I'm Not
There
and yet he's everywhere, and not just in the soundtrack (his own
versions of his songs and covers). The film gives us at least four
incarnations of the idea of Dylan: Bale plays the Greenwich Village
coffeehouse sensation as a man called Jack Rollins who later, in the
film's sole truly snide touch, emerges as a revivalist preacher in
California; Ledger, embodying the Dylan ill-at-ease with fame, isn't
even a musician, but a movie star trying to keep his relationship with
Claire (Gainsbourg) on the rails; Richard Gere plays Billy the Kid
(Dylan scored a film about him and, after all, has always been an
outlaw spirit).
There's even a character called Woody Guthrie (a
folk musician Dylan always acknowledged as his principal muse) but he's
played by an African-American, the barely post-pubescent Franklin. He
introduces himself to another character by name; "Just like the
singer," comes the response.
In the film's most audacious touch,
Cate Blanchett plays Jude Quinn -- her hunched shoulders, Afro, shades
and truculent, cryptic utterances perfectly recalling the Dylan who
left the mainstream press floundering. More male than the men, she's
also somehow more Dylan than Dylan. And she's mesmerising.
The
film, then, is less a portrait of Dylan than a meditation on how he
defies portrayal. And it's replete with enough self-referential
allusions to keep trainspotters busy for years: is "Jude" a reference
to "Judas", the name the newly electric 1966 Dylan was branded as in
London? Or to his Jewishness (the Nazis' word for Jew is "Jude")? Or
both?
The great thing is that none of this matters. The film's
non-linear structure and the haunting, brilliant final shot announce
that this is neither biography nor documentary. It's a exhilarating,
poetic rumination on the most enigmatic, charismatic figure in modern
music. And, like any Dylan album you want to name, it is a work of at
least partial mastery.
Peter Calder
Cast:
Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett, Marcus Carl Franklin,
Richard Gere, Heath Ledger, Ben Whishaw, Kris Kristofferson, Charlotte
Gainsbourg, Julianne Moore
Director:
Todd Haynes
Running time:
135 mins
Rating:
M (sex scenes, offensive language)
Screening:
Berkeley, Hoyts, Rialto, SkyCity