In 1961, unknown 19-year-old Bob Dylan arrives in New York City with his guitar. He forges relationships with music icons of Greenwich Village on his meteoric rise, culminating in a groundbreaking performance that reverberates worldwide. |
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Ratings: | IMDB: 7.8/10 | |
Released: | December 25, 2024 | |
Runtime: | 141 min | |
Genres: | Drama Music Biography | |
Countries: | United States | |
Companies: | Searchlight Pictures Veritas Entertainment Group White Water Range Media Partners The Picture Company Turnpike Films | |
Cast: | Edward Norton Elle Fanning Timothée Chalamet | |
Crew: | James Mangold Jay Cocks Elijah Wald | |
Trailers (37)
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Of course he had a direct line to a divine creative force of some type. He is one of the chosen tribe. ✡️
underrated comment
This was excellent. Nice to hear those old tunes again and the lyrics are still so amazing. I thought the actors all did a fine job and his life story itself is amazing. Imagine going to New York at 19 in the early 60s and sky-rocketing to the top like this. He had a direct line to a divine creative force of some type.
I didn’t know he had friendships with Johnny Cash, Seager and Guthrie, or that he received a Nobel Prize in Literature. Time to play some Dylan albums in full on Spotify.
In all honesty, never saw what the big deal was with this guy, or how he even made it as big as he did.
When I was younger, I felt/thought the same thing. However, as I got older and actually listened to quite a few of his songs, lived in Minneapolis MN and had the chance to actually see Bob Dylan perform in person at a venue in Downtown Minneapolis, MN too? My opinion changed.
He only completely reinvented songwriting… but whatever you say.
you 🔨it. It was what he had to say. His confronting style in which he gave others the backbone to express heated topics that needed to be addressed in America. War, racism, sexism. I could go on and on. He drew people in with a commonality. He wasn’t searching for startum. He was searching for like-minded people to produce amazing songs. Without Bob Dylan we would not have had the amazing artists that followed him during and after the 60’s counter-culture. Okay, I will step down off my soap box now. I couldn’t help myself from interjecting. A hippy musician raised this passionate person I’ve come to be :)
where is the i like that on here
He totally was a new innovation to music
I don’t now and never did really see it, truth be told, and for the life of me I don’t see how all of this got put in a spoiler. My original comment was not in one and shouldn’t have been put in one, didn’t need to be put in one…
One thing I will say is, and it doesn’t paint Bob in a good light. He didn’t have the greatest voice in the world. It wasn’t horrible. He can carry a tune but he was far from a trained vocalist. I think that maybe why you can’t understand the big deal people make of him, I’m I right?
It’s not just that, I just never liked any of his stuff, period. Didn’t like his vocals, for sure, there’s that, but didn’t care for his music or lyrics either. Just never really saw what made him so special or groundbreaking, there were others out there just like him, but he was the guy that was in the right place at the right time, and got the lucky break is all.
As a former DJ, I, too never cared for his music. His voice was like nails on a chalkboard. I will say, that he knew how to write some really good songs. He is still getting royalties from those songs that were covered by another artist/band. Jimi Hendrix comes to mind. I was in grade school during the 1960’s and really didn’t know who he was until the 1970’s and I was not inspired to buy any of his records. The counter culture affected young peoples attitudes opposed to or at variance with the prevailing social norm. Social norm…..fighting words in today’s culture….what is the social norm in the early years of the 21st century.
I think we are about the same age, or pretty close. I couldn’t stand his voice either, and yeah, he is still getting royalties. I remember he tried to pull a fast one on Spotify a while back, got mad because Joe Rogan had a deal with them, took his stuff off off the site, then quickly reconsidered, and put his music back. I have no idea if he was making much $$ from it being there or not, but must have been, because he changed his mind pretty quickly.
That being said, I never really paid much attention to the guy, though I did like Hendrix to a point, not a great fan, but did like him, I did like Crosby Stills and Nash, though they weren’t something I would call a ‘favorite band’ but I wouldn’t change the channel if they came on the local station.
I tended to be more of a Jethro Tull kind of a person coming up, trying to think of a few others, not quite like Tull, Jefferson Airplane was another, The Who, Zeppelin, of course, BOC, Creedence was decent of course, and there’s another one, was pretty good, and popular as well, can’t think of the name of it now, but have been trying, but when I was in high school, we had this one bus driver, she had a 8 track player that she could put in and take back out of the bus, and would play tapes for us on the bus. She played all kinds of really good music if we behaved, which believe me, we did, and it was one of the bands she played.
Good times man, good times, whole different world.
Dylan was a few years before my time so I kinda missed whatever it was with him and never was crazy about him. I agree with you on bands - Tull, Zeppelin, Jefferson Airplane - music-wise I’d consider them better but lyric-wise you gotta give Dylan credit. I’ve just recently been playing through whole albums and the lyrics are fantastic. I wish we had a voice for the people like that today.
Okay. we are all entitled to opinions and everyone’s opinion matters. That is my philosophy. Have a great holiday G.F. and an even better New Year. :)
And you as well!
thank you so very much :)
There was pen and paper, and you wrote a song. How was it reinvented? Guys stuff was awful, but that’s just me. Not everybody likes the same stuff, so there’s that.
No one ever wrote songs like Masters of War, Like a Rolling Stone, Highway 61, Visions of Johanna or Subterranean Home Sick Blues before him. No one ever said anything like that in songs before.
Pay no attention to the naysayers…Subterranean Homesick Blues proves Dylan was the “OG” of Rap Music
Heck yeah, great point M.B. Also one of his best songs. Long live Bob Dylan🤘🎶🎶🤘
Well, facing a couple facts, the only reason (just my opinion) his name got any notoriety is because of some of the people he got lucky enough to get attached to at the time. A lot of the music business is pure blind luck, always has been. Guy got lucky. A lot of people did, some of them had real talent, and a lot of people with real talent never got the chance.
This guy right here? He got lucky, and he got his name attached to some people that wound up being real name stars, and that actually got him somewhere, and thinking without that, he probably wouldn’t have made it nearly as far as he did. I just don’t think he was all that myself. But then, opinions, right?
That’s just wrong. People attached themselves to him. The Beatles attached themselves to him. He wasn’t a fluke who got lucky, he was a generational talent.
Before him, folk singers didn’t write their own songs and the edgiest protest song got were This Land is Your Land and If I Had a Hammer. The Times They Are a Changing was call to an entire generation and that rippled out all the way to all the Viet Nam protests of the 60s and 70s. He was the voice of a generation.
And just look at all the other musical legends who idolized him… John Lennon, George Harrison, Hendrix, the Stones, Leonard Cohen, Joni Mitchel, Van Morrison, Jim Morrison, Jerry Garcia, Bruce Springsteen, Marvin Gaye…
You need to educate yourself on history and culture. Dylan changed the world.
And….could have cared less for most of the people you just mentioned, musically, myself, with the exception of Hendrix, and hated Springsteen with a passion, and still do. And have no clue who Cohen is either. Not everybody likes the same thing. And not everybody is going to like this guy either…
I don’t care if you care. Just stop trying to rewrite history.
I’m not trying to rewrite anything, I just don’t give a rats about the guy, period. And for some reason, that tweaked you. Full stop. Now leave it be.
No, you ARE trying to rewrite history. You said he got lucky by attaching himself to people. He’s one of the greatest cultural figures of the 20th century every bit as influential as Andy Warhol, F Scotts Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Pablo Picasso, Marlon Brando, Elvis Presley and Muhammad Ali. He won a Nobel Prize, had 2,000 artist record covers of his songs, invented folk rock, invented country-rock, invented rap, has nine songs on Rolling Stone’s 500 greatest songs of all time list, and was named number one on Rolling Stone’s 100 Greatest Songwriters of All Time… And nothing you say will ever erase that.
Stop trying to rewrite history and educate yourself: https://youtu.be/camlWtA8GX4?si=9JJFCgz0JEl7MGYR
No more than now.