I'm wearing a T-shirt with Bob Dylan printed on it these few days. If it's not dirty, I might wear it for another day tomorrow. His biography "Like a Rolling Stone" has always been the first reading I recommend to character reporters-please write your interviewees as Bob Dylan wrote about yourself. When Hu Ma came to my house, I was surprised to find that I was posting another video biography of Bob Dylan. This guy who resembled Bob Dylan in China was a bit less ambitious, or in the first few years of the 21st century. China lacks rebellion and vanguard. Everything is stealing knowledge in a flat-chested world in a state of following.
This "I'm Not There" movie didn't understand it at first, forgive me for walking through and sneer in the director's use of 6 completely different-looking actors to piece together a complete Bob Dylan design. This is a tribute to Bob. The movie finally slid into the shadow of Andy Warhol, and the portrayal of Ginsburg lacked strength and resembled a SHAX. These were the faults.
But it does not hinder the retrospect, nostalgia, nostalgia and goodwill of the United States in the 1960s in the set. This was the period of the "Cultural Revolution" in the United States. Martin Luther King, Kennedy, Ginsburg, Crujak and Bob created the temperament and spirit of an era. The mass situation of cultural idols has gained popularity, new lifestyles are being established, and the sluggish atmosphere, sex, freedom, and drugs have just begun.
I haven't heard Bob Dylan completely. His music is not a type that hits your heart at once, but needs to be discerned by trained ears, that comes from the aesthetic quirks and sound changes of an era.
There are many sayings in the movie that should be memorized. I should look for them now and copy them into my quotation book.
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