BOB DYLAN AS FILMMAKER
No Time To Think
by Michael Glover Smith
Published 2 March 2026
Paperback £16.99
ISBN 9780857162991
'As lively as it is insightful, Bob Dylan as Filmmaker: No Time to Think is a sunbeam-lit account of Bob Dylan as filmmaker—informed, thoroughgoing, prodigiously researched, ingeniously creative, and serious as pericarditis. A totally engrossing read.'
Eric Lott, author of Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class
Bob Dylan as Filmmaker, opens exciting new ways to think about the artistry of Bob Dylan. It offers a captivating exploration into movies that showcase Bob Dylan not just as a subject, but as the primary author. These include Eat the Document—a short, experimental television film shot in 1966 and released in 1972; the sprawling, genre-blurring epic Renaldo and Clara (1978), both directed by Dylan himself; and the darkly surreal Masked and Anonymous (2003), directed by Larry Charles but co-written by and starring Dylan. Bob Dylan as Filmmaker explores what these movies reveal about “how it feels” to be Bob Dylan during three defining eras of his career: the revolutionary 1960s, the introspective 1970s, and the enigmatic early 2000s. Just as crucially, they illuminate Dylan’s remarkable instinct for using film not merely as a medium, but as a deeply personal mode of expression.
The book also provides an essential survey of Dylan’s most recent movie projects, including those by other directors, in which Dylan’s influence is less overt but no less powerful. Here, Michael argues that Dylan operates as a kind of “invisible co-author”: in Martin Scorsese’s Rolling Thunder Revue (2019), where Dylan appears as a slippery, self-mythologizing interviewee; Alma Har’el’s haunting Shadow Kingdom (2021), a stylized livestream performance; and James Mangold’s A Complete Unknown (2024), the Timothée Chalamet-led biopic shaped in part by Dylan’s behind-the-scenes “script approval.”