<\/a><\/p>\nDirected by Todd Haynes, I\u2019m Not There features Cate Blanchett, Heath Ledger, Richard Gere, Christian Bale, Ben Whishaw, and Marcus Carl Franklin as the parts of Dylan\u2019s life, be it more fact-based (Blanchett as a Don\u2019t Look Back era Dylan) or a bit more adventurous (Gere as Billy the Kid). The cinematography is gorgeous, the acting is generally good, and the use of music is effective. But the Bob Dylan aspects of this movie aren\u2019t what make it interesting, and are probably why the movie never found any sort of mass acceptance. Despite the fact that the following phrase will read like \u2018I\u2019m smarter than you,\u2019 the movie was simply tough to understand.<\/p>\n
I had no interest in Bob Dylan\u2019s life and only a vague interest in his career when this movie was released, and that barely changed after seeing I\u2019m Not There. I might have been more into listening to The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll because of the scene where the Christian Bale version of Dylan performs it, but I did not run out and buy The Times They Are a-Changin\u2019 when I left the cinema. I\u2019ll never read a page of Bob Dylan: Chronicles; all of Haynes\u2019 set design, costume, and plot details inspired by Dylan\u2019s life were completely lost on me. But I feel like Haynes would be alright with that, because he made a movie about a man that also happened to be a movie about every man (and woman).<\/p>\n
The idea behind I\u2019m Not There is that our lives change through different phases; you are more or less a different person as a child than you are as a forty year old. There will still be similar aspects, but important things that used to define you will change. And the more time passes since seeing this movie in 2007, the more incredible this movie becomes. Not only is it an interesting idea, but it\u2019s almost indisputably true. I have no idea what I\u2019ll be like in ten years, and I barely remember who I was ten years ago. Despite that being slightly depressing, it mostly reaffirms that life will continue to be interesting. If everything stayed constant, there would be no reason to do anything. I\u2019m Not There is a movie about Bob Dylan, yeah, but it\u2019s (almost) just as much about you.<\/p>\n