Absolutely loved it. And I wasn't even a Bob Dylan fan! But, the most amazing part of the movie was that all the actors actually play and sing their parts. Truly awesome!
Thank You Bob Dylan …I lost my daddy 3 months ago…He loved your music so much..He introduced me into your music…One of my greatest memories of my dad and I was us dancing around when I was a little girl to your music.
I watched this film on xmas day by myself in a theatre half full of people. I loved every minute. I cried ... i laughed ... and was left wanting more ... there has to be a Part 2 !
@@LucyLennon909 I got into Dylan around 1970 big time. There is little coverage of Dylan after 1966 cause he quickly lost his enthusiasm for the sport of performing. If you want to prove it to yourself. watch a you tube of Dylan for pre 65 and one from post 911 and it should be obvious the difference and why no one covers his later years
Dylan started out mimicing politics with his songs and by 66 got real tired of living with that shadow casting over him and it likely took the zest for it out of his game. An audience wants to feel like the entertainer wants to be there entertaining. Dylan isn't able to sell that anymore
I’ll tell you right now Timothée Chalamet is going to win an Oscar and the movie is going to win an Oscar so just get used to it. You don’t need to love Bob Dylan but it doesn’t hurt if you do.😊💙
@@santacruzman Yeah, but the globe awards hate God. I think the rest of the country is more in tune with the depth of Dylan: spiritual, social, and phycological. If the Acadamy doesn't feel that way too, then screw them. The rest of the country will
Time machine for me. This is the city and music world I grew up in, and it seems to viscerally recreate it very well. I've always felt the're 3 reasons people appreciate Dylan: personally relating to his lyrics of sneering rejection, wanting permission and strength to feel that way, and appreciating what he's done on a technical level, in terms of writing, musicianship, and his persona. This portrayal of Dylan seems accurate, but I can't tell yet how well it captures his deep vulnerabilities.
"Don't Look Back" is all you need to watch. I don't know why we need this film other than hopefully Chalamet gets a new generation interested in Dylan's music.
@@SuperRobertoClemente That's been my poiint exactly. I bet half the movie will be acting out the clips from "Don't Look Back" and Penebaker 1965 documentary of Dylan's English invasion
@@jsigur157 I don't like what bio-pics do to history, to its complexity, and Dylan was nothing if not complexity personified. More than electric v. acoustic, which is the stuff of facile mythmaking, DLB is about Dylan using Warhol's example to craft an elliptical persona that totally refused all forms of authority. He refused to give a "straight" interview, to commodify himself. He refused to give us his "real" self. All of this was to empower the listener, to give them the right to interpret his music-- it was radically democratic art.
@danielsiegfried3990 even if he is, at least he has something in him *too* "sell out", most people doing that have never been real artists to begin with!!!!
I watched "A Complete Unknown" on Xmas day alone in a theatre half full of people. I cried ... I laughed ... I loved every minute, and was left wanting more ... hoping for Part 2.
I remember when Sean Penn won the Oscar for playing Harvey Milk. That’s a certain kind of acting. I preferred Mickey Rourke in The Wrestler. He channeled his own pain into that character. It was more subtle but also raw and real. I think he should have won it.
Sean Penn is an enemy of Humanity, and those who know why, know why. His new film should be boycotted and he should be ignored, if not arrested and convicted of crimes against humanity in some perfect future.... A disgusting piece of garbage.
I actually learned this song. The chord progression is hypnotic.I had to employ mnemonic devices to memorize the words, associating the first word of every stanza with a specific image. It's a very wordy song.
If you visit the “Experience Music Project” museum in Seattle, Paul Allen had collected some items from Dylan’s life. Very interesting. If I remember correctly, there is a concert contract that he signed and he would be paid $23,000 in the 70’s.
I wish they would have retold the romantic, day to day lives of Bob and friends..... as in the moving book "Positively 4th Street" by David Hajdu. Brilliant, emotional book.
They keep selling it as a slice of time, but this clip looks like the average biopic to me, only not average because it's about Dylan. I hope they prove me wrong.
I'm too young to really appreciate Dylan and his influence in the 60's, and I'm not a fan of his voice and appearance, but nonetheless I will surely watch the movie because of Timothée Chalamet. He is such an ingenious actor.
he does a better job playing Dylan songs than Dylan does, or at least the movie makes it seem that way. I don't like the real versions as much as I enjoyed the movie versions.
Not particular into Dylan's music but this movie's vibe is pretty good. But there would be more interesting to know more about David Bowie life's adventure as he had tried so many extraordinary exploration and bizarre experiments to get into his throne.
When i watched bob dylan in the concert for bangladesh, i was spellbound for many years, i was not crushing on bob dylan, i wanted to BE Bob Dylan. And i was a 20 yrs old female.
VV here: Me too! I once met her at “Star Art in LA invited by John Mayall and ran into another friend musician Commander Cody who passed away a few years ago. While everyone partied, she sat in the food buffet room very quietly with another lady. She is a very shy and modest lady. I simply adore her music and have every album she ever recorded.
I’m one of the 5 people in human history who just can’t seem to like Bob Dylan’s music no matter how hard I try but man, I really want to see this movie
I don't fully get it, but I have the CDs and try. Have you checked out any covers? Billy Joel does "To Make You Feel My Love"...with a better singer, you realize the song's potential. Guns & Roses "Knocking On Heaven's Door.". Etc. I want to see this film as well. 😊
Considering what we must accept as NYC and leftist politics, this film let's us enjoy America. Woody Guthie was an amazing character, real, inspirational coming out of the Great Depression so contextually, Bob Dylan, the artist carries his torch and finds himself throughout decades of bad and good times in our sad nation's tale. Timothee will win an Oscar for his fine work because I was able to appreciate who Bobby was and grew to be, surrounded by friends and fellow artists from genres that represent American musicianship well. I literally wrote a song on my phone as this film was rolling like a stone. See, I took solace in the fiction that Judas Priest wrote and sang Diamonds and Rust but the ending credits reminded me that Joan Baez penned it originally and sang it best in loving memory of her relationship with "azzhole Bob."
He sings better than Dylan. Don't get me wrong - Dylan is a bonafide genius, but this actor dude should have smoked 2 packs/day and drank 2 quarts of Wild Turkey/day for 6 months to get the gravel right.
Real Bob Dylan fans are just not gonna be able to suspend doubt in Chamamet s singing and performance. We]ve seen mucho video clips of Dylan talking and singing. The Movie, The Doors, moreless sold their actor as the real thing but some ppl were literally fooled as to who was Morrison and who was not and they won't have that issue with Chalomet. Basically like any number of singers doing a Dylan cover tune. But who knows, maybe I give the public way more credit than they deserve. I was around, then most seeing the movie weren't but if you didn't know full well who Dylan was, would you really go to the movie? Maybe with the hype but you won't be getting much real Dylan in the movie, just the homogenized 2025 version. That was a unique time in history, encouraged by TPTB. They don't want that to happen again because the rot exposed would be massive
@@Chuck-Morris3 It's subjective. I'm sure there are others that may feel differently. But, for me, he lacks spontaneity. His choices seem predictable and obvious. It feels like he's "acting" as opposed to being in the moment. There is no sense of unpredictability or danger to him. As opposed to someone like Daniel Day Lewis, who I think is possibly the greatest actor that has ever stepped in front of a camera. Or Christian Bale or even Saoirse Ronan, who I think will be regarded as a truly great actress in time. Of course, this is all subjective, as most things in art are. Just for fun, here are some examples of what I think are truly great film performances: Al Pacino in Dog Day Afternoon, Dustin Hoffman in Straight Time, Ellen Burstyn in Requiem for a Dream, Eric Roberts in Pope of Greenwich Village, Daniel Day Lewis in There Will Be Blood, Robert Downey Jr. in Less Than Zero, and John Cazale in every film he ever appeared in. There are many other great performances, those are just a few that come to mind. All of which are, in my opinion, true master classes in acting.
Tim was definitely "in the moment" in this movie. It took a ton of dedication to pull this off. To learn to play guitar and harmonica, to actually sing and play all those songs live on set is amazing. I'll be shocked if this movie doesn't win at the Oscars. Monica Barbaro is awesome as Joan Baez. She also learned to play guitar and sing all the songs live on set. Everyone involved in this deserves a lot of recognition for the enormous amount of work and effort they all put into it. I've seen this movie twice, loved it both times. ❤😊
There's no way I will be able to watch this without thinking about that nose prosthetic the whole time lol. No matter how good stuff like that is, it always sticks out like a sore thumb to me. Is it really that important to the movie? Just use Timothy's actual nose. It's fine.
“And the words that are used as to get the ship confused, will not be understood as they are spoken …..” That was the hope, then the hope manifested itself in a complete different way, but I guess it is confined by the water’s edge.
It's got Bob Dylan's very own seal of approval and full-throated endorsement and praise once he saw it, and Bob Dylan's whole thing is being totally authentic, never fake, so...
I know Chamalet worked hard on this performance and meant well but he sounds and looks like he is mimicking Dylan’s speech and micro gestures, it looks goofy and even cringe. Chamalet trying to sound like Dylan’s mumbling but it just makes him sound drunk. I much prefer the loosely Dylan impressions in I’m Not There.
@@Kyle-l8p I don’t look at it that way. Even the way Timothee says a line one scene garnered so many likes and comments I saw on RUclips. I am fascinated by Timothee acting and this movie!
COLORIZED?! Please don't do that! Find B & W, please. And yes, "Don't Look Back" is simply all you need. This new movie is classic unnecessary Hollywood / Oscar bid for TC. Dylan in that moment was so much more complex than acoustic v. electric.
Fortunately I have the privilege and pleasure to watch more than one film concerning Bob Dylan. Besides these two, for example, also "I'm Not There" and "Bob Dylan - The Other Side of the Mirror" - which shows his 1963, 1964 and 1965 Newport sets. I don't know about colorized "Dont Look Back" but I can recommend the extended DVD release of "Dont Look Back"
i don't get it. I thing they made a contrived drama about his switch to 'electric' and I honestly think they are making a big deal about this actor's performance. He bores me. He is the critics supreme favorite but he's often just very boring. Its not easy to do historical fiction. You need exciting actors, not actors who always play safe. Boring.
Bob Dylan doesn't agree with you. Also, Timothee Chalamet never plays it safe. Beautiful Boy, there's no playing it safe in there. Call Me by Your Name, there's no playing it safe there. The King, there's no playing it safe there. Those are all extremely risky and brave performances that are outstanding and distinct from each other, none of them like the others, just like this one isn't, meaning he's a real actor, not one of those pretend actors who just play themselves over and over again, like Tom Cruise, for example. So don't like him. That's fine. But in so doing don't act like you're the voice of the people, especially since the proof is in the pudding that the people--not just the critics--don't agree with you at all, just like Bob Dylan doesn't.
Did you actually see the movie? I did and it’s absolutely brilliant. Impressive too all with live singing and no lip synching by the actors. Timmy does an excellent job of recreating Bob.
Who cares what Bob thinks? I'm sure he's flattered and in his old age he's acceptably susceptible to that. I'll reserve judgement till I see the film but from the trailer and clips I'm not blown away. Biopics are tricky.
The audience sang along to the whole movie, it was a magical experience. Seeing it again for sure
i got yelled at for singing to this land is your land
Wow, mean people next door!
Sounds like a nightmare.
Wow i can't wait.
I would love to be in the singalong audience! What a treat!
Absolutely loved it. And I wasn't even a Bob Dylan fan! But, the most amazing part of the movie was that all the actors actually play and sing their parts. Truly awesome!
Thank You Bob Dylan …I lost my daddy 3 months ago…He loved your music so much..He introduced me into your music…One of my greatest memories of my dad and I was us dancing around when I was a little girl to your music.
I'm a huge Dylan fan and Timothee was spot on Bob Dylan!
I watched this film on xmas day by myself in a theatre half full of people.
I loved every minute. I cried ... i laughed ... and was left wanting more ... there has to be a Part 2 !
Part II gets boring real fast cause he stops doing Angel dust
@jsigur157 ... replacing drugs with electricity
@@LucyLennon909 I got into Dylan around 1970 big time. There is little coverage of Dylan after 1966 cause he quickly lost his enthusiasm for the sport of performing. If you want to prove it to yourself. watch a you tube of Dylan for pre 65 and one from post 911 and it should be obvious the difference and why no one covers his later years
Dylan started out mimicing politics with his songs and by 66 got real tired of living with that shadow casting over him and it likely took the zest for it out of his game. An audience wants to feel like the entertainer wants to be there entertaining. Dylan isn't able to sell that anymore
me too!!! Same as you described haha. Maybe we were in the same cinema lol
I’ll tell you right now Timothée Chalamet is going to win an Oscar and the movie is going to win an Oscar so just get used to it. You don’t need to love Bob Dylan but it doesn’t hurt if you do.😊💙
Today is Friday, December 27, 2024. I usually don’t do predictions but oh well.😮
I think so too.
The Globe awards suggest otherwise.
I sure hope so.
@@santacruzman Yeah, but the globe awards hate God. I think the rest of the country is more in tune with the depth of Dylan: spiritual, social, and phycological. If the Acadamy doesn't feel that way too, then screw them. The rest of the country will
This is unbelievably good.
Time machine for me. This is the city and music world I grew up in, and it seems to viscerally recreate it very well. I've always felt the're 3 reasons people appreciate Dylan: personally relating to his lyrics of sneering rejection, wanting permission and strength to feel that way, and appreciating what he's done on a technical level, in terms of writing, musicianship, and his persona. This portrayal of Dylan seems accurate, but I can't tell yet how well it captures his deep vulnerabilities.
Dylan..
Dylan
"Don't Look Back" is all you need to watch. I don't know why we need this film other than hopefully Chalamet gets a new generation interested in Dylan's music.
@@SuperRobertoClemente That's been my poiint exactly. I bet half the movie will be acting out the clips from "Don't Look Back" and Penebaker 1965 documentary of Dylan's English invasion
@@jsigur157 I don't like what bio-pics do to history, to its complexity, and Dylan was nothing if not complexity personified. More than electric v. acoustic, which is the stuff of facile mythmaking, DLB is about Dylan using Warhol's example to craft an elliptical persona that totally refused all forms of authority. He refused to give a "straight" interview, to commodify himself. He refused to give us his "real" self. All of this was to empower the listener, to give them the right to interpret his music-- it was radically democratic art.
Chalamet. A new class of actor.
Surely there are hundreds of actors that would not have done worse job than he did.
@@tokctoo Exactly,.He's really crappy in the scenes I've seen..
These people will applaud ANY garbage~!
Best I've seen in last 25 years
Chalamet is not a star. Hollywood is pushing him but he's really not that great.
@@mikecantreed 1000%~
I like how he never took himself or life too seriously. John was dark, George was on his spiritual journey and Paul was/is too cocky.
He will get the Oscar for this.
I just love that Bob referred to him as "Timmy"
Makes him part of the family :)
So beautiful: voice & guitar perfect strumming, Joan would be prouder!!!
He does a great job!
He smashed it
Can’t wait to see this next week!
He gay
it really was a good movie. saw it xmas eve day
It was amazing !! Def gonna get an Oscar 🎉🎉
This is a movie I want to see again! So good!
I love the lyric Can't buy a thrill. Dylan is so unique and never sells out. Hope the movie does him justice❤
I love Dylan too but he sells out constantly- whiskey company, ect...
@danielsiegfried3990 even if he is, at least he has something in him *too* "sell out", most people doing that have never been real artists to begin with!!!!
No? Ever see the photo of him talking to Hurricane Carter with his scarf so carefully placed for the photo?
I watched "A Complete Unknown" on Xmas day alone in a theatre half full of people.
I cried ... I laughed ... I loved every minute, and was left wanting more ... hoping for Part 2.
It’s him. It’s Chalamet. He’s an incredibly gifted actor.
I remember when Sean Penn won the Oscar for playing Harvey Milk. That’s a certain kind of acting. I preferred Mickey Rourke in The Wrestler. He channeled his own pain into that character. It was more subtle but also raw and real. I think he should have won it.
Sean Penn is an enemy of Humanity, and those who know why, know why.
His new film should be boycotted and he should be ignored, if not arrested and convicted of crimes against humanity in some perfect future....
A disgusting piece of garbage.
I agree but what the hell does that have to do with this new Bob Dylan movie???
Were you supposed to make a point here? Feels like you didn't close the loop.
@@Mike-fd1lq The point is implied. Huh oh for you.
Pete is brilliant
Wow! Can't wait to see it!
I always viewed him as a Song and Dance man, actually...
fuck yea th first biopic for a singer i actually wanna watch
You should see "Ray" and "Walk the Line".
Great movie!
Bob Dylan was one of a kind.
Great times, long gone.
As a Bob Dylan fan beyond anything I can't complain if anything I can praise
Fascinating breakdown of one of my favorite Lightfoot songs.
I actually learned this song. The chord progression is hypnotic.I had to employ mnemonic devices to memorize the words, associating the first word of every stanza with a specific image. It's a very wordy song.
If you visit the “Experience Music Project” museum in Seattle, Paul Allen had collected some items from Dylan’s life. Very interesting. If I remember correctly, there is a concert contract that he signed and he would be paid $23,000 in the 70’s.
which is $150,000 in current usd. Gross. Before agent, fees and taxes.
You know he sold his entire catalogue to Sony for over $400 mill....
@ - I did not know that. Thanks !!
I wish they would have retold the romantic, day to day lives of Bob and friends..... as in the moving book "Positively 4th Street" by David Hajdu. Brilliant, emotional book.
Yeah, this book is great. Tells in detail the fateful day Richard Farina was killed. Great insight into Dylan's early life.
They keep selling it as a slice of time, but this clip looks like the average biopic to me, only not average because it's about Dylan. I hope they prove me wrong.
I'm too young to really appreciate Dylan and his influence in the 60's, and I'm not a fan of his voice and appearance, but nonetheless I will surely watch the movie because of Timothée Chalamet. He is such an ingenious actor.
he does a better job playing Dylan songs than Dylan does, or at least the movie makes it seem that way. I don't like the real versions as much as I enjoyed the movie versions.
@@seeingeyegod :-) :-) :-)
Appearance?😂
😭🤣😂😅🇮🇪☘️💚@@billyin4c514
Not particular into Dylan's music but this movie's vibe is pretty good. But there would be more interesting to know more about David Bowie life's adventure as he had tried so many extraordinary exploration and bizarre experiments to get into his throne.
Watch Velvet Goldmine then, it gets to the heart of Bowie's first transformations.
Very nice tribute no matter🤠
that looks great !
This needs to be on soundtrack.
And the Academy award goes to....
My thoughts exactly.
Edward Norton. Yes.
@@csmarkham Hopefully supporting for sure. Didn't even recognize him.
I love Lay Lady Lay. I never knew he wrote it for Barbara Streisand.
Nor did I. That is interesting.
Do NOT look that up. She doesn’t want you to know about the writing credits for that song.
Blind Willie Mctell?.......@@99albino
@@99albino I see what you did there.
@@99albino
But now you’ve made me really, really, really curious to look it up!
If only there was a term that would describe such a phenomenon.
It’s definitely not for everyone but I love it
I’ve got to see this one
I can tell you , like that clip , it felt fine .
Loved Ed Norton, too.
When i watched bob dylan in the concert for bangladesh, i was spellbound for many years, i was not crushing on bob dylan, i wanted to BE Bob Dylan. And i was a 20 yrs old female.
Great Woody Allen movie "A Rainy Day In New York" TC is awesome!!!
I spy Allen Ginsberg! Such a great clip, such a great movie!
I'd like a Joni Mitchell biopic.
Would you like fries with that?
VV here: Me too! I once met her at “Star Art in LA invited by John Mayall and ran into another friend musician Commander Cody who passed away a few years ago. While everyone partied, she sat in the food buffet room very quietly with another lady. She is a very shy and modest lady. I simply adore her music and have every album she ever recorded.
I’d love that and I’d also love a Laura Nero one as well.
You know who could play her? Elle Fanning!
who would play her?
Chalamet plays Dylan forever ....
We knew he was as rare as hens teeth back in the 60s
I’m one of the 5 people in human history who just can’t seem to like Bob Dylan’s music no matter how hard I try but man, I really want to see this movie
Weird but at least Bob does have deep lyrics. This movie looks so good too
I felt the same but bob dylan's greatest hits vol. II opened my eyes. Look for songs you haven't already heard a million times.
Try the three disc Masterpieces. That was my gateway as a fifteen year old in the eighties.
I’m one of the other 4. I don’t get it. I think it’s a case of the Emperor’s New Clothes!
I don't fully get it, but I have the CDs and try. Have you checked out any covers? Billy Joel does "To Make You Feel My Love"...with a better singer, you realize the song's potential. Guns & Roses "Knocking On Heaven's Door.". Etc. I want to see this film as well. 😊
Considering what we must accept as NYC and leftist politics, this film let's us enjoy America. Woody Guthie was an amazing character, real, inspirational coming out of the Great Depression so contextually, Bob Dylan, the artist carries his torch and finds himself throughout decades of bad and good times in our sad nation's tale. Timothee will win an Oscar for his fine work because I was able to appreciate who Bobby was and grew to be, surrounded by friends and fellow artists from genres that represent American musicianship well.
I literally wrote a song on my phone as this film was rolling like a stone.
See, I took solace in the fiction that Judas Priest wrote and sang Diamonds and Rust but the ending credits reminded me that Joan Baez penned it originally and sang it best in loving memory of her relationship with "azzhole Bob."
What kind of guitar is he playing when he meets Seeger?
Terrific performance by Chalamét. …best actor 🎉 is Chalamét…
Thomas-André Boisraméy
Mr. Chalamet did a fine job of emulating an American Original!
🤷♀️ Is it me or is Chalamet way past due for the Best Actor Academy Award?
Oh I do so hope Tim C lives a long life and doesn’t suffer tragedy for his meteoric rise in fame so early…I feel like he may - gods forbid.
Where is Timothee? I can only see Bob.
Edward Norton looks like a heckin Pete Seeger
He sings better than Dylan.
Don't get me wrong - Dylan is a bonafide genius, but this actor dude should have smoked 2 packs/day and drank 2 quarts of Wild Turkey/day for 6 months to get the gravel right.
Check out Peter Seager singing "Coyote / My Little Brother" to June and Johnny Cash live. Tell me your life didn't change.
Pete Seeger biopic, please.
Is Dylan a “close talker”?
lmao
I can see myself here...a movie like a mirror
Timothy's best performance, better bob dylan than Heath Ledger
Wow
Chalet plays dylan for the rest of his hopefully very long life.
crazy that timothee sounds great singing bob’s songs. I love bob’s lyrics but his voice always disconnected me from his music.
Bobs da Guy man.
I actually liked his transition. Like A Rolling Stone is a very good song.
Is that a good Bod Dylan characterization?
Más se parece a Cerati
Norton too heavy handed, but brilliant.
a great actor and an complete asshole IRL.
Eve., hi. 😢❤
I heard Timothee's granddad was an Elvis impersonator.
Looks more like Billy Joe from Green Day
Phil oches
Real Bob Dylan fans are just not gonna be able to suspend doubt in Chamamet
s singing and performance. We]ve seen mucho video clips of Dylan talking and singing. The Movie, The Doors, moreless sold their actor as the real thing but some ppl were literally fooled as to who was Morrison and who was not and they won't have that issue with Chalomet. Basically like any number of singers doing a Dylan cover tune. But who knows, maybe I give the public way more credit than they deserve. I was around, then most seeing the movie weren't but if you didn't know full well who Dylan was, would you really go to the movie? Maybe with the hype but you won't be getting much real Dylan in the movie, just the homogenized 2025 version. That was a unique time in history, encouraged by TPTB. They don't want that to happen again because the rot exposed would be massive
He sings too good to be Dylan.
Dylan sings all the right notes but not necessarily in the right order
Looking forward to the day people stop pretending this kid is a good actor.
You don't think he's a good actor? I've never seen him before. Curious what you think makes him not a good actor
@@Chuck-Morris3 It's subjective. I'm sure there are others that may feel differently. But, for me, he lacks spontaneity. His choices seem predictable and obvious. It feels like he's "acting" as opposed to being in the moment. There is no sense of unpredictability or danger to him. As opposed to someone like Daniel Day Lewis, who I think is possibly the greatest actor that has ever stepped in front of a camera. Or Christian Bale or even Saoirse Ronan, who I think will be regarded as a truly great actress in time. Of course, this is all subjective, as most things in art are. Just for fun, here are some examples of what I think are truly great film performances: Al Pacino in Dog Day Afternoon, Dustin Hoffman in Straight Time, Ellen Burstyn in Requiem for a Dream, Eric Roberts in Pope of Greenwich Village, Daniel Day Lewis in There Will Be Blood, Robert Downey Jr. in Less Than Zero, and John Cazale in every film he ever appeared in. There are many other great performances, those are just a few that come to mind. All of which are, in my opinion, true master classes in acting.
@@ReactionShot Daniel day lewis goes pretty hard
Tim was definitely "in the moment" in this movie. It took a ton of dedication to pull this off. To learn to play guitar and harmonica, to actually sing and play all those songs live on set is amazing. I'll be shocked if this movie doesn't win at the Oscars. Monica Barbaro is awesome as Joan Baez. She also learned to play guitar and sing all the songs live on set. Everyone involved in this deserves a lot of recognition for the enormous amount of work and effort they all put into it. I've seen this movie twice, loved it both times. ❤😊
There's no way I will be able to watch this without thinking about that nose prosthetic the whole time lol. No matter how good stuff like that is, it always sticks out like a sore thumb to me. Is it really that important to the movie? Just use Timothy's actual nose. It's fine.
In hindsight sight , his going electric wasn’t bad . But as the years passed his music became progressively worse
Not according to millions of other people. 😊
“And the words that are used as to get the ship confused,
will not be understood as they are spoken …..”
That was the hope, then the hope manifested itself in a complete different way, but I guess it is confined by the water’s edge.
It's always easier to imitate than create . Who needs more Dylan imitators .
Were the people in those audiences...like the one depicted...truly that stiff?
Are you talking about the people at the party? Most of them were a generation older than Bob.
no the people that didn't like electric instruments
Now let's see Paul Allen's biopic.
No thanks. A$$holes need to stay silent
TOTAL REVISION
?
It's got Bob Dylan's very own seal of approval and full-throated endorsement and praise once he saw it, and Bob Dylan's whole thing is being totally authentic, never fake, so...
@@benjaminharman1987I don’t think bobs ever told a lie in his life tbh- at least that’s what Sharon stone said
Dylan is great but authenticity isn’t a word I would use, look into the stuff around Chronicles Vol 1
I feel sorry for you!
Not a single.millenial or gen Zer wouls dee this movie ig timothee wasnt in it.....anf maybe not EVEN but im 47. Anf i certsinly will
No one talented enough to play her.
Chalamet's got a real talent.....for music rather than acting however.
This is how they should have ended it.
???????????????????????????????????
🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴🥴
Because finding an actor that could play 6 chords and sing as good as Dylan was impossible,..🙄🤣🤣🤣🤣~
Sing as well or sing the same way with the same sound? There's a difference.
@@NH-ze9ee I mean 9 out of 10 people can FAKE how Dylan sings,.lol
It's not like this is a Whitney Houston Biopic,..lol
Unbeliveable~lol
Dylan can't sing to save his hide. His voice is awful.
He needs to age before I can take him more seriously.
I know Chamalet worked hard on this performance and meant well but he sounds and looks like he is mimicking Dylan’s speech and micro gestures, it looks goofy and even cringe. Chamalet trying to sound like Dylan’s mumbling but it just makes him sound drunk. I much prefer the loosely Dylan impressions in I’m Not There.
Hollywoods desperate to put this kid in every film it seems no matter how right or wrong for the role
I think I would just enjoy the movie without over analyzing and trying to find the perfect Bob.
@@underated17 its so far from perfect you won't have to overanalyze. You'll effortlessly find it uncomfortable
@@Kyle-l8p I don’t look at it that way. Even the way Timothee says a line one scene garnered so many likes and comments I saw on RUclips. I am fascinated by Timothee acting and this movie!
Loved I’m Not There.
I’d say ignore this movie and see colorized ”don’t look back”, here on youtube for free instead…such a masterful documentary!
COLORIZED?! Please don't do that! Find B & W, please. And yes, "Don't Look Back" is simply all you need. This new movie is classic unnecessary Hollywood / Oscar bid for TC. Dylan in that moment was so much more complex than acoustic v. electric.
Fortunately I have the privilege and pleasure to watch more than one film concerning Bob Dylan. Besides these two, for example, also "I'm Not There" and "Bob Dylan - The Other Side of the Mirror" - which shows his 1963, 1964 and 1965 Newport sets. I don't know about colorized "Dont Look Back" but I can recommend the extended DVD release of "Dont Look Back"
todays movies suck
i don't get it. I thing they made a contrived drama about his switch to 'electric' and I honestly think they are making a big deal about this actor's performance. He bores me. He is the
critics supreme favorite but he's often just very boring. Its not easy to do historical fiction. You need exciting actors, not actors who always play safe. Boring.
Bob Dylan doesn't agree with you. Also, Timothee Chalamet never plays it safe. Beautiful Boy, there's no playing it safe in there. Call Me by Your Name, there's no playing it safe there. The King, there's no playing it safe there. Those are all extremely risky and brave performances that are outstanding and distinct from each other, none of them like the others, just like this one isn't, meaning he's a real actor, not one of those pretend actors who just play themselves over and over again, like Tom Cruise, for example. So don't like him. That's fine. But in so doing don't act like you're the voice of the people, especially since the proof is in the pudding that the people--not just the critics--don't agree with you at all, just like Bob Dylan doesn't.
let’s see your brave body of work lansky
Did you actually see the movie? I did and it’s absolutely brilliant. Impressive too all with live singing and no lip synching by the actors. Timmy does an excellent job of recreating Bob.
You are boring. Shut up.
Who cares what Bob thinks? I'm sure he's flattered and in his old age he's acceptably susceptible to that. I'll reserve judgement till I see the film but from the trailer and clips I'm not blown away. Biopics are tricky.