The 10 Most Incomprehensible Bob Dylan Interviews of All Time
Interviews in which Bob Dylan fucks around with his questioner (most
of them, in my experience) are always good for a chuckle. For me, none
of the video clips collected here by New York's Vulture column really rivals the 1966 Playboy interview,
rightly placed at number one, that set the gold standard for sheer
cheekiness. Check out the whole thing if you haven't; it's a really
good read. (I also love the weird screed against Time magazine
that kicks off the list.) But what interested me, as someone who spends
his days interviewing people, is the way these clips and excerpts,
especially the raw, unedited footage, where you can really feel the
reporters trying to regain control of the situation, cast some light on
how difficult it is to be interviewed — to try to give your
interrogator the insight he desires into your life, thoughts and
creative process while simultaneously keeping yourself from spouting
something embarrassing, or easily misconstrued. (I think this is why
politicians, increasingly, come off as either soulless automatons or
dopey hillbillies.) Dylan's strategy has remained pretty simple: refuse to give a straight answer.
Don't Open This Cookie
Not movie-related, but I really welcomed this news from The New York Times of a Queens fortune-cookie maker that has actually created some alternatives to the feel-good postprandial platitudes dispensed to date. Like this: “Perhaps you’ve been focusing too much on yourself.” Or, "Your problem just got bigger. Think, what have you done?" Sweet.
Listentoamovie.com (tag line: "For the Cubicle Workers of the World") has a fairly novel approach to copyright infringement. The site offers free streaming copies of movie audio tracks. Only. This wouldn't be terribly interesting in our age of DVD, zillion-channel digital-cable packages, and Bittorrent, except that some of the audio files are commentary tracks. So far I don't see the awesome original Criterion laserdisc commentaries by Martin Scorsese and Co. for Raging Bull and Taxi Driver — but somebody has posted the three James Bond laserdisc commentaries for Dr. No, From Russia With Love and Goldfinger that Criterion had to withdraw from the market after somebody squawked.
Queens of the Stone Age: “3's and 7's”
No Fat Clips has a new QotSA video that's patterned on Grindhouse, complete with guns, blood and boobies. (Scroll down to download it. Who pays for this guy's bandwidth?) You can see a tamer version on YouTube, but this one is the uncut version. Why not fill your new rock video with tits and blood? I'm flabbergasted at how quickly the Internet has become, essentially, the only place to see new music videos.
Zoom: A Filmmaker Uncovers the Hidden Truths of Photos