A Complete Unkown (2024)

Like the previous film, I have yet to have a chance to provide complete thoughts on this film. I liked it quite well, and I will share those thoughts later this week. I am simply trying to keep my 2024 time line complete with this post.

UPDATE

Sorry, it has taken me a month to get back to this. I have been traveling from one coast to the other and doing the podcast in-between, so I have just been busy.

The best thing about the movie is the original music, re-recorded for the film by the lead actor. The songs are classics, and most of them are delivered in the folk style that Dylan first emerged thru. I can’t say how much fidelity was paid to the story surrounding the creation of the songs, but it feels quite realistic and I think people who are interested in this kind of process will enjoy the film quite a bit. The film really does seem to be immersing us in a time and place.

One of the problems I have seen in biopics is that in trying to cover too much territory, they spread the interesting elements too thin. Trying to get to everything means you skimp on what might be more important. This film does not make that mistake.  The director James Mangold did a great job covering Johnny Cash over his lifetime in “Walk the Line” but wisely chose to focus a specific period in Bob Dylan’s career. Dylan arrives in NYC in 1961, with a guitar and a dream to connect with singers he has admired, especially Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger. The opening scenes of Dylan singing with Seegar are sort of magical in the way it dawns on the established Folk legend, how the young newcomer is fully formed. 

Timothée Chalamet does the heavy lifting by not only acting the part of a reclusive songwriter, but he also performs the music and plays the instruments. This is a fully committed performance and not just casting of someone who matches Dylan’s physical appearance. In the personal relationships with women, Dylan remains an enigma as to his feelings. The women in the story act as muses but can’t get him to emotionally engage like a true human being. Elle Fanning plays Dylan’s main girlfriend named Sylvie Russo for the film. Her attraction to and frustration with Dylan are completely understandable based on the screenplay. Monica Barbaro portrays Folk singer Joan Baez, known as an activist in social causes, and Dylan’s on again off again affair with her is a catalyst for some of the fireworks that accompany the story. She is also excellent.

If you are not familiar with the pop scene of the early 60s, this will be a revelation to you. That folk music was thought of as more pure and honest than Rock and Roll will be new to audiences who have thought of the rock era as the defining part of mid-century culture. Pete Seeger, played wonderfully by Edward Norton, sees the rock elements creeping into Dylan’s music as an apostasy. Those who don’t know the story of the 1965 Newport Folk Festival and the upheaval that Dylan presented will get a good look at the kinds of infighting that purists can engage in. It also works as a metaphor for the political realm with Dylan surprisingly being the realist and Baez and Seeger representing the true believers and their prejudices. 

“A Complete Unknown” was always destined for awards recognition, given the track record of the cast and director. I found it a satisfying film that I will probably revisit soon. It just missed my end of year top ten favorites, although in terms of quality, it certainly deserves to be in the mix.

The Beguiled (2017)

What looks like is going to be a Gothic horror set in the Civil War period, turns out to be a psycho-sexual drama with a slightly demented finish. I was not fooled by the trailer or other marketing, because I’d seen the original version of the story from 1971. There are a few changes in the film which were supposed to alter the perspective from the soldiers point of view to that of the women in the story. I guess that would be the justification for remaking a film that was not particularly compelling the first time out. Let’s just say for the moment that they may have altered the perspective some but they have not overcome the issue of the film lacking a need to exist in the first place.

Sophia Coppola is a director that many admire but I have found most of the films by her, that I have seen, to be cold and disengaging. They are beautifully shot and “The Beguiled” is certainly beautiful. Set in Virginia during the last year of the War between the States, the story concerns a wounded Union soldier taken in by a girls academy. The school is run by matron southerner Nicole Kidman. She is assisted by a younger woman played by Kirsten Dunst and they are in charge of five young women and girls who are being educated in a traditional form for young ladies. As they learn French and penmanship and sewing skills, their life is disrupted by the war around them. The introduction of Corporal McBurney (a solid Colin Farrell) into their island  of antebellum etiquette throws things into a tizzy. Since it is a Sophia Coppola film however, it is done at a languishing pace with each frame posed as if it were a still life being painted for the wall of another plantation.

 

The pacing of the story is so agonizingly slow, but still interesting, because of the mores and cultural rules the people of that time operate in. Even when he is being chastised by Kidman,  the dialogue between the two consists of polite and well thought out vocabulary. The inflections and tones contain the reprimands more than any word does. McBurney slowly courts the Dunst character and again it is done in a manner reflecting the times. In the original film, Clint Eastwood is much more clearly manipulative and he is wooing multiple women simultaneously. Farrell’s version of the character seems sincere in his approach to Edwina, but Kidman’s Miss Martha is also drawn to him and Elle fanning as the recalcitrant Alicia is the most brazen of the girls who have sexualized the Corporal in their heads. The little girls are fascinated by him as well but it is his Irish Charm and status as a Union soldier that holds their interest. As the story gets closer to the dramatic elements, it feels like it wakes up in a burst of energy and tries to accomplish everything the movie set up in the first ninety minutes in a two minute segment. There is a betrayal on a couple of levels, but those come rapidly and are followed by a resolution that seems to have been arrived at capriciously. The film feels like it is missing the second act.

Farrell and Dunst are the two standout performances. They are tentative and then passionate and frustrated and anguished in very effective moments. Kidman seems a little miscast. She is older but certainly desirable rather than repressed and desperate. Her delicate bathing of Farrell when he first arrives was the strongest part of her performance but in the manner she shows herself during the rest of the film, she feels a little stiff. The biggest unpleasant surprise from the actors comes from Elle fanning, an actress that i thought was special in  Super 8, but here she looks like she is play acting and although she is an aggressive flirt, she does not give off the impression of lustfulness that would justify the Corporal’s behavior.

The only way I see this film as being a more feminist version of the original is that only one of the women completely falls under the sexual power of the man, and he is the one who is manipulated by two of the other women. That’s about it. This is a good film but not a great one. It retells the original story but without much justification for doing so. It also makes the languid pace of the original seem frenetic by comparison.  The only music in the film occurs on screen when the girls are singing or performing, with the exception of an occasional synthesizer note held for a long period as a prelude to a couple of moments near the end. That may be another reason the fil feels longer than it should, without a melody it feels plodding. This is a film for Coppola Completists  or someone who has missed the original and has already seen everything else playing. I am largely indifferent on it.