folk Festival he used his closing act to introduce some of his most iconic electric songs to a highly divided audience, among them **Like A Rolling Stone**. According to rumors, Pete Seeger was so upset at him for this, that he is alleged to have uttered something about wishing to use an axe to cut the cables to the amplifier. In the documentary he admits having used this phrase, whereas Dylan remembers having heard about it, but not believing it, since it would have broken his heart if a man he respected as much as Seeger had said something like this. Interestingly, the dramatized biography shows Pete Seeger looking at a couple of axes set up near the stage (which honestly is nonsense, no matter how you look at it), before shaking his head dismissively. <center>https://i.pinimg.com/originals/3f/4d/86/3f4d86ec6afc66e9244075ce4cd716cf.jpg</center> [image source](https://www.pinterest.com/pin/284430532689611753/) ## Check Out Both Films Clearly, Bob Dylan is whole lot more than all the images presented in both the documentary and the dramatic adaptation (as well as numerous books, articles, inside stories, and even his songs themselves). The guy behind the music had been understood, explained, and reasoned about, ever since the beginning of his career, that he consciously chose to shroud himself in a great deal of mystery. Again, both films do an excellent job at making this clear, without trying to shed light on the unfathomable. In any case, I believe for all those who know and like Bob Dylan's music, and all those who would like to get to know it, it's worth getting a glimpse at him through these two films. <center></center>
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