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Blanchett plays Dylan and wonders will fans get it?
Michelle Nichols
NEW YORK—A new movie about Bob Dylan is the first dramatic portrayal of
his life and music that the reclusive performer has approved, but
Oscar-winning actress Cate Blanchett says fans may struggle to
understand it.
After all, she plays one of six Bob Dylans — the others are Richard Gere,
Christian Bale, Heath Ledger, Ben Whislaw, and young black actor Marcus
Carl Franklin in his movie debut.
“It doesn’t make sense in terms of it being a non-conventional
narrative. I think it definitely makes sense but in a dreamlike musical
way. You have to let the film wash over you,” the Australian actress
said of “I’m Not There.” “The fact that director Todd Haynes fractured
Dylan’s musical journey and persona into six different characters, none
of whom are called Bob Dylan — it’s unusual,” the 38-year-old actress
said in an interview at the New York Film Festival this week. While not
meant to be a direct mimic of Dylan, Blanchett’s hair is dark and frizzy
like the singer’s and she adopts some of his mannerisms. But the actress
said she needed extra help to become more masculine — by putting socks
down her pants.
“There was a scene where I was lounging on the bed and I saw Todd
looking a little pensive and my friend who was doing make up, looking a
little pensive and they both had the same thought at the same time, that
maybe it was a bit too feminine — I needed a bit of ‘hamburger helper’,”
she said.
The role has already won her the Venice Film Festival best actress award
and is being touted as worthy of another Academy Award nomination. She
won a best supporting actress Oscar in 2005 for her portrayal as
Katharine Hepburn in “The Aviator.” While her decision to play Dylan may
seem unusual, Blanchett said there was no way she could turn it down.
“It’s such a wild and crazy idea,” she said. “You don’t get offered that
kind of stuff every day.” So just one week after finishing starring as
England’s 16th century queen in “Elizabeth: The Golden Age,” Blanchett
took on the character of Jude — a depiction of Dylan in the mid-1960s
when he first played electric guitar and drew ire from some fans who
wanted him to remain a folk protest singer. “I’m Not There” has garnered
mixed reviews. The Hollywood Reporter said, “It’s a curiosity that could
delight or turn off loyal Dylan fans and may prove too oddball to draw
in younger and mainstream audiences.”
But Blanchett has won praise. Variety called her performance “a daring
coup.” While most critics see the Dylan film as too high concept and
esoteric for most Americans, Blanchett’s next project will likely draw a
bigger audience. The actress has just finished filming Steven
Spielberg’s “Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull,” with
actor Harrison Ford, which she described as “a riot.” “It was like
revisiting my childhood. I ate that series of films alive,” said
Blanchett, who has two young sons. “My children had a fantastic time.
And Steven, being a father of seven, was so embracing of the kids”. |