Bob Dylan, Timothée Chalamet and I Was
Oscar-nominated director James Mangold directs Timothée Chalamet as the Nobel-Prize winning Musician Bob Dylan in 'A Complete Unknown'. Starring Chalamet with Edward Norton as Pete Seeger, Elle Fanning as Sylvie Russo,
The 'Rebel Without a Cause' star was nominated posthumously twice in that category after tragically passing away at 24 years of age.
Edward Norton, Timothée Chalamet, James Mangold and Monica Barbaro attend the Paris premiere of “A Complete Unknown” on Jan. 15. Chalamet has a history with Chanel, having fronted campaigns for the label’s Bleu de Chanel cologne.
CHANG: James Mangold co-wrote and directed the new film, "A Complete Unknown." Timothee Chalamet stars in the movie. It's in theaters now. Thank you both so much for sharing this time with me. MANGOLD: Thank you, Ailsa. CHALAMET: Thank you. Thanks for the ...
TO borrow the title of a Bob Dylan song, it was a case of “one more cup of coffee” for the film director. (Or perhaps not, as you’ll see.) When James Mangold got stuck into making his biopic A
This portrait of Bob Dylan going electric boasts the songs, the stars and 60s-era style — plus plenty of passion from its lead, his fellow cast and director.
Find out more about the actor’s performance on Saturday Night Live, where he hosted for the third time and sang songs by Bob Dylan.
A look at James Mangolds's Bob Dylan biopic 'A Complete Unknown', starring Timothée Chalamet, which has left us wanting to listen to albums and not watch movies.
but director James Mangold shows Dylan is clearly in a class by himself. Spanning a handful of years, the movie includes a lot of music and more than a few iconic songs. Timothee Chalamet makes a ...
CHANG: James Mangold co-wrote and directed the new film, "A Complete Unknown." Timothee Chalamet stars in the movie. It's in theaters now. Thank you both so much for sharing this time with me.
It might at first seem obvious why filmmakers won’t leave the subject of Bob Dylan alone. Search “Dylan” and “movies,” and the list — from documentaries like “Don’t Look Back” (1967) to fictionalized treatments like “I’m Not There” (2007) — turns out to be surprisingly extensive.