The
biopic is a very easy genre to get wrong. Compressing someone’s lifetime into a
two and a quarter hour film forces some uneven narrative choices. Focus on one
period of the subject’s life? Before they were famous? The subject on the cusp
of fame? At the height of their fame? The aftermath of fame? Or try to
encompass the entire timeline, building individual scenes or sequences around
the more dramatic and/or controversial moments, thereby running the risk of
reducing the film to a “greatest hits” package rather than engaging
aesthetically with the subject’s life and legacy.
Point
of comparison: one of my favourite biopics of the last decade, Stephen
Hopkins’s ‘The Life and Death of Peter Sellers’ is based on Roger Lewis’s
biography of the same title. Hopkins’s film runs a shade over two hours.
Lewis’s book is an epic 1,100 pages.
So: to Todd Haynes’s ‘I’m Not There’. And I must admit,
off the bat, that I have only the most superficial knowledge of Bob Dylan’s
life. I’m still debating whether this proved advantageous or onerous to my
appreciation of it.
What Haynes does, essentially, is reimagine the biopic
as fantasia, not so much examining Bob Dylan’s life as exploring various facets
of him – his influences, his alter ego(s), his obfuscations and his
contemporaries. In order to isolate each of these, while still incorporating
them into a patchwork quilt of a whole, Haynes casts a different actor – and often
employs a different aesthetic approach – to each facet. Hence we have Ben
Wishaw as Arthur Rimbaud, facing interrogation and beguiling his questioners
with evasive cant; Christian Bale as both Jack Rollins, the earnest and almost
cripplingly shy folk singer and Pastor John, his post-conversion alter ego; Heath
Ledger as Robbie Clark, the charismatic but arrogant actor playing Rollins in a
Hollywood biopic; Richard Gere as an aged, in-hiding Billy the Kid about to
find himself back in conflict with an equally decrepit Pat Garrett (Bruce
Greenwood); Cate Blanchett as Jude Quinn, a folk singer who angers fans and
critics alike by adopting the electric guitar and enters into a war of words
with TV interviewer Keenan Jones (Greenwood again); and Marcus Carl Franklin as
a prepubescent black kid calling himself Woody Guthrie and spinning tales, with
an ornery pragmatism beyond his years, of a life spent riding the rails.
The cast give it their all, with Bale and Ledger in
particular delivering, if not career bests, then performances that deserve
comparison to their absolute best. Blanchett is revelatory – the gimmick of
casting a woman as one of the six aspects of Dylan ceases to be a gimmick
within seconds. Blanchett’s drawn and haunted face is the perfect counterpoint
to Quinn’s long dark night of the soul as he drifts down into 60s netherworld
of Warhol acolytes. Kudos, too, to Michelle Williams as the Edie Sedgwick
inspired Coco – although not playing Sedgwick directly, Williams channels her
waif-like enigmatic allure far more effectively than Sienna Miller in ‘Factory
Girl’.
Haynes’s appropriation of the avant garde aesthetic
during this sequence is a spot-on pastiche, arguably the most perfect fusion of
time, place and music in a work that sometimes wavers dangerously in its
fine-line walk between artistic extrapolation and pretentious wankery. The
oddest exegesis of his approach is in the Billy the Kid scenes, which play out
like Peckinpah b-roll spliced with some Jodorowsky outtakes.
It’s frustrating, fascinating, flawed and fanciful to
greater or lesser degrees. It thumbs its nose at the reviewer, challenging to
be met on any terms other than its own. It ends with some brief footage of Bob
Dylan onstage, a reminder that the film has, at one and the same time, brought
us no closer to the real Dylan and vastly broadened our perspective of him.
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