By Marc S. Sanders
A drifter hitches a ride into New York City with a guitar on his back looking for Woody Guthrie. He only comes to realize that his musical idol is in a New Jersey hospital ward with a debilitating illness. The drifter just came from Jersey.
The young stranger eventually catches up with the legendary folk singer, and a friend named Pete Seegar. He plays a song he wrote for the ill and mute Mr. Guthrie and the men are dazzled by this young man. This is Bob Dylan, and he writes music and lyrics as quickly as he breathes. But where did this wunderkind stem from? To everyone that encounters Bob Dylan, he’s simply A Complete Unknown.
Timothée Chalamet delivers a blazingly convincing performance as Bob Dylan, surely a front runner for the Best Actor Oscar. The appearance is easy to get used to. The dialect and expressions of what I’d like to think is the summit of what most of us know about the musician never falters from an apathetic expression or that mumbling hoarseness we all know. Everything from the clothes to the shaggy brown hair to the sunglasses and motorcycle he confidently rides perfect this embodiment. In James Mangold’s latest musician biography (prior credits include the Johnny Cash bio Walk The Line), with Timothée Chalamet in this role, I was truly watching a Bob Dylan of the early to mid-1960’s.
Any movie has a conflict for its story to work around. There’s more than one conflict in A Complete Unknown, but Bob Dylan would not know that. He’s content with doing what he does and has not one care for what anyone else wants him to be or wants him to share. Bob lacks much concern for the tumultuous times of the mid twentieth century either. JFK and Malcolm X are assassinated. The Vietnam War persists. The Cuban Missile Crisis terrifies everyone. Yet, Bob only focuses on his songwriting. He’ll make connections with Pete Seegar (Edward Norton) and develop a sometimes-romantic tryst but mostly singing partnership with Joan Baez (Monica Barbaro). He also gets involved with Sylvie Russo (Elle Fanning), one of his first fans. However, no matter what they might expect of the performer, he’s only going to follow the path that drives him. Therefore, that will be their own respective problems to contend with, not his. Bob is only going to follow that path that he chooses.
Sylvie wants to know more about her live-in boyfriend who only tells tales of when he moved with a travelling carnival. Joan wants to know where he learned to play guitar or even how he developed a knack for poetic lyricism. Later, she’ll want to play the original numbers that solidified their friendship on stage despite his stubbornness not to agree. It becomes curious when photo albums are delivered, addressed to a Robert Zimmerman. Pete and his other peers want Bob, a now marquee name, to hold on to the grassroots of folk singing. Bob will not acquiesce though. Like other masterful musicians such as Prince or John Lennon and Elton John, Bob Dylan is going to continue to reinvent himself.
In a matter of months, the signer becomes a nationwide superstar and he can’t walk the streets without getting bombarded; something he never wanted. He performs with a passion for the music he’s written and he persists in making the next new thing with his talents as he transitions from acoustic to electric guitar and incorporates keyboards and drums to accompany his performances. His friend Pete sees a berth becoming wider from the folk music he parades at annual festivals in Newport, Rhode Island and what Dylan insists on only playing. Record producers (primarily represented by actor Dan Fogler) beg the singer to perform his older familiar tracks, but Bob Dylan only wants to move on to what is new and fresh.
A Complete Unknown is full of such energy because it delivers what was produced by the guy who composed all of these magnificent and magnetic tracks from Song To Woodie to Blowin’ In The Wind to Like A Rolling Stone and to The Time’s They Are A Changing and A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall. You might not know or even understand all the verses by heart, but you quickly catch on to the choruses. To hear these newly composed songs pulled out of a dusty attic for an updated biography, performed by Timothée Chalamet in underground bars, at concert festivals or even in messy apartments is addicting. You don’t want the actor to stop the song. You don’t want the film to cut away from any of the numbers and you wish the concert would never end. Like Joan Baez, Bob Dylan’s works stay with you.
I’ve become a huge admirer of James Mangold. He’s a writer/director who does not criticize his subjects. He empathizes with them and respects their boundaries. We might find frustrations in people like Bob Dylan or Johnny Cash, but Mangold does not compromise the biography. He finds reasons for you to like these men even while those who stand in their circles might not care for their attitudes.
The director is also skillful at showing the history of the time. Like the last Indiana Jones film he covered, the settings are so authentic. New York City in A Complete Unknown is depicted down to the finest detail including the yellow street signs within the small boroughs of damp Brownstones and city streets that Bob Dylan navigates. The musty interiors of Woody Guthrie’s hospital room or Pete Seegar’s cabin home are shot with a hazy photography. The Newport music festival, full of concert spectator extras feels like it was pulled from a documentary; what maybe a calm and relaxing Woodstock might have looked like.
Beyond Timothée Chalamet, the cast of this film is superb. Elle Fanning need not say a word as James Mangold provides an assortment of close ups depicting her pain of wanting to love Bob Dylan but knowing she just can’t. Her complexion turns into a weeping pink without one tear shed. Monica Barbaro is on the cusp of becoming a marquee name in films. The actress who was recently in action material with Tom Cruise and Arnold Schwarzenegger hides so well under the folk appearance of Joan Baez and she carries an immense stage presence. Scoot McNairy is Woody Guthrie who never speaks and only stares straight ahead during visits from Bob and Pete. Yet, the silent performance offers the only character who truly understood the value of an enigmatic Bob Dylan. Edward Norton has given a new range as a liberal and calm Pete Seegar who uses folk music as an escape from the turmoil of the times and not as a harbor to protest or fight an authority with aggression and violence. He might wish for his friend Bob Dylan to uphold the value of folk music, but he knows he can’t keep a bird caged in one place either. Norton’s introductory scene in a courthouse with a banjo in hand is unforgettable. The casting is simply perfect in A Complete Unknown.
Since I saw this film on Christmas Day, I have not stopped thinking about it, and I think I want to see it again in a theater with a speaker system that amplifies the power of Bob Dylan’s guitar and mumbly vocals. Right now, nothing sounds better.
A Complete Unknown is one of the best films of the year.
