KEY POINTS:
Rating: * * * *
Verdict: An unconventional but exhilarating rumination on Bob Dylan by a filmmaker who really gets him.
"[Stuck
Inside of Mobile With The] Memphis Blues Again", off 1966's Blonde on
Blonde, was lodged in my memory as a slow, haunting wail. But seconds
into this boundary-stretching fantasia, I was hearing it for the first
time. It rocks.
Dylan does that. The albums, even the bad ones,
yield new riches each time you dig them out. And Haynes' film, dressed
as a biopic but actually an extended riff on its subject, constantly
illuminates Dylan by providing new angles of view.
If his music
has never made the hair stand up on the nape of your neck, you may not
get this film. If it has, you will, because it's made by a man who gets
Dylan. You may not like all of it - it's sometimes flatulent or dull or
a bit too knowing. But you'll argue into the night over which bits work
and which don't and you'll admit that it is not to be missed.
The title, that of an obscure and unreleased Dylan song, is a clue
to the film's playful tone. There's nobody called Bob Dylan in