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I’m Not There
Reviewed By Rich Drees
Singer Bob Dylan once famously asked in song, “How many roads must a
man walk down, before you can call him a man?” Writer/director Todd
Haynes attempts to answer that question by showing us six travelers
on the various roads that make up facets of Dylan himself.
One of the
first images we see in the film is a Dylan-esque figure on a
mortuary slab, dead from a motorcycle accident. A scalpel makes the
first incision of an autopsy, Haynes’ visual signal for the upcoming
dissection of Dylan’s life. To do so he has splintered Dylan into
various characters representing various aspects the artist’s
personality at various points in his life.
Chronologically, the first Dylan avatar we meet is a young black boy
(Marcus Carl Franklin who gives a performance far more mature than
his young years would indicate) who identifies himself as “Woody”
(as in “Guthrie”). Although it is 1959, Woody is schooled in the
folk music of the Great Depression of two decades earlier,
recreating the lifestyle of that era by hopping freight trains.
Other incarnations include a young folk singer trying to catch a
break in the Greenwich Village of the early 1960s (Christian Bale)
and an actor playing the aforementioned singer in a biopic a decade
later (Heath Ledger).
Perhaps the most interesting segments of the film cover the time
immediately after Dylan “went electric,” much to the dismay of a
majority of his fans who saw it as a betrayal. Haynes accurately
depicts the impact of that performance with a quick shot of the
Dylan character – here called Jude, short for Judas, naturally – and
his band blasting machine guns out into the audience from onstage.
Jude is traveling Europe, performing his new material to the
disapproval of his fans and flirting about the edges of the pop
culture he has supposedly sold out to. All the while he is dogged by
a persistent British journalist who doubts the stories that Jude has
been telling about his background. Portraying this version of Dylan
is Cate Blanchett who manages to capture the singer in ways that are
extraordinary, belying any fears that her inclusion in the film was
anything more than a bit of stunt casting.
Haynes employs
a variety of visual styles for each segment, reflecting the essence
of the artist and his music at the various times being examined. The
early 1960s folk scene of Greenwich Village is shot in grainy black
and white, invoking a rejection of the more colorful palette of pop
and mod culture of the time in addition to matching the look of the
1967 Dylan documentary Don’t Look Back. It amounts to what
could be called impressionistic filmmaking, even if the effect
somewhat feels like one is watching a film edited together from
biopics from six alternate universes. Haynes intercuts each segment
in a way that reinforces one another in various ways, with
storylines often paralleling each other or providing ironic
counterpoint to each other.
Unfortunately,
the one segment that doesn’t seem to work is the one that projects
Dylan as an older Billy The Kid, as personified by Richard Gere, who
has survived his supposedly fatal gunfight with Pat Garrett to live
a quiet life in a strange little town the celebrates Halloween all
year round. Although beautifully shot with rich vibrant color, there
are no strong links between it and the other segments, leaving it
feeling strangely disassociated from the rest of the film.
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