En véritable alchimiste, Martin Scorsese mélange les mythes et la réalité pour évoquer la tournée Rolling Thunder Revue de Bob Dylan, dans l'Amérique en mutation de 1975.En véritable alchimiste, Martin Scorsese mélange les mythes et la réalité pour évoquer la tournée Rolling Thunder Revue de Bob Dylan, dans l'Amérique en mutation de 1975.En véritable alchimiste, Martin Scorsese mélange les mythes et la réalité pour évoquer la tournée Rolling Thunder Revue de Bob Dylan, dans l'Amérique en mutation de 1975.
- Récompenses
- 3 victoires et 11 nominations au total
- The Filmmaker
- (as Stefan van Dorp)
- The Medicine Man
- (as Chief Rolling Thunder)
Avis à la une
**two months pass**
When I sat down to write this short, relatively negative review in advance of recording a podcast about how this should have just been released as a concert movie, and the documentary aspects didn't work at all, I stumbled upon the information that nearly all the documentary elements were fiction. The director who shot the original footage? Just an actor playing a character named Stefan Van Dorp, a European filmmaker who claims to have directed the original footage (in reality, Dylan and a crew shot the footage for Dylan's own project, the 1978 feature 'Renaldo and Clara'). Sharon Stone? Digitally inserted into photos; never met Dylan on tour as a 17 or 19 year old or however old she was supposed to be in a past that never happened. There's no word on whether Dylan being inspired by the band KISS to paint his face white is a real factoid or not, and what does it matter? An entire fiction concocted by two elderly men that couldn't even be a fraction as interesting as what actually transpired in reality... now that is truly an artistic statement! +1 for effort, and by effort I mean: genuinely fooling me. Now and then, there's a fool such as I, bored and ready, willing and able to click the next thing I see featured on Netlifx that even remotely intrigues me at all.
Couple of comments: this is directed by longtime Dylan admirer Martin Scorsese. Here he brings a work of mostly fiction, although of course the concert footage is real. You may recall that during the 1975 Rolling Thunder Review, Dylan filmed a ton of footage, which eventually was released as "Renaldo and Clara" in early 1978 (more on that later). Basically Scorsese was handed the unused footage and told "do with it what you want". As if Scorsese would decline that opportunity! While they are of course very different films (and thankfully this one doesn't run 4 hours, which was the original running time of "Renaldo and Clara"), there are clear parallels between the two. In then end, "Rolling Thunder Review" also rambles quite a bit, and I found it of most interest for the concert footage, and the current interviews (all fictional). Nevertheless this is really a "must-see" for any and all Dylan fans. Now almost 50 years later, this footage is most interesting from a historical perspective. (I remember seeing "Renaldo and Clara" with a buddy of mine in a movie theater in London in the summer of 1978, and we were just dumbstruck about it. Can't recall if we stayed for the entire 4 hour showing.)
"Rolling Thunder Review: A Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese" was released on Netflix in 2019, bypassing theaters altogether. I didn't have Netflix in 2019, and only recently stumbled on it. Please note that this is currently rated 93% Certified Fresh on Rotten Tomatoes, and for good reason. Of course don't take my word for it. If you like Dylan, and in particular his Rolling Thunder era (including his vastly underrated 1976 album "Desire"), I'd readily suggest you check this out and draw your own conclusion.
Le saviez-vous
- Anecdotes"Stefan van Dorp" does not exist in real life and was created for this movie. He is played by Bette Midler's husband, Martin von Haselberg.
- GaffesIn the closing credits where Bob Dylan's Never Ending Tour scheduled is listed, on the 2018 slide, August 24 is incorrectly listed as Brisbane, New Zealand. When in fact it should be listed as Brisbane, Australia.
- Citations
Interviewer: What were the audiences like that you played to?
The Balladeer: Well, they would all be hysterically happy. So, I mean, you can't really judge much from saying "What would the audiences be like?" They would all be people who would've slit each other's throats to get there.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Morning Joe: 05-24-2021 (2021)
- Bandes originalesThe Stars and Stripes Forever
Written by John Philip Sousa
Meilleurs choix
- How long is Rolling Thunder Revue?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Conjuring: The Rolling Thunder Revue, a Bob Dylan Story by Martin Scorsese
- Lieux de tournage
- Lawrence, Massachusetts, États-Unis(At 36: 00 when discussing New England the view is traveling south on route 495 while crossing the Merrimac River)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 2h 22min(142 min)
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 1.85 : 1