In my experience, the more a movie is advertised the worse it is. A Complete Unknown has been all over my feed for a couple of months now and I've seen the TV commercials recently. Maybe it is just because I'm a music person and love Timothy Chalamet from his tour in Dune but the movie has outstripped its fanfare.
If Chalamet does not get an Oscar this year there is no justice and he'll end up winning in a couple of years for something idiotic just to make up for it. Seldom have I seen anyone so completely become a character, all the more difficult as I've seen enough of Dylan to get a pretty good feel for what he's like and I saw him on the screen and heard him talking and singing and playing guitar (all of which Chalamet did almost entirely on his own).
And Edward Norton as Pete Seeger, the same. It was really like listening to Seeger. And Monica Barbaro as Joan Baez. Same.
The movie is wonderful. I've been to most of the locations in the movie although it was a few years after the time period covered. Still, the grit of the Village in NYC was there in all its pre crack glory.
I also loved seeing the characters of Al Kooper, Mike Bloomfield, Mavis Staples and Maria Muldaur and how they fit in the story.
It was a fun movie for me and really did give me more insight into Dylan's character. One of the things he said was that he could tell when people asked him how he wrote his songs they were really asking why they couldn't write them. And at one point Joan Baez accused him of being an asshole for coming to her apartment and writing songs. Songs, presumably, she could not keep up with, music that was so good and so prolific.
Funny side note. About 23 years after the time in which the movie is set I went to the Newport Folk Festival and saw, among others, Arlo Guthrie play.
If Chalamet does not get an Oscar this year there is no justice and he'll end up winning in a couple of years for something idiotic just to make up for it. Seldom have I seen anyone so completely become a character, all the more difficult as I've seen enough of Dylan to get a pretty good feel for what he's like and I saw him on the screen and heard him talking and singing and playing guitar (all of which Chalamet did almost entirely on his own).
And Edward Norton as Pete Seeger, the same. It was really like listening to Seeger. And Monica Barbaro as Joan Baez. Same.
The movie is wonderful. I've been to most of the locations in the movie although it was a few years after the time period covered. Still, the grit of the Village in NYC was there in all its pre crack glory.
I also loved seeing the characters of Al Kooper, Mike Bloomfield, Mavis Staples and Maria Muldaur and how they fit in the story.
It was a fun movie for me and really did give me more insight into Dylan's character. One of the things he said was that he could tell when people asked him how he wrote his songs they were really asking why they couldn't write them. And at one point Joan Baez accused him of being an asshole for coming to her apartment and writing songs. Songs, presumably, she could not keep up with, music that was so good and so prolific.
Funny side note. About 23 years after the time in which the movie is set I went to the Newport Folk Festival and saw, among others, Arlo Guthrie play.
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