A COMPLETE UNKNOWN Review : Timothée Chalamet Embody as Bob Dylan

A COMPLETE UNKNOWN Review : Timothée Chalamet Embody as Bob Dylan

©Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

Creating a biopic about a musician is a challenging task. The reason many music biopics fail to live up to their hype is that they attempt to satisfy both the super fans and newbies at the same time. To satisfy the perspectives of super fans, the filmmakers attempt to include vital artistic elements and cover every significant moment in the movie, but they are ultimately left with half-baked characters due to time constraints.

To make a great music biopic, like A Complete Unknown, you need to know what was the vein of this artist’s life, which is often in the formative years or when this artist met other great talents or met their own muses. So, the film intelligently focused solely on the four years from Dylan’s arrival in New York City in 1961 until his controversial electric guitar performance at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.

The film depicts the significant political, social, and generational changes that occurred in the early 1960s. Bob Dylan was a young Robert Zimmerman, way before he won the Nobel Prize, a tousle-haired man who hitches his way from Minnesota to New York to pay a visit to Greystone Park Hospital and catch the spark of his favorite singer, Woody Guthrie (Scoot McNairy), who is suffering from Huntington’s disease.

A Complete Unknown

©Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

Guthrie was accompanied by fellow folk singer Pete Seeger (Edward Norton), who took the young ‘Bobby’ under his wing and passed his baton to a greater talent. Pete Seeger was a founding member of two highly influential folk groups: the Almanac Singers and The Weavers. By the time of Bob Dylan’s arrival in New York, Seeger was a senior figure in the 1960s folk music revival, which he had been working on with Woody Guthrie since the 1940s.

Seeger also pushed for Dylan’s first LP to be produced by A&R man John Hammond and invited Dylan to perform at the Newport Folk Festival, where he was a board member. It obviously doesn’t take long for people to notice Dylan’s genius, which is the brilliance of his lyrics. Those who are captivated by Dylan’s songs for the first time, emotionally invested from the first note.

One of those individuals is Sylvie Russo (Elle Fanning), who is a fictionalized portrayal of Dylan’s true girlfriend, Suze Rotolo, who is depicted clutching onto him on The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan album cover. The story revolves around the love triangle between Sylvie, Bob, and Joan Baez. Monica Barbaro, who portrays Baez, is just as talented, beautiful, and fiery as the real musician, and watching her struggle to control Dylan is an addictive dance in a certain aspect. Dylan and Baez ‘relationship is a beautiful illustration of what made them so captivating together.  But also aids us in comprehending how Dylan’s relationships consistently suffered due to his need to be himself, regardless of his identity.

A complete Unknown

©Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

And also the action of the film isn’t primarily driven by his love of women. It’s driven by his passion for music. At one point, he deems Baez’s songs ‘too pretty’, it appears as if he’s flirting with the established folk singer, but he’s actually offering a genuine criticism, it presents the soul will respond more favorably to an authentic song with grit than beautiful artifice

A Complete Unknown‘s true success lies in the supporting cast that accompanies Dylan’s rise to fame. Joan Baez was one of the pioneers in the expansion of folk music on a larger scale, but she recognized the power of Dylan’s words. Dylan and his refusal to conform to society’s demands were a source of excitement for Johnny Cash (Boyd Holbrook). Edward Norton’s portrayal of Peter Seeger is as affable and charming, and it’s charming to watch him lead a crowd through ‘The Lion Sleeps Tonight’ (Wimoweh). The supporting cast serves to remind us that Dylan is not a perfect person. But he is a genius.

Dylan’s young career is at a pivotal point where he sees change as a chance to experiment. Throughout the film’s 2-hour-and-20-minute runtime, the talented young artist constantly scribbles in notebooks and feels out chord changes as they work on new songs. His talent is attributed to his fearless dedication to his craft and his passion for emotion, so it’s inevitable that an opportunity to be unshackled by those who want to control him and his direction. The young Dylan is not only searching for true music; he also desires the liberty to lead his own life without being obligated by others’ demands.

A Complete Unknown

©Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

Timothée Chalamet, who sings his own songs, provides a talented and understated interpretation of the iconic figure, which reflects the musician’s personality and mannerisms and adds another layer to his stardom and Chalamet’s dedication to allowing the spaces to other actors that he shares a screen with their moments to shine is another impressive attribute.

It’s evident that Director James Mangold enjoys this period of American culture, a time that experienced intense political changes, rebellious spirits, and reimagining Greenwich Village folk scenes, while discovering generational shifts that are still felt today.

Someone who found the script does not truly dive into who Bob Dylan is, they’re completely missing the point of what this film intended, they’ve never intended to reveal who he is, they intended to see a glimpse of who he is, and elusive as he is in many aspects, that’s why the title of the film is A Complete Unknown. He arrived in New York to become an iconic figure, and the movie left us with the ‘A Complete Unknown’ persona, which was always evolving, constantly reinventing the artist without giving us a grasp of who they are, but still enigmatic and charismatic in our minds.

A Complete Unknown

©Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

Grade : A-

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Here’s the trailer of the film.

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