CATALYSTS

Monday, October 08, 2007

Dylan is not there
I'm not there
In a recent interview with indieWire, director Todd Haynes states that the notion of a fixed personal identity is a lie; that "it is something that we are always working on and abridging and using outside influences to keep changing." No where is this theory better exemplified than in his new movie, I'm Not There, in which his subject, Bob Dylan is played by six different actors including Cate Blanchett and 13-year-old African-American actor, Marcus Carl Franklin. Ultimately, the movie becomes as much a study of identity for the filmmaker himself -- of all of us for that matter -- as it is of one of America's greatest songwriters. As Robert Sullivan writes in his cover article in yesterday's New York Times' Magazine:

"Todd Haynes’s Dylan film isn’t about Dylan. That’s what’s going to be so difficult for people to understand. That’s what’s going to make “I’m Not There” so trying for the really diehard Dylanists. That’s what might upset the non-Dylanists, who may find it hard to figure out why he bothered to make it at all. And that’s why it took Haynes so long to get it made. Haynes was trying to make a Dylan film that is, instead, what Dylan is all about, as he sees it, which is changing, transforming, killing off one Dylan and moving to the next, shedding his artistic skin to stay alive."

More from Haynes on the making of "I'm Not There" can be found here and here and here.

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