“A Complete Unknown,” James Mangold’s Bob Dylan biopic (in theaters now), is many things: a star-making vehicle for Timothée ...
The Dylan in question in “A Complete Unknown,” loosely based on Elijah Wald’s 2015 book, “Dylan Goes Electric! Newport, ...
The evasions and elisions that are inherent to the format—as here, with the cramming of four eventful years into just over two hours—are on view from the start of “A Complete Unknown.” Timothée ...
“We cut his hair shorter and used his hair for the earlier Bob Dylan stuff,” she says. “We adjusted the styling depending on the time.” MacIntosh observed that Dylan’s hair never looked ...
TULSA — Has Bob Dylan ever stepped foot inside the ... “From the first note, the vibrations from the loudspeaker made my hair stand up,” Dylan wrote about hearing Johnson’s music in ...
The Oscar-nominated actor co-stars in James Mangold's Bob Dylan biopic as the beloved folk ... He was comparing it to “Hair.” He was comparing it to things that were so different from what ...
Bob Dylan performed at the famed Newport Folk Festival three years in a row, from 1963 to 1965. His final appearance ended in controversy when he performed an electric set of rock songs ...
You’re reading the Today’s Opinions newsletter. Sign up to get it in your inbox. In today’s edition: Will Leitch is a huge fan of Bob Dylan, in large part because the musician is “so ...
Bob Dylan is so inherently unclassifiable that, when the great filmmaker Todd Haynes made a purposefully disjointed and elliptical film about the songwriter, he had to cast six actors to play ...
Various locations in New Jersey dressed up as 1960s Greenwich Village are the backdrop for “A Complete Unknown,” about the rise of Bob Dylan (Timothée ... costumes and hair in this film ...
This holiday season, if you find yourself parked in a theater seat to witness Timothée Chalamet embody an early-1960s Bob Dylan ... changing hairstyles, but also his denim. When Dylan lands ...
Everything, as Charles Péguy said, begins in mysticism and ends in politics. Except if you’re Bob Dylan. If you’re Bob Dylan, you start political and go mystical. You start as an apprentice ...