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Bob Dylan in Bob Dylan: Dont Look Back (1967)

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Bob Dylan: Dont Look Back

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The scene where Donovan visits Dylan in his hotel was generally viewed as Dylan putting the young singer-songwriter in his place when he grabs the guitar and performs "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue." But a 2015 Criterion Collection remaster, with improved sound, revealed that Donovan actually requested Dylan play that song for him. That gave the entire scene a new meaning and revealed Dylan and Donovan as more friends than rivals.
In the opening scene Allen Ginsberg appears behind Bob Dylan as he flips the note cards.
Although rightly lauded as a classic, one person who was NOT a fan of this film was Bob Dylan himself, who told Rolling Stone magazine in 1969: "You know this movie, Dont Look Back? Well, that splashed my face all over the world, [yet] I didn't get a penny from that movie, you know." [This was because the film was set up by his manager and Pennebaker as joint producers, leaving Bob out of the financial mix]. When Rolling Stone asked Dylan "Did you like Dont Look Back?" he laughingly replied, "I'd like it a lot more if I got paid for it!" [PM]
Contrary to popular belief, the title is not a reference to the lyric "She's an artist, she don't look back" from the song "She Belongs to Me". Pennebaker stated that he hoped Dylan knew he wouldn't do that.
At 1:04:37, as Dylan is trying to escape a scrum of young fans, a voice calls out, "Get in a taxi, Pete, come on!" The camera follows the young men to the taxi where at 1:04:42, one can briefly see the young Pete Townshend.

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