• Subscribe to our newsletter
The Media Online
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs
No Result
View All Result
The Media Online
No Result
View All Result
Home Broadcasting Film

Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown has enormous resonance

But the Netflix film doesn’t break with gender stereotypes.

by Lisa French
January 24, 2025
in Film
0 0
0
Bob Dylan biopic A Complete Unknown has enormous resonance

Chalamet’s performance as Dylan has enormous resonance/Searchlight Pictures

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

In 1961, aged 19, Bob Dylan left home in Minnesota for New York City and never looked back. Unknown when he arrived, he would later be widely described as the voice of a generation.

A Complete Unknown follows Dylan’s transformation from his arrival in 1961 to when he was booed at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965 for playing electric guitar instead of acoustic.

Loosely based on Elija Wald’s 2015 book Dylan Goes Electric!, the film is a snapshot of an era of generational and social upheaval through the prism of Dylan’s music.

In the ’60s and ’70s, my home was filled with Dylan’s songs, and those relating to the antiwar movement had particular resonance. My mother, who loved Dylan’s music, was aligned with Save Our Sons, which campaigned against the Vietnam War and hid young men from conscription. She worried her eldest son might get swept into the war.

In 1978, three years after the war ended, I went with my teenage friends to hear Dylan play at the Sidney Myer Music Bowl in Melbourne. He began with A Hard Rain’s A-Gonna Fall, and it literally did. A transfixed concert audience endured the deluge of pouring rain through 29 songs.

Crafting a biopic

Director James Mangold looks at the period where Dylan (Timothée Chalamet) emerged from obscurity, using his shift to electric music to show how his artistic evolution and pursuit of his own path led to fame.

The film does not shrink from portraying Dylan in an unflattering light. His focus is on music at the expense of everything else. He hardly notices his impact on others and does not show loyalty to anyone. Male rock stars are Teflon: their mystique wins over, self-centeredness is accepted.

Film still of a man with dark curly hair in a polka dot shirt.
The film does not shrink from portraying Dylan in an unflattering light.
Searchlight Pictures

Music biopics about men often romanticise them as visionaries and laud the artist for their genius, from Mozart in Amadeus (1984) to Brian Wilson from The Beach Boys in the film Love & Mercy (2014).

Biopics about female musicians tend to emphasise their unique challenges, including sexism and exploitation, or issues around race or gender, rather than their status as legendary artists.

Female biopics

The Billie Holiday biopic Lady Sings the Blues (1972) examined addiction and racism. Judy (2019), about Judy Garland, explored addiction and the pressures of stardom. What’s Love Got to Do with It (1993) depicted Tina Turner’s journey to become a solo performer despite an abusive relationship.

A Complete Unknown shares the major approaches of recent biopics, including a focus on a key period of the artist’s transformation, such as the portrait of the first 15 years of Queen’s Freddie Mercury in Bohemian Rhapsody (2018).

Others explore the artist as innovator, as in the Elton John biopic Rocketman (2019). The majority examine the musician’s cultural impact, for example Aretha Franklin’s influence on civil rights and feminism in Respect (2021).

There are many traditions both male and female biopics share: the cost and burden of fame, the music as a lens for understanding struggle or triumph, the artist as a figure challenging society. A Complete Unknown examines those, and includes romantic and professional relationships, but they are secondary to the story of Dylan’s achievement.

A Complete Unknown is more open than some of its predecessors to acknowledging the difficulties women encounter, but it hints at them rather than fleshing them out.

The pressure on Joan Baez (Monica Barbaro) as a woman in a male-dominated industry is invisible, and the film does not substantially break with gender stereotypes which inform the narrative, character development and themes.

The women of Dylan’s life

Chalamet’s performance as Dylan has enormous resonance. Elle Fanning’s Sylvie Russo, a character inspired by Dylan’s real-life girlfriend at the time, is played as a quiet yet strong presence. Vulnerable but independent, she supports and inspires him during his unknown early days, clearly motivated by genuine care for him rather than his stardom.

The film depicts Dylan as having simultaneous relationships with both Sylvie and Joan (although this is apparently a liberty of fiction, his manager at the time has said the real-life characters had relationships at different times).

The film communicates this through the characters’ various gazes at Dylan. Sylvie watches Bob with Joan; Joan sees him with Sylvie.

Film still: Joan plays a guitar on stage.
The pressure on Joan Baez as a woman in a male-dominated industry is invisible.
Searchlight Pictures

Joan and Sylvie gaze at Dylan as if trying to fathom a mystery: Dylan is unpredictable and unknowable. Sylvie tries to go with the flow, but ends up saying she can’t do it.

Joan, a singer with a reputation far greater than Dylan’s at the beginning of the film, ends up throwing him out of her room when it becomes clear all he wants to do is write another song.

They both cut him loose. Dylan’s 1964 song One Too Many Mornings is about the newly single man and a failure of communication. It speaks of a post-breakup reflective solitude, and how men and women don’t always understand each other.

A cultural turning point

Dylan’s artist girlfriend Suze Rotolo, upon whom Sylvie is based, reportedly resented being cast simply as a musician’s chick. In the film she stands in for the emotional and intellectual support women offer but she is not portrayed as the artist she was.

The only woman represented in the male dominated folk music industry is Joan Baez, which along with her forthrightness in calling Dylan out as “kind of a jerk”, symbolises the times were changing for women too.

Film Still: Sylvie leans against a car.
Dyan’s girlfriend Suze Rotolo, upon whom Sylvie is based, resented being cast as simply as a musician’s chick.
Searchlight Pictures

But the focus is Dylan. Everyone else is just those he abandoned along the way.

A Complete Unknown depicts the cultural turning point of the times as the context for Dylan’s own musical transformation – from acoustic folk to electrified rock. The film stays with you, ricocheting around in your memory. That, for me, is a sign of a good one.The Conversation


Lisa French, Professor & Dean, School of Media and Communication, RMIT University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.


 

Tags: A Complete UnknownbiopicBob DylanElle FanningfilmJoan BaezLisa FrenchmoviesThe ConversationTimothée Chalamet

Lisa French

Professor Lisa French is Dean of The School of Media and Communication at RMIT University, and Professor of Screen and Media. She is internationally recognised for her research on women in Australian Cinema. Her scholarship reflects a career long interest the nation’s screen culture, with a specialist interest in gender. Her books include The Female Gaze in Documentary Film – An International Perspective (2021); Shining a Light: 50 Years of the Australian Film Institute (2009); and Womenvision: Women and the Moving Image in Australia (2003). Her record as an educator with first-rate scholarship is evidenced by numerous awards for both research and teaching, among them several federal government Australian Teaching and Learning Council (ALTC) Citations, and the Permezel Memorial Award For excellence of research and commitment to developing international world-class links in Media and Cinema Studies. She has broad experience on the boards of peak industry associations and currently sits on the Editorial Board of The Conversation.

Follow Us

  • twitter
  • threads
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Kelders van Geheime: The characters are here

Kelders van Geheime: The characters are here

March 22, 2024
Dissecting the LSM 7-10 market

Dissecting the LSM 7-10 market

May 17, 2023
Keri Miller sets the record straight after being axed from ECR

Keri Miller sets the record straight after being axed from ECR

April 23, 2023
Getting to know the ES SEMs 8-10 (Part 1)

Getting to know the ES SEMs 8-10 (Part 1)

February 22, 2018
Sowetan proves that sex still sells

Sowetan proves that sex still sells

105
It’s black. It’s beautiful. It’s ours.

Exclusive: Haffajee draws a line in the sand over racism

98
The Property Magazine and Media Nova go supernova

The Property Magazine and Media Nova go supernova

44
Warrant of arrest authorised for Media Nova’s Vaughan

Warrant of arrest authorised for Media Nova’s Vaughan

41
Navigating the AI tide without losing our humanity

Navigating the AI tide without losing our humanity

May 29, 2025
The marketing mission remains clear

The marketing mission remains clear

May 29, 2025
 Auditing masterclass lifts the lid on hidden costs

 Auditing masterclass lifts the lid on hidden costs

May 29, 2025
Media Moves: TASTE turns 20, Anele, Lira and Janine van Wyk are FEARLESS in new campaign; Alex Okosi new MD for Google Africa, Accenture Song wins Telkom business

Media Moves: Media24 unveils unified advertising and content team, Masego Matlotleng awarded Creative Futures scholarship, PHD wins Cell C business

May 29, 2025

Recent News

Navigating the AI tide without losing our humanity

Navigating the AI tide without losing our humanity

May 29, 2025
The marketing mission remains clear

The marketing mission remains clear

May 29, 2025
 Auditing masterclass lifts the lid on hidden costs

 Auditing masterclass lifts the lid on hidden costs

May 29, 2025
Media Moves: TASTE turns 20, Anele, Lira and Janine van Wyk are FEARLESS in new campaign; Alex Okosi new MD for Google Africa, Accenture Song wins Telkom business

Media Moves: Media24 unveils unified advertising and content team, Masego Matlotleng awarded Creative Futures scholarship, PHD wins Cell C business

May 29, 2025

ABOUT US

The Media Online is the definitive online point of reference for South Africa’s media industry offering relevant, focused and topical news on the media sector. We deliver up-to-date industry insights, guest columns, case studies, content from local and global contributors, news, views and interviews on a daily basis as well as providing an online home for The Media magazine’s content, which is posted on a monthly basis.

Follow Us

  • twitter
  • threads

ARENA HOLDING

Editor: Glenda Nevill
glenda.nevill@cybersmart.co.za
Sales and Advertising:
Tarin-Lee Watts
wattst@arena.africa
Download our rate card

OUR NETWORK

TimesLIVE
Sunday Times
SowetanLIVE
BusinessLIVE
Business Day
Financial Mail
HeraldLIVE
DispatchLIVE
Wanted Online
SA Home Owner
Business Media MAGS
Arena Events

NEWSLETTER SUBSCRIPTION

 
Subscribe
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Copyright © 2015 - 2023 The Media Online. All rights reserved. Part of Arena Holdings (Pty) Ltd

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • MOST Awards
  • News
    • Awards
    • Media Mecca
  • Print
    • Newspapers
    • Magazines
    • Publishing
  • Broadcasting
    • TV
    • Radio
    • Cinema
    • Video
  • Digital
    • Mobile
    • Online
  • Agencies
    • Advertising
    • Media agency
    • Public Relations
  • OOH
    • Events
  • Research & Education
    • Research
    • Media Education
      • Media Mentor
  • Press Office
    • Press Office
    • TMO.Live Blog
    • Events
    • Jobs

Copyright © 2015 - 2023 The Media Online. All rights reserved. Part of Arena Holdings (Pty) Ltd

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?