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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > James Mangold: Dylan by no means meant to set the folks scene on fireplace. He would have favored a band
James Mangold: Dylan by no means meant to set the folks scene on fireplace. He would have favored a band
Entertainment

James Mangold: Dylan by no means meant to set the folks scene on fireplace. He would have favored a band

Last updated: February 11, 2025 3:09 pm
Editorial Board Published February 11, 2025
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So Bob Dylan seems to be you within the eye and says, “I never intended to become a folk singer.”

What’s that, once more?

James Mangold, director, co-writer and co-producer of “A Complete Unknown,” had a number of prolonged conferences with the musical icon as he labored on the script for the movie about him. Mangold hoped to verify some issues (sure, “Masters of War” was written in response to the Cuban Missile Disaster), however largely to know the Corridor of Fame songwriter in a deeper approach than commonplace analysis may yield. However sitting down with the Man Himself was a bit daunting, not figuring out what Dylan’s response to his draft can be.

Nonetheless, says the director, “I had a great time. It wasn’t some kind of meeting at Yalta. He was really happy to talk about this time. And the questions I was asking were less agenda-driven than a biographer out to get that ultimate quote; I was just there to understand. So, these became extended conversations about this period in his life, which I think he had enough distance from to be really honest about.”

That interval within the movie properties in on the 4 years between Dylan’s arrival in New York and his epic 1965 Newport Folks Pageant efficiency.

James Mangold sat with Bob Dylan (performed by Timothee Chalamet) to get a really feel for the long-lasting musician earlier than making “A Complete Unknown.”

(Macall Polay/Searchlight Footage)

The songwriter wasn’t valuable about his personal work; for the scene wherein the display screen Dylan (Timothée Chalamet) debuts “Masters of War” in a people membership, “He opened to that page [of the script] and said, ‘You don’t need these verses.’ And he just put Xs through them.”

In adapting Elijah Wald’s e-book “Dylan Goes Electric! Newport, Seeger, Dylan, and the Night That Split the Sixties,” Mangold and co-writer Jay Cocks declined what the director calls the “cradle-to-grave biopic” strategy. Mangold believes Dylan himself needed to higher perceive that interval in his life, particularly the anger brought on by him enjoying with a rock band on the Newport brouhaha. That tight focus left house for lived-in moments.

Mangold says films can “give you a palpable feeling of a moment between humans. I really wanted to watch their interactions, rivalries, love, fears and the music happening, all in a way that you [feel] they didn’t know history was being made. They didn’t know the cultural impact that the songs would have. I wanted the audience to feel that, the innocence.

“Some people might react if I talk about innocence with a character as hyper-intelligent as Dylan. Discussions about him revolve around an idea of him as a manipulator or enigma. I believe that’s half right. But I think a lot of that is what we’ve decided retroactively. I think those skills — of image creation, identity creation, art creation — were acquired in the period we’re watching, as opposed to he just arrived with them.”

 James Mangold

(Christina Home/Los Angeles Instances)

That lends dimension to the movie’s title — past being from Dylan’s iconic tune, “Like a Rolling Stone” (“How does it feel / To be on your own / With no direction home / Like a complete unknown / Like a rolling stone”), itself a key tick within the timeline of Dylan going electrical — past signifying a brand new child on the town, breaking into the enterprise. Mangold situates 19-year-old Minnesotan Robert Zimmerman’s reinvention on his arrival in New York in 1961 at one of many movie’s poles. His anonymity granted him the liberty to remake himself into whomever he wished us to imagine he was.

If “A Complete Unknown” “were a fiction film,” says Mangold, “it would be a very sensible story about a stranger coming into town, creating a new name, meeting the ailing king and his first lieutenant, entering their world as a nobody and then revealing a level of talent by which he suddenly lifts the entire community to heights they had never known, only to move on again and leave them in his wake. That, to me, is such a beautiful fairy tale about self-invention.

“I think of Dylan’s journey in life, which has been a series of reinventions, explosions of success, then wearying of that and reinvention again. So it seemed really joyous to focus on one movement of his life that way.”

However what drove Dylan to that different pole, to meld people with upstart rock to the acute chagrin of its gatekeepers? Clues may be present in that remark about by no means meaning to turn out to be a people singer, evoking that traditional model of the early Bob Dylan, like when he got here again out on the competition with out his rock band, with simply his acoustic guitar, and was applauded at Newport.

“ ‘If I could have arrived in New York and gotten a band, that would’ve been awesome,’ ” says Mangold, reporting Dylan’s phrases, “ ‘But this is what happened. Just like an actor who ends up on a TV show or in the movies, this is the gig I got. I was broke. Back in Minnesota, I played with other people. I got to New York and it was just myself.’

“It’s not that he didn’t want to be a solo artist; it’s that he didn’t conceive of himself as only a solo artist. He said, ‘It’s really lonely being a solo act. You come there alone. You’re in the green room alone. You’re onstage alone. There’s no one to look to.’ He would get jealous of the camaraderie he saw in people who had bands.”

Mangold exhibits this by the onscreen Dylan’s admiration of Johnny Money and the Tennessee Three, and the way in which he lights up when his eventual bandmates rework his sound.

“It means his decision to go electric or have a band wasn’t purely, ‘I’m going to turn folk music on its head.’ It was a personal yearning, as opposed to an intellectual decision about the direction of his art,” Mangold says.

So, what was Dylan’s total tackle the mission?

“He saw my endeavor as both trying to be loyal to the reality of the historical situation and also loyal to my duty to make something good, juicy, enticing and gripping out of it. Because without the second part, without the fact that it holds, you never have the audience. There is a magic that occurs where you gain greater understanding through the power of story and drama of what these people felt like than you would if you were just listing the dates and the facts.”

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