Dylan Demands Factory Girl Screening
Filed under: Drama, Independent, Music & Musicals, New Releases, Celebrities and Controversy, The Weinstein Co., Hayden Christensen, Cinematical Indie
Just by watching the trailer for Factory Girl, I gathered that Hayden Christensen's character is supposed to represent Bob Dylan. He's got the voice, the look and the harmonica. Sure, the character has a different name, and the film's producers are insisting that it is actually a composite of Dylan, Mick Jagger and Jim Morrison, but as played and depicted, it is as obviously specific as it gets. The whole thing makes me think of Velvet Goldmine, which featured Jonathan Rhys Meyers and Ewan McGregor blatantly portraying David Bowie and Iggy Pop, respectively, without the film's use of real names. But that film had no intention of being passed as a true story, unlike Factory Girl, a biopic that otherwise represents real people by name. Velvet Goldmine also didn't implicate any of its characters as being responsible for a person's death.Dylan is no idiot, and he isn't about to let a movie indirectly accuse him of being the cause of Edie Sedgwick's suicide. According to the NY Post's Page Six column, he's prepared to take legal action; lawyers have already begun proceedings by demanding they see the film before anymore screenings are held. Though the case isn't yet involving the courts, if Factory Girl producers Bob Yari and Holly Wiersma don't comply with the missive issued them, things might get ugly.
Dylan is reportedly very concerned about how the film will affect his image. And he should be. As if the trailer wasn't enough, it is being noted that people who've seen the film say that it is unmistakably Dylan being portrayed. Plus, there's the matter that the original script had the character named Bob Dylan before it was changed to the fictionalized "Billy Quinn" (or is it "Danny Quinn"?).
This legal matter adds to a very long list of controversy surrounding Factory Girl, including a lawsuit over distribution rights and a complaint from the literally depicted Lou Reed.
[via Hollywood Wiretap]









Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
12-14-2006 @ 6:32PM
visceralfilm said...
Dylan gave Edie Sedgwick drugs, he gave the Beatles drugs. Didn't anyone else have any drugs to give people?
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12-15-2006 @ 11:31AM
Guffin GacGuffin said...
I remember when I saw the trailer online I was like "That's Bob Dylan!" and then I checked the cast list online and I was like "Billy Quinn? Maybe I don't know as much about the story as I thought." It's nice to know I had basically the right idea.
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12-22-2006 @ 2:20AM
Michelle Braverman said...
Jean Stein's seminal book, "Edie: American Girl", written in 1982, tells the Bob Dylan/Edie story very differently. Bob Dylan expressed interest in doing a movie with Edie, but not a Warhol movie. Through his manager, Albert Grossman, Edie was advised to distance herself from Andy and began to be wooed by Dylan. By all appearances Edie had a crush on Dylan, who seems to have been flirting with her for professional reasons only. He had been secretly married for several months. Andy broke the news to Edie (probably not very nicely). Edie was furious at the news and the Edie/Andy relationship was over.
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1-01-2007 @ 11:30PM
Sally Wilder said...
First, the book is titled EDIE: AN AMERICAN BIOGRAPHY, which I have right in front of me, and have read several times. I knew Edie and her family personally, and stayed at their ranch in Los Olivos numerous times. As far as I know, she never had an affair with Dylan, but was enamored with him. He got married secretly to his first wife, Sara, during the Factory times, which was very devastating to Edie. But that's life, and as far as I know, there was nothing else between him and Edie.
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