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Recent Articles
Recent Articles by Scott Foundas
Penélope Cruz and Scarlett Johansson join forces — and some other stuff — in Woody Allen's (winning!) latest
Ferrell, Reilly, McKay & Co. still don't wanna grow up. And thank God for that
Heath Ledger peers into the void as Christopher Nolan's Batman returns
Male fulfillment and lack thereof
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A blogger steals someone else's life story and calls it her own.
By Ashley Harrell
Westword
How William Orr's quest for better, cheaper gas became a crime.
By Alan Prendergast
The Pitch
I worked at Kmart with John McCain's director of strategy.
By Alan Scherstuhl
I'm Not There
Continued from page 1
Published on November 22, 2007
If Blanchett's Jude is the most recognizable Dylan — and the performance that even those who hate the film won't be able to stop talking about — then Gere's Billy the Kid is the most enigmatic, the one who seems at once the ghost of the musician's roots-music past and the spirit of his eternal present, the living phantom embarked on his self-proclaimed "never ending tour." "You've got yesterday, today and tomorrow all in the same room. There's no telling what can happen," he muses late in the film, at once paraphrasing Dylan (from a 1978 interview about his songwriting style) and succinctly summarizing the Möbius-strip structure of Haynes's film. And so the most lasting image of I'm Not There may well be its last, in which the Kid picks up Woody Guthrie's guitar and hops yet another boxcar, as a train pulls down the line and a soulful harmonica blows its ageless tune.