No Direction Home: Bob Dylan
No Direction Home: Bob Dylan
G | 21 July 2005 (USA)
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A chronicle of Bob Dylan's strange evolution between 1961 and 1966 from folk singer to protest singer to "voice of a generation" to rock star.

Reviews
Diagonaldi

Very well executed

Protraph

Lack of good storyline.

Dynamixor

The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.

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Bob

This is one of the best movies I’ve seen in a very long time. You have to go and see this on the big screen.

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grantss

Directed by Martin Scorsese, a documentary on Bob Dylan, master-lyricist, musical genius and one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. Covers the period from 1961 - his first arrival in New York - to 1966, when he retired (not permanently, ultimately) after a motorcycle accident.Great documentary on an extraordinary man. Bob Dylan is one of the most influential people In music history, and director Martin Scorsese captures well his ability and influence. He captures too Dylan's rise to the top, from playing folk music clubs in New York to being one of the most famous rock stars on the planet.

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tieman64

In the 1920s, right through to the 1950s, the FBI began suppressing both the history of politically engaged early 20th century writing, and radical artists themselves. Only art which managed to evade repression tended to squeeze through. Historian Claire Cullen says that this resulted in a "version of modernism that was apolitical and stylistically abstruse". During this period, countless famous artists (Hemingway, Brecht, Richard Wright, Joyce, Jean Renoir, John Galbraith, Norman Mailer, Ginsberg, Faulkner, Steinbeck, Sandburg, Dreiser, Pearl Buck, Dorothy Parker, Thomas Wolfe, Georgia O'Keeffe, Tennessee Williams etc) were also monitored, as well as radical singers like Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie.In the 1960s, the FBI's Counterintelligence Program began focusing on musicians and artists whom they dubbed, quote, "domestic enemies", "advocates of new lifestyles" and "apostles of non-violence and racial harmony". These supposedly dangerous artists (the Rolling Stones, Hendrix, Elvis, Charlie Chaplin, John Lennon, Bob Marley etc) were, in the eyes of the state, "subversive", "anti-American", "members of the New Left", "pacifists", "communists", "dangerous intellectuals" and "progenitors of cultural revolution". Other declassified papers would refer to them as "highly political and unfavourable to the administration". Between 1968 and 77, most had died.One who survived, and one of the last active connections to that era, is singer/song-writer Bob Dylan, the subject of "No Direction Home", a documentary by Martin Scorsese. Scorsese's film is divided into two parts. In the first, we move from the mid 1950s to 1963. Here we watch as Dylan grows up in a Minnesotan mining town and begins to get hooked on music. Dylan's many influences (Pete Seeger, Woody Guthrie, Tommy Makem, Huddie Ledbetter, Chuck Berry, Little Richard etc) are touched upon, but only superficially. This is understandable. Part high modernist and part postmodernist, Dylan's influences are almost too boundless to map, his songs (he's written over five hundred) drawing extensively from poetry, literature, religion, cinema, history, early blues, rock, folk, country, gospel and jazz.The film's second half focuses on a roughly six year period, starting in 1960. Here we watch as Dylan becomes a popular political/folk singer and becomes swept up in various civil rights movements. During this period, some of Dylan's best political material was written, most notably "Masters of War", "When The Ships Come In", "Blowing in the Wind", "Chimes of Freedom", "The Times They are Changing", "Hard Rain's Gonna Fall", "With God on Your Side", "Maggie's Farm" and "Talking WW3 Blues". Meanwhile, songs like "Oxford Town", "Only a Pawn in Their Game", "Death of Emmett Till" and "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll" focused on the plights of African Americans, whilst others ("Motorpsycho Nightmare", "John Birch Paranoid Blues") poked fun at anti-communist hysteria. Funny, apocalyptic, ambitious and angry, all these songs were perceived as new sounds. Dylan himself, though, began to distance himself from politics. Though he went to the southern states with Pete Seeger in support of black voter rights, and sang next to Martin Luther King during the March on Washington, he only rarely got involved in public political action.Scorsese, though, doesn't care about politics at all. He ignores Dyan's political roots, ignores Dylan's life in the bohemian Greenwich Village and ignores Dylan's relationship with 19 year old Suze Rotolo, a communist and daughter to prominent communist/activist parents. During this period, Dylan filtered many of his songs through Suze. Scorsese's film then watches as Dylan rejects his fan-base and moves from political-folk to electric, rock and country ballads. Why Dylan rejects them is made clear: they're looking for a leader, a voice, a messiah, an Answer. But Dylan refuses to comply. His 1964 masterpiece, "My Back Pages", would mark the point at which he openly breaks ties with civil rights movements. Scorsese, though, offers Dylan's May 1965 Newport Folk Festival appearance, where he "went electric", as the precise moment in which Dylan turned Judas. Betrayer. Regardless, to folk fans and even artists like Seeger, Dylan's switch to electric was an admittance that he now refused to pen protest songs. To them, Dylan was now a reactionary. A sell out (though he'd occasionally still release protest songs, from the 1970s onwards Dylan primarily offered a mix of esoteric folk, country and blues). Ironically, even Guthrie was accused of similar things, co-opted by the Roosevelt government to promote the New Deal, and paid by the state to sing in towns and villages which were about to be destroyed to make way for hydro-electric schemes.Elsewhere Scorsese attempts to chronicle Dylan's impact on 20th century American popular music - Dylan politicised pop and brought both folk and complex/ambiguous lyrics and song structures into the mainstream - but the results are again superficial. Scorsese's suggestion that Dylan needed to move away from topical songwriting to be able to reach the heights of "Bringing It All Back Home" and "Highway 61 Revisted" is likewise dubious, and the director seems uninterested in examining the relationship of art and artists to questions of social liberation."No Direction Home" is at its best when it offers us glimpses of concert footage. Later Scorsese clumsily attempts to convey a simple theme. In Scorsese's hands, Dylan is just a guy who "refuses to be pinned down". Like the chorus of his 1965 classic, "Like a Rolling Stone", Scorsese's Dylan is a constantly shifting stone without direction (also the thesis of Todd Haynes' "Im Not There"). None of these statements are true. Dylan may be nasally, his words may be vague, he may have constantly changing, weird inflections, and no two live performances of his songs are ever the same, but the idea that he has been a cryptic chameleon has never been true. If anything, Dylan's a one man archive of a very specific type of American mythology. He represents a kind of shared nostalgia, an interactive museum whose malleable lyrics allow listeners to tap into a vanishing America.7.5/10 – See "Don't Look Back" (1967) and "Bound for Glory" (1976).

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Michael_Elliott

No Direction Home: Bob Dylan (2005) **** (out of 4) Being a die-hard Dylan and Scorsese fan meant I was really looking forward to this documentary and for sometime I was a bit worried that hype would kill the thing for me but it clearly didn't. Dylan's story is something that anyone could eat up and Scorsese pulls out all the stops in somewhat trying to explain Dylan. While Dylan doesn't pour his soul out here I think Scorsese, with his great talent of using music, helps make it clear all the stuff that was going through Dylan at the time as well as what was going through the country. The way Scorsese used "A Hard Rains A-Gonna Fall" and connection it to the JFK assassination is quite remarkable and even non-fans could feel the power of the song and it's lyrics. Scorsese does a brilliant job of telling the story and the majority of the documentary takes a look at Dylan's early days. Then, kinda like the downfall of Henry Hill in Goodfellas, Scorsese cuts to the final scenes and uses fast editing to show how quickly Dylan tired down. The infamous European tour of 1966 has had hundreds of books written about it and it's fascinating that Scorsese doesn't use any narration but instead just uses news clips and old interviews to tell the story. We can just look at Dylan and see that the end is nearing.Scorsese has easily created one of the greatest documentaries out there that might appeal to non-Dylan fans more than the die hards. When people ask me who Dylan is and what he did I never really know where to start but this documentary is a good place to show how he changed music while trying to change the country. As a die-hard fan the documentary also gives all sorts of never before released concert footage, which is a huge bonus. The infamous "Judas"/"Play It F*cking Loud" footage is like a holy grail to Dylan fans and it's here complete. There's plenty of other music of the times with Joan Baez and Johnny Cash as well. Scorsese really nailed down the Dylan aspect but it's also nice seeing him capture the mood of the Civil Rights and other issues that were all going on at the same time. To music buffs and Dylan fans this is a very important document but it's also very important to American history.

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arnbar-1

Things I learned from this great film: people still speak of Dylan's practice of making cryptic or sarcastic public comments as if it were an independently formed behavior on his part. The film clearly shows how they were provoked by his interrogators. It's easy to see this in our era when we, educated by him and the great artists of that and following generations, hear the amazingly benighted questions of the mainstream press of the 60's, their stiff, sexless style and their obvious confusion at the changes sweeping through that generation. Dylan, to me, looked endearingly young and innocent, not really cynical, more astonished than irritated by the cluelessness of his questioners. Another point: what some imply to be his "commercialism" is revealed as a deep and high-intentioned gift for "theatre." We hear his comments about the difficulties some other artists in the Village had communicating to their audiences. He also remarks that "a lot of things happen between the audience and an artist." All his affectations served the goal of hypnotizing us, forcing us to surrender to the charisma of the character he had created. But that goal in turn was subordinate to his desire that we listen to the fabulous lyrics he poured out on us and the seductions of his voice and guitar work.Another (rather obvious) insight I had: the great irony of the "rock vs folk" controversy was that while so many thought he had sold out to pop, in reality he was dragging pop up onto a higher aesthetic level, where prior to him, it was the folkies who considered themselves the aesthetes. As for the civil rights and peace movements, would his attaching his art to them have made any difference? Wouldn't everything have happened just as it did? Wouldn't we all have gotten high and tripped into psychedelia anyway? Wouldn't America have killed Bobby and elected Nixon and Reagan anyway? Of course it would have. Wouldn't the hippies have sold out and become yuppies? You bet. Meanwhile, Dylan went on to "Lay, Lady, Lay" and "All Along The Watchtower" and "Long Train Coming." In Scorcese's wide-lens view of the era, we see that, at a critical moment in American history, Dylan possessed both the opportunity and the talents to transmute beat poetry into musical form, infusing it with his unique vocal inflections, his evocative chording and rhythms. His voice seemed outrageously bad in the conventional view of 1965, but considered in the context of his poetry and social comment and musical lineage (Woody), it was perfect. He sang in tune, only straining for high notes, and even those worked emotionally. Understand his sound as you would the uncompromising purity you hear in the tone of John Coltrane, whose voice was also seen early on as unbeautiful. People thought Coltrane's sound was harsh, but it was simply modern, stripped of the excessively sweetness of earlier players. Dylan did this too. His sarcastic lilt, tonally appropriate to the sentiments of what would become the white counterculture, could be equated to Coltrane's eventual wildness, which fit so well the black anger of the day -- though ironically Trane's was conceived as the opposite of anger. Similarly, from today's vantage point, Dylan's strange coloration speaks less of social protest and more of a personality simply standing outside the mainstream, totally possessed of his own individuality. His is also the most purely rural voice of the rock era, the most deeply evocative of the history of the land, more than country musicmusicians proper, who conformed to the commercial styles of the period, each artist aping the other to some degree.Thanks To M.S. for this gem.

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