The A Complete Unknown director got into filmmaking because he was lonely. It’s a quality he also saw in Bob Dylan.
"[It was strange] in an intellectual way," Mangold tells Entertainment Weekly of revisiting Johnny Cash. "But not at all in a ...
New York, early 1960s. Against the backdrop of a vibrant music scene and tumultuous cultural upheaval, an enigmatic 19-year-old from Minnesota arrives in the West Village with his guitar and ...
Big shoes (and tight pants) to fill. Val Kilmer dutifully performed as Morrison in director Oliver Stone’s account of the ...
Edward Berger, Brady Corbet, Coralie Fargeat, James Mangold, Denis Villeneuve and Malcolm Washington on adapting as you go, ...
It’s not historically accurate, but it’s poetically accurate,” says "Dylan Goes Electric" author Elijah Wald of the new Bob Dylan biopic.
The Village Voice review of "A Complete Unknown" notes that the movie concentrates on Bob Dylan's folk beginnings and rock breakthroughs.
Mangold explains how Timothée Chalamet made Bob Dylan his own, from pandemic guitar practice to socially awkward extreme ...
The filmmaker discusses the acclaimed biopic, recalling his chats with the musical legend, discussing everything from art to ...
James Mangold has made a career out of versatility in tackling the kinds of movies he wants to do as a filmmaker. In fact I ...
James Mangold's Bob Dylan biopic doesn't transcend the genre, but it does tweak Boomer mythology ever so slightly.