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Co-writer
and director Todd Haynes has taken an innovative approach to the
music bio-pic with I'm Not There, a strange and unique film
which is inspired by the music and many lives of Bob Dylan.
The film features six different actors who portray characters based
on Dylan in various stages of his personal and professional career.
Young black actor Marcus Carl Franklin plays a travelling musician
who has taken the name of legendary folk singer Woody Guthrie; Welsh
actor Christian Bale plays Jack Rollins, a pioneering Greenwich
Village folk singer who goes into seclusion and returns as born
again preacher Pastor John; Australian actor Heath Ledger plays
Robbie Clark, a James Dean-esque bohemian actor who portrays Rollins
in a film, and is also going through the motions of a divorce with
his wife (Charlotte Gainsbourg); English actor Ben Whishaw plays
Arthur Rimbaud, a poet who is undergoing an interrogation; Australian
actress Cate Blanchett plays Jude Quinn, a popular folk singer who
evokes the hatred of her fans when she begins to use electric instruments,
and the intense scrutiny of the press while touring England (especially
from a critic played by Bruce Greenwood); and American actor Richard
Gere plays Billy the Kid, who is hiding in seclusion in a quiet
little town until Pat Garrett (Bruce Greenwood, again) forcefully
tries to evacuate its residents so he can continue the development
of a new road.
There are also cameos by Julianne Moore as Alice Fabion (who is
based on real life folksinger and activist Joan Baez), Michelle
Williams as an uptight super model, and comedian David Cross as
poet Allen Ginsberg.
Every actor brings something special to their performances. Christian
Bale continues to show his versatility and impresses with a solid
singing voice, Cate Blanchett puts on an astonishingly excellent
chameleonic performance (her expertise in mimicry paying off big
time and sure to land her plenty of accolades come awards season),
and Heath Ledger continues to impress with another strong performance.
I'm Not There spits in the face of conventional filmmaking,
with director Todd Haynes opting to take an inspired approach whilst
telling the story of a legendary musician who would have not benefited
from the style of filmmaking seen in Ray and Walk
the Line.
It is a rather bizarre film that takes on different colours and
tones. The way in which the film is shot and edited reminds me somewhat
of Oliver Stone during the 1990's, in particular JFK
and Natural Born Killers. Numerous sections are shot
in black and white, scenes focusing on the Jack Rollins character
is shot as if it was a documentary, and the Billy the Kid sequences
are confusingly trippy. The film's surrealistic elements do little
more than further complicate things.
Praise should be given to Editor Jay Rabinowitz in crafting such
an eccentric bunch of sequences without the benefit of a singular
narrative. Cinematographer Edward Lachman also does a first rate
job.
Despite its flaws, I'm Not There does succeed in adapting
Dylan's story to the big screen. He has had an extraordinarily varied
and storied career that could only be told with such unconventional
methods. Fans of Dylan would better understand the films eccentricities,
yet others (myself included) will still find I'm Not There
an entertaining and thought provoking biography of a man who has
been labelled a spokesman for a generation, a traitor to his cause,
and a messiah. But in the end, he is just a musician, and everything
else is secondary.
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