Bob Dylan PBS movie packs a wallop
Martin Scorsese directs this chronicle of the rock legend’s life
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NEW YORK - “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan,” released in 1963, has one of the era’s most memorable album covers. Gracing the album that features such folk anthems as “Blowin’ in the Wind” and “A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall” is a photo of the 21-year-old Dylan tripping through a snowy New York street with a radiant young woman hugging him close.
As a resident of Greenwich Village, I was dimly aware that this photograph I knew so well was snapped somewhere along my regular haunts. But I didn’t much care where. Although I shared with Dylan the time he helped define, I had never really been a fan, never felt his magic. I never even owned that record.
I mention this only because of a magnificent film portrait, “Bob Dylan: No Direction Home,” which airs as a two-part “American Masterpiece” special at 9 p.m. ET Monday and Tuesday on PBS (check local listings).
After seeing this 3 1/2-hour documentary, I was inspired to pinpoint the site of that fateful photo shoot: Jones Street, a single block that stretches between West Fourth and Bleecker, where I pass every day. And, now knowing, I retraced Dylan’s steps in homage to him and his long-ago girlfriend, Suze Rotolo, and especially to what he represents.
After four decades of putting off Dylan, now I understand. Such is the wallop I got from “Bob Dylan: No Direction Home,” a film I recommend not only to Dylan devotees and neophytes alike, but also to anyone trying to reconnect with where America was then, and grasp where it is today.
Scorsese puts together a magnifient chronicle
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John Smock / AP Martin Scorsese arrives at the Ziegfeld Theater in New York City on Monday, Sept. 19, 2005, for the premiere of 'No Direction Home: Bob Dylan.' |
Shortly after that, Martin Scorsese was brought in to make sense of 60 hours worth of footage.
“I’m predisposed to love Dylan’s work, but what really hooked me on the project was the nature of him in the interviews,” says the celebrated director, who traveled similar ground for his 1978 concert film, “The Last Waltz,” focusing on Dylan’s one-time backup group, The Band.
“Watching Dylan’s eyes as he searches for these words, you see it all happening there,” Scorsese says with evident delight. “He was so honest and so open, but also playing with you, and contradictory, and I said, ‘That’s great! That’s exactly what we need.’
“‘Cause who’s gonna figure the man out? We want an answer for everything, but he can’t give you the answer! You know the man through his art, and he’s still going. He doesn’t know where he’s gonna wind up. He’s trying to get home. Like all of us, I guess.”
During an exclusive chat with The Associated Press, Scorsese calls himself a latecomer to Dylan.
“I think it was 1965 with ‘Like a Rolling Stone,”’ he says. “The way it revels in the bitterness: ‘How does it feel to be on your own, no direction home.’ Devastating! It grows with you as you grow older, and it doesn’t go away.”
Dylan follows his own muse
Scorsese’s film covers Dylan during his first, most revolutionary period — up through 1966, by which time he had moved on from his basic folk foundation and “gone electric,” incurring the wrath of fans who accused him of betrayal, of selling out.
But Dylan, who has always followed his own muse, was unrepentant even after being booed by those who loved him most.
“I had a perspective on the booing,” he recalls in the film, “because you got to realize you can kill someone with kindness, too.”
Dylan had wanted success, whatever that might mean, but he never consented to be anyone’s messiah. That was a role he spurned, like every role imposed on him as, at his own pace, he stayed in transit.
“Just when people think he gives you one thing,” Scorsese marvels, “he gives you another.”
The film explores how with loads of concert footage and other vintage material, some never before seen; interviews with figures who were there, including Pete Seeger, Joan Baez, Maria Muldaur, Peter Yarrow and Al Kooper, as well as the late Dave Van Ronk and Allen Ginsberg; and most notably, Dylan himself, who provides the narrative thrust of the film.
“I was born very far from where I was supposed to be, and so I’m on my way home,” he declares at the start, and the film reaches back to tiny Hibbing, Minn., where, growing up, Robert Zimmerman felt so dislocated he even wondered if he was born to the right parents.
But grounding him early was the fearless folk singer Woody Guthrie, who proved a revelation: “You could listen to his songs and actually learn how to live.”
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