A crazy film which shouldn't work, but for most of the time does.
I'm Not There (2007)
Runtime: 2 hrs 15 mins
Genre: Musical & Performing Arts
Starring: Christian Bale, Cate Blanchett, Marcus Carl Franklin, Richard Gere, Heath Ledger
Screenwriter: Todd Haynes, Oren Moverman
Producer: James D. Stern, John Sloss, John Goldwyn, Christine Vachon
DVD Info
Release:
Jun 5, 2008
DVD Features:
- 2-Disc Set
- Widescreen
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - English
- Subtitles - Spanish - Optional
Reviews
This works so well that long before the end you don’t merely accept the use of these wildly diverse personae, but you may also even wonder whether Dylan’s story could properly be told any other way
There are also some great performances from Heath Ledger, Christian Bale and, particularly, Blanchett. But director Todd Haynes works under the misapprehension that everyone who sees this film will have a detailed knowledge of Dylan.
This drama, a surreal, fractured examination of the mercurial singer-songwriter comes closer to revealing the man behind the music than anything that’s come before, but still preserves his essential mystery.
A fascinating work for cinema and Bob Dylan fans alike. Haynes has painted a perfect picture tribute to the musical icon that only misses a beat in the final quarter. One actor simply couldn’t do the man justice.
It’s not your average biopic but it’s unforgettable all the same.
Haynes, astutely perhaps, has created a biopic with little time for "justice" or indeed any of the reverence and piety of recent films such as Walk the Line or Ray.
A powerfully reverent exercise in remystification, an attempt to waft some of the clouds of glory back around the great man, clouds that might have dispersed in recent years.
One of the sexiest pieces of cinema I’ve seen at a festival.
A multifaceted diamond of a film. Todd Haynes joyously freewheels through the times of Bob Dylan.
You'll have your work cut out keeping track of Haynes' dotty intentions, but there remains something compelling in his mercurial art.
An extraordinary attempt to encapsulate the many faces of Bob Dylan that plays better to the convert than the sceptic. Like the nasal twang of the man in question, the film finally beguiles more than it irritates.
Todd Haynes' bold, unconventional Dylan biopic is an experiment that doesn't always pay off, but there are strokes of genius in both the direction and performances.
There's a wonderfully adventurous tone to this Bob Dylan biopic that keeps us utterly gripped, even though it's hard to get a grip on.
An extraordinary puzzle of a biography that's ripe to be decoded.
The director's disappointment in Dylan's downward metamorphosis from outlaw poet, prophet and political idealist to cynic, egotist, wasted stoner, Jesus freak and recluse, is palpable, with a symbolic dirge for a body that has outlived its art.
Haynes is brilliant at tearing off the top of his own head and giving audiences a peek into his pop obsessions.
Not particularly entertaining or enlightening, but it is slow-moving and long.
Uma das cinebiografias mais atípicas e, por isto mesmo, mais fiéis ao espírito criativo de seu biografado que já tive o prazer de assistir.
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