Product Description
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The two-part film includes never-seen performance footage and
interviews with artists and musicians whose lives intertwined
with Dylans during that time. For the first time on camera, Dylan
talks openly and extensively about this critical period in his
career.
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It's virtually impossible to approach No Direction Home without
a cluster of fixed ideas. Who doesn't have their own private
Dylan? The true excellence of Martin Scorsese's achievement lies
in how his documentary shakes us free of our comfortable
assumptions. In the process, it plays out on several levels at
once, each taking shape as an unfailingly fascinating narrative.
There is, of course, the central story of an individual genius
staking out his artistic identity. But along with this
Bildungsroman come other threads and contexts: most notably, the
role of popular culture in postwar America, art's self-reliance
versus its social responsibilities, and fans' complicity with the
publicity machine in sustaining myths. All of these threads
reinforce each other, together weaving the film's intricate
texture.
Scorsese's 200-plus-minute focus on Dylan's earliest years allows
for a portrayal of unprecedented depth, with multiple angles: a
rich composite photo is the result. The main narrative has an
epic quality: it moves from Dylan growing up in cold-war
Minnesota through Greenwich Village coffeehouses and the Newport
Folk Festival, climaxing in the controversial 1966 U.K. tour that
crowned a period of unbridled and explosive creativity. In his
transition from Robert Allen Zimmerman to Bob Dylan, we observe
him concocting his impossible-to-describe, unique combination of
the topical with the archaic, like an ancient oracle. Scorsese
was able to access previously unseen footage from the Dylan
archives, including performances, press conferences, and
sessions. He also uses interviews with Dylan's friends,
ex-friends, and fellow artists, and, intriguingly, with the
notoriously reclusive Dylan himself (who looks back to provide
glosses on the early years), fusing what could have turned into a
tiresome series of digressions and tangents into a powerful whole
as enlightening, eccentric, contradictory, and ultimately
irreducible as its subject.
Some of the deeply personal bits remain unrevealed, but Dylan's
preternatural self-assurance acquires a slightly
self-deprecating, even comic edge via some of his reflective
comments. Alongside the arrogance, we see touching moments of the
young artist's reverence for Woody Guthrie and Johnny Cash. Joan
Baez, in a poignant confessional mood, comes off well, and the
late Allen Ginsberg is so seraphically charming he almost steals
the show a few times. A crucial throughline is Dylan's hunger for
re and ability to shape perceptions so that would be
singled out as not just another dime-a-dozen folk singer. It's
illuminating--particularly for those familiar with the artist's
latter-day aloofness on stage--to see his reactions to audience
booing in the wake of his "betrayal" in this fuller context. No
Direction Home also makes clear--in a way that wasn't possible in
D.A. Pennebaker's iconic Don't Look Back--how Dylan's ability to
manipulate his persona always, at its core, protects the urge for
expression: Dylan's ultimate mandate, as an artist, is never to
be pinned down. As Scorsese masterfully shows, the myth around
Dylan only grows bigger the more we discover about him. --Thomas
MayDVD features: This two-disc set of Scorsese's full two-part
documentary includes treats such as Dylan working on a song at
his hotel during the UK tour as well as performing several songs
as in concert or on TV.
More for the Dylanologist