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Renaldo and Clara

  • 1978
  • R
  • 3h 55m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
639
YOUR RATING
Renaldo and Clara (1978)
DocumentaryDramaMusic

Bob Dylan on tour with the Rolling Thunder Revue in 1975; concert footage, documentary interviews and bizarre improvised character scenes.Bob Dylan on tour with the Rolling Thunder Revue in 1975; concert footage, documentary interviews and bizarre improvised character scenes.Bob Dylan on tour with the Rolling Thunder Revue in 1975; concert footage, documentary interviews and bizarre improvised character scenes.

  • Director
    • Bob Dylan
  • Writer
    • Bob Dylan
  • Stars
    • Bob Dylan
    • Sara Dylan
    • Joan Baez
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    639
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bob Dylan
    • Writer
      • Bob Dylan
    • Stars
      • Bob Dylan
      • Sara Dylan
      • Joan Baez
    • 9User reviews
    • 19Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins total

    Photos14

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    Top cast43

    Edit
    Bob Dylan
    Bob Dylan
    • Renaldo
    Sara Dylan
    • Clara
    Joan Baez
    Joan Baez
    • The Woman in White
    Ronnie Hawkins
    Ronnie Hawkins
    • Bob Dylan
    Ronee Blakley
    Ronee Blakley
    • Mrs. Dylan
    Ramblin' Jack Elliott
    Ramblin' Jack Elliott
    • Longheno de Castro
    • (as Jack Elliott)
    Harry Dean Stanton
    Harry Dean Stanton
    • Lafkezio
    Bob Neuwirth
    Bob Neuwirth
    • The Masked Tortilla
    Helena Kallianiotes
    Helena Kallianiotes
    • Helena
    Mel Howard
    • Ungatz
    Allen Ginsberg
    Allen Ginsberg
    • The Father
    David Mansfield
    David Mansfield
    • The Son
    Jack Baran
    • The Truckdriver
    David Blue
    • David Blue
    Roger McGuinn
    Roger McGuinn
    • Roger McGuinn
    Rob Stoner
    • The Musician
    Ruth Tyrangel
    • The Girlfriend
    • (as Ruth Tyrangiel)
    J. Stephen Soles
    J. Stephen Soles
    • Ramon
    • (as Steven Soles)
    • Director
      • Bob Dylan
    • Writer
      • Bob Dylan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews9

    6.6639
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    Featured reviews

    6Billiam-4

    Quirky

    Quirky, idiosyncratic, often confusing and much too long mixture of concert footage, documentary and fictional scenes is definitely fascinating to watch, but one wonders, if Bob Dylan ever was certain about his intentions to create this film or whether he had an idea who its potential audience would be.
    7jaibo

    A sometimes irritating and sometimes profound meditation

    At over four hours and consisting of a lot of improvised and apparently self-referential scenes, this could and indeed has irritated many viewers. But if one stays with it and takes it as it comes (Dylan himself has recommended that one watches it doped), the film is an extraordinary meditation on the nature of self, performance, show biz and life. At its heart, the film seems to me to be saying that everything is show business (love, politics, poetry) or perhaps that show business (represented by a cheesy club act) is as valid a life choice as any of the more profound things portrayed. For all his supposedly radical support for Rubin Carter, the film suggests that the boxer is just as much a performer as anyone else. The film contains some moving sequences, not least the wonderful one in which Alan Ginsberg performs Kaddish before a group of oldsters. And not least, the concert footage of Dylan is magnificent - Isis being a stand-out. Which brings me back to the movie's theme: here is a performer whose name is not really Bob Dylan playing a performer who is called Renaldo performing a song about marriage but not marriage to his wife Sara (who plays Clara in the film) but marriage to the ancient Egyptian Goddess Isis - which implies that the singer really is Osiris, God of the underworld. But it's just this kid Robert Zimmerman! What is the real truth? This is the sort of heady trip the film offers. Put up with the irritating self-indulgence of much of this,and the enormous length, and there are great rewards. Re-issue it, Bob!
    x92037

    Underrated and should be re-released

    Bob Dylan has never made it as an actor. Nothing proves this better than his role as Billy Parker in "Hearts of Fire" (1987). Even his minor role as "Alias" in Sam Peckinpah's "Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid" (1973) was lackluster. The song he wrote for the film, "Knockin' On Heaven's Door," however, has survived as an anthem.

    But "Renaldo & Clara" is a very different sort of film. It runs nearly 4 hours and chronicles a concert tour, "The Rolling Thunder Revue." It is filled with interesting people, good music and impromptu dialogue. Even with so much situational dialogue, Dylan shared writing credits with the distinguished playwright Sam Shepard. Perhaps the thing that makes it such a valuable cinematic document is that it bridges the gap in American cultural history between the "Beat Generation" and the emerging post-modern movement.

    Critics panned the film at the time of its release, probably because they did not understand that were standing at the convergence of two great social tides. What they saw as an overly long movie without the benefit of tight plotting was really the melding of "beat" stream-of-consciousness and Dylan's own unique post-modern artistic sensibilities. Critics could only compare it to some lengthy epic from India because they had no other frame of reference at the time.

    In the film, the troupe re-enacts an old "true-life love triangle" (Joan Baez and Sara Dylan) and, with Allen Ginsberg, pays homage at the grave of Jack Kerouac. There are visits with Rueben "Hurricane" Carter in his jail cell and off-stage antics. It has many whimsical moments, plenty of hard-driving rock and roll and yes, it veers off the track on several occasions, but even those moments are not without their poetry.

    Dylan himself takes directorial credit, and while he was surely the man in control of his vision, one must look to the person credited as Assistant Director for the more mundane aspects. This man was Jacques Levy, a former New York City psychologist who had dabbled on Broadway and whose only other screen directorial credit up to that time was for "Oh! Calcutta!" (1972), the nostalgic strip show. Peter McGuinn of the Byrds introduced Dylan and Levy in 1969. Interestingly, Levy and Dylan co-wrote all but two of the songs on Dylan's 1976 album "Desire," including "Hurricane," "Isis," "Joey," "Romance in Durango" and others which appear on the film soundtrack. Levy now teaches theater at Colgate University.

    However, at the time the film was made, Levy probably could not be considered to have mastery as a director. Nor could claims of mastery be made by cinematographer and film editor Howard Alk, whose career peaked with this film. The producer was Mel Howard, and his only other credit as a producer at the time was "Quackser Fortune Has a Cousin in the Bronx" (1970). The point to mentioning all this is that Dylan was not surrounded by an over-abundance of talent when he made the film, other than the performers with him on the screen. It is testimony to Dylan's own talent that his vision was realized to any degree.

    It is said that Dylan was unhappy with D.A. Pennebaker's documentary of his 1965 UK tour, "Dont Look Back," (also featuring Baez, and even Allen Ginsberg in the background of the famous "Subterranean Homesick Blues" que card scene) because he didn't get a cut of the financial action. Yet, "Renaldo and Clara" owes something to Pennebaker's work. It has the same freshness, style and spontaneity, though it is darker and more original.

    "Renaldo and Clara" is a complex film. It's a concert tour film, a love story, a dues-paying to artistic influences. But simply because it is long and complex does not mean it is without its many joys. If Fellini had signed his name to this cinematic work of art, it might have been considered a masterpiece.
    4grantss

    Only for Dylan fans and even then it's not great

    The drama of Renaldo and Clara, set against Bob Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue of 1975-76.

    Part concert film, part drama, part documentary Bob Dylan's 'Renaldo and Clara' is a sprawling, disjointed, puzzling affair. The concert stuff is great, as one would expect. Dylan's Rolling Thunder Revue was a fantastic musical experience coming off the back of Dylan's excellent 'Desire' and 'Blood on the Tracks' albums and featuring Dylan at his most spontaneous, dynamic and, in terms of live performances, creative. Dylan had a great backing band (that included Mick Ronson, David Bowie's long-time guitarist) and the Revue also included big names such as Joan Baez and Roger McGuinn, performances of whose are also shown in the film.

    For a Dylan fan like myself the music alone should be enough to give this film a thumbs up.

    Unfortunately, it's not. The music makes around a third of this four-hour film and the remainder is very weak. The Renaldo and Clara drama is all over the place with a bare semblance of a plot and no character development or engagement.

    The documentary side has some interesting bits to it: the roadies setting up the stage, some of the other background aspects to the tour, but for the most part it is like the drama, an uninteresting meander.

    I really don't know what Dylan and co-writer Sam Shepard were thinking while penning the script for this or Dylan was thinking while directing and editing this. With Dylan's mountains of creativity it's not a surprise that he turned his hand to film: it's the execution that's the problem.

    My one thought is that is that Dylan's songs often consist of seemingly-disjointed, stream-of-consciousness imagery and narratives and he tried to replicate that in a four-hour film. It works in a song because it's short enough that you don't need a neat, complete story, the listener can add their own interpretations and there's music so the narrative isn't all that matters. None of these mitigations apply in a feature film.

    Dylan would have been far better off just releasing this as a concert film - no attempt at drama. After the full-length version bombed he did release a two-hour, mostly-concert, version of this but by then it was too late as fans had already written it off.
    louie-11

    Bob Dylan

    Renaldo And Clara was hit hard by critics, but was a true testimont that Bob Dylan (Robert Zimmerman) is the true modern leader of entertainment, and learder of social change.

    P.S. I would also like to find somewhere where I can buy this movie.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The film got many negative reviews, and some theaters refused to show it. Most theaters showed a two-hour cut that was mostly concert footage. The original four-hour director's cut was first shown on European television years later.
    • Quotes

      The Truck Driver: Why are you so much in a hurry? Is the law after you?

      Renaldo: I am the law!

    • Crazy credits
      The opening credits end with a title card reading "A Film by BOB DYLAN" directed after he is credited as writer and director. The closing credits are divided in three sections, separated by wide time gaps, played over a different artist, soul singer Hal Frazier, performing "In The Morning", a song written by Barry Gibb.
    • Alternate versions
      Originally released at 292 minutes (yes, that's almost five hours!). After dismal box office returns, Dylan shortened the film to 122 minutes removing almost all of the narrative storyline and leaving mostly concert footage.
    • Connections
      Featured in Bob Dylan: Change on the Tracks (2008)
    • Soundtracks
      When I Paint My Masterpiece
      Written and performed by Bob Dylan

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    FAQ16

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 25, 1978 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Renaldo y Clara
    • Filming locations
      • Alabama, USA
    • Production company
      • Lombard Street Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 3h 55m(235 min)
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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