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HOME arrow tMF Exclusives arrow I'M NOT THERE: Poetry in Motion
I'M NOT THERE: Poetry in Motion Print E-mail
Written by Jed Medina   
Friday, 05 October 2007

"I’m Not There is the name of a famously elusive, unreleased track from Dylan’s famed Basement Tapes sessions, and recorded with The Band in Woodstock in 1967, while Dylan was recuperating from his motorcycle crash. The song has been written about at length by writers as varied as Greil Marcus, Paul Williams and Don DeLillo, and is featured in the film both in its original form and in a powerful new cover by Sonic Youth (their first and only Dylan cover.) But to me the title evokes Rimbaud’s famous line (also in the film): I is another—and the theme of personal displacement that the film’s “multiple Dylan” strategy tries to illustrate." says director Todd Hayne about his new film.

Considered as one of the most anticipated films of the year, I'm Not There is an unconventional journey into the life and times of Bob Dylan. Six actors portray Dylan as a series of shifting personae—from the public to the private to the fantastical—weaving together a rich and colorful portrait of this ever-elusive American icon. Poet, prophet, outlaw, fake, star of electricity, rock and roll martyr, born-again Christian—seven identities braided together, seven organs pumping through one life story, as dense and vibrant as the era it inspired.

The Characters:

ARTHUR: ARTHUR (Ben Whishaw), a renegade symbolist poet, serves as the film’s de facto narrator, while being interrogated by a nameless commission as to the motivations, subversive undercurrents, and political misreading of his work. Arthur represents Dylan under the influence of Arthur Rimbaud as symbolist poet and artistic rebel. Here, Arthur responds in quotes from Dylan’s famous 1965 interviews and his witty, ironic responses provide counterpoint to the chapters in a life that begin to unfurl.

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WOODY: First up, as an embodiment of Dylan’s youthful aspirations, we meet WOODY (Marcus Carl Franklin), a precocious train-hopper who, despite being 11-years old and black, calls himself Woody Guthrie. Set in 1959, Woody has adopted the posture and tales of the dust bowl troubadour with a calculated earnestness. To the supporters he encounters on the road, Woody’s tall tales of circus escapades and musical glory provides impressive evidence of his authenticity, even as his impersonation is revealed.

JACK: The first character to achieve success, “singing about his own time,” is JACK (Christian Bale), who spearheads the protest-music scene of early sixties Greenwich Village with his original compositions, strident performances and high-profile LPs. Jack represents Dylan of the early sixties folk revival as embodied in landmark recordings such as The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan and The Times They Are A-Changin’. As the devouring public divines a social and political consciousness in his lyrics, Jack severs ties with his ‘message’ in a bizarre retreat from both his lover and folk singing champion, Alice (Julianne Moore) and his young worshiping audience.

ROBBIE: ROBBIE (Heath Ledger), a New York actor and motorcycle enthusiast, races to counter-culture fame with his performance in a 1965 film biography of the now vanished Jack. Robbie’s troubled ten-year relationship with Claire (Charlotte Gainsbourg) is chronicled from their initial meeting in Greenwich Village through to their eventual separation against the background turmoil of the Vietnam War. Here, Dylan’s romantic life is chronicled, drawing from his early love songs to Suze Rotolo (from The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan and Another Side of Bob Dylan) and his songs of marriage and break-up with Sarah Loundes (from Blonde on Blonde, Planet Waves and Blood On The Tracks).

JUDE: While Robbie struggles to balance private life with encroaching fame, JUDE (Cate Blanchett) surrenders body and soul to a full-throttle assault on his folk music following. Closely following Dylan’s mid-sixties adventures and folk-rock classics, Highway 61 Revisited and Blonde on Blonde, Jude shocks his audience by embracing amplified rock and an increasingly nihilistic, amphetamine-fuelled persona. His new sound attracts artistic kudos from Allen Ginsberg (David Cross), underground ingénue Coco Rivington (Michelle Williams) and international fame, but infuriates the protest-music old guard, not to mention journalists like Mr. Jones (Bruce
Greenwood). Evading emotional attachments and basic self-preservation, Jude’s dangerous game propels him into existential breakdown.

PASTOR JOHN: Jude’s resurrection comes in the nick of time: PASTOR JOHN (Christian Bale) is Jack twenty years later, a born-again Christian preacher who has jettisoned his folk music legacy for the gospel. Pastor John represents Dylan’s own conversion to Christianity in the late 70’s, and the gospel recordings that he produced and performed from 1979 -1981 (Slow Train Coming, Saved and Shot of Love.)

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BILLY: Finally, the last and oldest of our characters is discovered in full retreat from the world. BILLY (Richard Gere) imagines Dylan as the fabled outlaw Billy the Kid, after surviving his famous showdown and finding refuge in the metaphoric town of Riddle. But when word of the town’s impending demise forces a confrontation with his old nemesis Pat Garrett (a reincarnated Bruce Greenwood), Billy is forced to abandon sanctuary and continue moving on. Here, the story makes reference to Dylan’s many exiles from public life throughout his career, including his first retreat to Woodstock 1967 where he recorded The Basement Tapes and John Wesley Harding. The Western genre reflects his continued interest in country music and western themes (from Nashville Skyline and Pat Garrett & Billy The Kid to his Rolling Thunder Revue in 1976), as well as to his lifelong interest in the roots of traditional American music and its folklore.

Interview with Todd Haynes

What does Dylan mean to you? Do you feel the film will open up new interest in Dylan and his works for a younger audience?

Dylan’s artistic achievements don’t really require any endorsement from me. There are those who think he’s the greatest songwriter of all time and those who don’t care for him at all. But as a leading influence in popular music and post-war culture Dylan is inescapable, whether you like him or not. He along with the Beatles pretty much conducted the 1960’s, at least for its massive generation of young people. So for young people today, who may associate him more with their parent’s generation, I do hope I’m Not There offers a fresh jolt into that time, and an exciting new take on his music.

How did you begin preparations for the film, its obvious that you’ve often watched ‘Don’t Look Back’, the Newport film, live clips and read his autobiography - Chronicles. Did you speak to any of Dylan’s close friends from previous eras like Joan Baez & Suze Rotolo?

In preparing I’m Not There I spent as much time studying Dylan’s creative history as his literal one, and by creative history I mean his songs, his writing, his interviews, his films, as well as the music, writing, films and history that inspired him. This was never going to be a straight biopic, so I chose instead to focus on the places where his creative life and real life intersected or mirrored one another. I did read all his biographies—in fact most of the books published about him—but didn’t really conduct interviews. I suppose I felt that biographers in search of the “real Dylan” or “true Dylan” always failed, and that one can never really convey truth except through a kind of fiction. I did speak to Suze Rotolo, though, who had actually contacted me. She had heard I was doing a film about Dylan and was concerned that I would get her wrong in it, as all the biographers had done. I asked her what she meant, since I thought she always came off so wonderfully in the biographies. What was it they left out? “The fun”, she said.

What was the inspiration for casting each part of Dylan with different person? How did you come to write the screenplay with Oren? Where did these separate narrative strings come from?

I first discovered Dylan in high school, but sort of stopped listening for a while. Then in late 1999, at a certain turning point in my life, I found myself craving him again. I think I needed to return to that sense of adolescent energy—and possibility—that he had once nourished. I was leaving New York where I had lived for fifteen years, just to get away and write a script in Portland, Oregon, where my sister lived. What I didn’t know at the time was that I would never return. Something was happening and I didn’t know what it was. I just kept getting deeper and deeper into Dylan, discovering all the unreleased material and reading anything I could get my hands on. And the more I read the more I discovered how change—radical personal, artistic change had defined his life. And the only way to convey that fact would be to dramatize it, to literally distill his life and work into a series of separate selves and stories. The six characters that ultimately emerged seemed to encompass the dominant themes and instincts that informed his life and canon of work, though most had their roots in the sixties.

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So while writing the script for my last film, Far From Heaven, the basic concept and earliest drafts of I’m Not There were also taking shape. And by the end of that first year in Portland, we’d secured the rights from Dylan to proceed. But the serious research and writing of the script didn’t really begin until 2002, when Far From Heaven was over. It was a massive endeavor, producing massive early drafts of a script. And that’s where Oren came in. A great writer and someone I really trusted, Oren flew to Portland and together we started whipping it down to a conceivable size and shape. It was a tough process but much more fun than doing it alone. And together we had a finished draft by the end of 2004.

Dylan’s life is already very well documented, with I’M NOT THERE what do you hope you can add to the understanding of this artist? How do you hope his fans will perceive this radical reworking?

Basically I hope to explode any preconceived notion about Dylan into a thousand shimmering pieces—to see him both from the inside out and from the outside in, as both a creative person at a specific time and place and a true embodiment of the American multitude: its conflicts, rebellions and traditions. Hardcore Dylan fans are a serious bunch. I suspect the film will send them into a state of frenzied debate, evoking both euphoria and outrage.

In light of your previous works on the subject of music i.e. SUPERSTAR & VELVET GOLDMINE and your work with Sonic Youth why choose Dylan?

I would be compelled to make a film about Dylan even if I didn’t like his music. He’s just too important and fascinating a figure to post-war culture to not eventually take on as a dramatic subject.

How did you choose the songs from Dylan’s vast back catalogue?

The songs in the film are not necessarily my favorite or even the “best” Dylan songs. First and foremost they had to serve the narrative and dramatic demands of the film. But I felt it was important to combine great Dylan “masterworks” (like All Along The Watchtower or Visions of Johanna) with lesser known, even obscure compositions (like the title song, I’m Not There). I also knew I wanted a mixture of actual Dylan recordings alongside new versions performed by contemporary artists. This gave us the opportunity to continue to broaden and invigorate his enormous body of work, bringing new life to songs like Going To Acapulco and Pressing On.

Why are you making this film today?

The many reasons for doing this film today were not immediately apparent when the idea first came to me. But the years I spent developing, researching and writing I’m Not There were of course the crowning years of the Bush administration and the war in Iraq. At times I felt very close to the character of Claire (Charlotte Gainsbourg) who finds herself caught impotently watching the Vietnam War unfold on television. I think much of my own rage and disbelief was channeled into the depiction of that seemingly distant universe of the 1960’s, which, while offering some parallels to a war of choice run amok, was more often marked by an engaged and vocal opposition, nowhere in sight at the height of the Bush/Cheney years. At the time I felt as if I were writing about a lost and buried cultural history—the antithesis of where we were at the time. Today, though, the catastrophes of the Bush era have pushed the country in a very different direction—in some people’s estimation, toward the collapse of a conservative era that began in the 1960’s and one far more inclined to receive a film like I’m Not There as a powerful reminder of what’s at stake in a free society, and what’s been lost along the way.

What artistic license did you take with Dylan’s life did you censor anything?

The film was never meant to be a tell-all about Bob Dylan, check-listing his drug use or infidelities. That said, the film is no puff piece. His indulgences, excesses, his aggressions, fabrications and controversial opinions are all on display at various points throughout the film. But to their extraordinary credit, Dylan’s management has provided nothing but encouragement for me to interpret him as I saw fit, a situation that hasn’t ceased to amaze me and to which the film owes its frankness and complexity.

Dylan is notoriously reclusive and this is the first film he has approved of his life - how did you approach him with the project? What did he say? What was Dylan’s input in the film if any?

Throughout this entire adventure, I have never met or spoken to Dylan myself. I know if I had requested to do so it could have been arranged. But I never felt the need to speak to him directly. Jeff Rosen, on the other hand, his long-time manager, has been extremely close and generous to the production from the get-go. It was Jeff who Christine Vachon and I first approached in the summer of 2000, via Dylan’s oldest son, Jessie, an independent filmmaker based in LA. After making my “pitch,” Jeff advised me to write my concept down on a single sheet of paper—avoiding any references to Dylan’s “genius” or “voice of a generation” stuff. The result, a proposal entitled I’m Not There: Suppositions on a Film Concerning Dylan, began: If a film were to exist in which the breadth and flux of a creative life could be experienced, a film that could open up as oppose to closing down what it is we think we know walking in, it could never be within the tidy arc of a master narrative. Accompanied by copies of some of my films, the proposal was sent to Dylan for his consideration. And a few months later, no doubt aided by Jeff Rosen’s encouragement, we received word that Dylan said yes. (To this day, I still can’t quite believe it.)

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Why did you choose the title I’M NOT THERE?

I’m Not There is the name of a famously elusive, unreleased track from Dylan’s famed Basement Tapes sessions, and recorded with The Band in Woodstock in 1967, while Dylan was recuperating from his motorcycle crash. The song has been written about at length by writers as varied as Greil Marcus, Paul Williams and Don DeLillo, and is featured in the film both in its original form and in a powerful new cover by Sonic Youth (their first and only Dylan cover.) But to me the title evokes Rimbaud’s famous line (also in the film): I is another—and the theme of personal displacement that the film’s “multiple Dylan” strategy tries to illustrate.

How did you choose the actors? Especially Cate Blanchett?

I couldn’t be more astounded by my actors in this film, from my extraordinary leads to all the local talent we cast out of Montreal. Basically I just chose the best actors I could find, from Cate Blanchett, Heath Ledger, Christian Bale, Richard Gere and Ben Wishaw, to Marcus Carl Franklin, Charlotte Gainsbourg, Julianne Moore, Michelle Williams, David Cross and Bruce Greenwood. But the role of Jude was always meant to be played by a woman. I felt it was the only way to resurrect the true strangeness of Dylan’s physical being in 1966 which I felt had lost its historical shock value over the years. But of course it would take an actor of Cate’s supreme intelligence and ability to bring to the role the kind of depth and subtlety she delivers so stunningly onscreen.

How much freedom did you give to the actors of their interpretation of the roles? How did you keep what is ‘essential’ to you about Dylan with each separate character?

During the development and preproduction of the film I basically provided all my lead actors with extensive visual material of Dylan and the stylistic references I was drawing on for each of their stories. In addition I made collections of songs and interviews from Dylan’s career that inspired their roles. No one was asked to imitate him directly, but rather to make use of his cadences, looks and styles, as they pertained to their specific time in his life. The result is a range of interpretations of Dylan from the inside out—while hair, make-up and costume designers worked closely with the actors to specify the physical manifestation of their characters and the time and place in which they are set.

What is your favorite Dylan song and why?

I don’t have a single favorite song. My favorite record is still Blonde on Blonde—the rock era’s first double album—whose baroque modernity and urbane melodrama never cease to astound.

[ I'm Not There @the wiki ] [ Todd Hayne's Discussion Board ] [ Yahoo movies trailers and clips ]

Comments (3)

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...
I'm so glad that this is getting great reviews and a lot of attention. I was beyond thrilled at the Venice wins.

In the beginning, I had been afraid that this would be another small indie that would get overlooked by the mainstream. But now, especially knowing how the Weinsteins like to promote, promote, promote, and with the reviews and festival recognition, I have high hopes that many people will have a chance to see this film. And that it will be nominated for some of the major awards during the 2008 Award Season.

Can anyone say Oscar for Best Film, Director, Supporting Actress (Cate Blanchett)?

And (dare I hope??) a nom for Heath Ledger?
PhyllisC , October 07, 2007 | url
The Heath is on!
I'm keeping my fingers cross too on the number of noms this film might get from the Oscars, it seems the reviewers and critics have been impressed by the performance of Cate Blanchett. I was hoping that Ben Whishaw will get the kind of recognition he deserves, but as with James McAvoy last year, he was not even considered for the nomination, in his amazing performance for The Last King of Scotland. Anyway, in Atonement I think he might.

There are also talks about Christian Bale's performance. smilies/cool.gif

As for Heath, I hope so. He's one of our best actors today!
Admin , October 07, 2007
I'm There!
I'm hoping that some of our film reviewers here, will get the opportunity to see this, and give their own review.

I have followed this indie film from the very beginning, and I'm happy to hear it's getting good reviews from some well known critics, and especially that its even getting Oscar buzz. My prediction, is perhaps Cate will get a nom for her amazing Dylan portrayal, and may also get a nom to Todd Haynes for Director. It would be awesome for Best Film as well of course.

Like you mentioned Jed, I too would like to see some of the other Dylan actors get more recognition as well...especially Heath, Ben, and Christian. Realistically though, Cate's Dylan seems to be the stand out one, and also resembles him the most which seems to be getting the most attention. Perhaps one of the least noticed Dylan's, is the young actor Marcus. He should get more recognition as well because if I'm not mistaken, he's the only Dylanesque actor who does his own singing in the film!

One statement that I believe I read in an article about INT which is quite true I thought, is that this film is perhaps one of the very few original films out this year. I also don't think you necessarily have to be a Dylan fan, to appreciate this film either--perhaps in some ways, non-Dylan fans would enjoy this film even more, since it would be completely fresh to them sort of speak.

It's great to see another small indie film like I'm Not There, get the recognition and visibility it deserves! smilies/smiley.gif
Jan , November 23, 2007

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