No Direction Home - On the trail of Rimbaud, the man who inspired Bob Dylan

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  • Опубліковано 14 сер 2018
  • The historian and travel writer Charles Nicholl pursues the trail of the enigmatic French poet Arthur Rimbaud into the Horn of Africa.
    Subscribe to the channel: goo.gl/VITuUt
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    Original title: No Direction Home
    Directed by Ron Orders
    © 1994, Cinecontact Ron Orders

КОМЕНТАРІ • 190

  • @noahfranks984
    @noahfranks984 5 років тому +65

    Now that was a very good documentary.

    • @suejowell
      @suejowell 4 роки тому

      about wHAT??????

    • @springheeledjack165
      @springheeledjack165 4 роки тому +4

      Very little about Rimbaud, more just the British exotic locations traveling fetish.

    • @john-carlosynostroza
      @john-carlosynostroza 4 роки тому +3

      Awesome documentary

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +1

      About a poet they called sue in France but he didn't care, so he went to Harar. Pretty sad story really, but incredible journey!

    • @arupsengupta2454
      @arupsengupta2454 3 роки тому +3

      How to make an ethnographic documentary out of a poet's wanderings

  • @ThosCavendish-tq9no
    @ThosCavendish-tq9no 6 місяців тому +5

    Just discovered this excellent documentary. As a fourteen year old I was totally enamoured by Rimbaud's poetry, it spoke to my own disturbed and wandering soul. I used to look at detailed maps, planning my journey to Harar to follow in the soles of his shoes and perhaps to find him. Of course I never did, although now in my sixties my love for his work has remained with me. This film goes some way to find closure in his story for me, and I found it very moving.

  • @christopherpaul7588
    @christopherpaul7588 5 років тому +130

    "The Man Who Inspired Bob Dylan"? You could have left off that part of the title. I'm pretty sure he's been an inspiration to most singers/ songwriters and poets of the 20th Century. His influence on the Beat writers was immeasurable.

    • @gregoryswift9573
      @gregoryswift9573 5 років тому +12

      Christopher Paul most notably Jim Morrison. The moved to France

    • @yoyossarian9468
      @yoyossarian9468 4 роки тому +10

      I saw that and cringed

    • @joejones9520
      @joejones9520 4 роки тому +5

      right, made me cringe...i never got the bob dylan fascination.

    • @josiahprofenno4136
      @josiahprofenno4136 4 роки тому +2

      @joe jones Commoners always obsess over musicians; especially those of lyrical prowess.

    • @elijahthomas6102
      @elijahthomas6102 4 роки тому +12

      Josiah Profenno “commoners always obsess over musicians” what a snobbish comment. Rimbaud would have fucking hated you.

  • @struttingbirdlofi
    @struttingbirdlofi 4 роки тому +36

    Geez get over yourself presenter haters. I'm not a fan of Dylan myself, but the presenter was just conveying what Rimbaud meant to him which was via Dylan one of HIS favourite artists not EVERYONE'S. When you make your own documentary on Rimbaud, you can call it whatever you like (:

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +9

      Thank you, you are right. It's actually a very effective film on the journey of the poet in Africa. I was touched & learned some about the Horn of Africa from it. I think it is humbly beautiful.

    • @glennhall8665
      @glennhall8665 Місяць тому

      👏👏👏👏

  • @warlockofwordsreturnsrb4358
    @warlockofwordsreturnsrb4358 4 роки тому +19

    That work of that quality was written by someone before the age of twenty is utterly gobsmacking, many of my favourite writers sang his praises in one form or another over the decades - William Burroughs, Samuel Beckett, HP Lovecraft called him a 'titan', Patti Smith, Iain Sinclair, Jean Cocteau, the list goes on winding its way through most of the interesting writers in the world.

    • @petercrossley2956
      @petercrossley2956 Рік тому

      But what has this pointless travelogue got to do with poetic genius ?

  • @MrTroposphere
    @MrTroposphere 4 роки тому +11

    I love Charles Nicholl's book on Rimbaud: Somebody Else. It's a classic study. This film is a little discursive but still very atmospheric

  • @juds2u
    @juds2u Рік тому +2

    I just came across a reference to Rimbaud in Camus’ “The Myth is Sisyphus” and so glad to find myself here to learn more about Rimbaud.

  • @MrGiorgioud
    @MrGiorgioud 2 роки тому +2

    Brilliant documentary. Just like the presenter, I discovered Rimbaud when I was 15. He became the backbone of my cultural formation. It was great this investigation in this mysterious chapter in the poet's life, after he was no longer a seer....

  • @neilbush9873
    @neilbush9873 Рік тому +2

    Good music commentary and filming with a romantic mystical heartfelt mission beautifully accomplished

  • @darylcumming7119
    @darylcumming7119 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you, life after poetry.

  • @159India1
    @159India1 3 роки тому +2

    Fascinating. Well done, given such extraordinary conditions. Your voyage has helped me better understand the paintings of Rimbaud by the French artist, Jules Franck Mondoloni, who in 1991, the centennial of Rimbaud’s death, painted 100 paintings in homage to the renown poet.

  • @patrickboyle3106
    @patrickboyle3106 Місяць тому

    This is an unheralded gem. Wow!

  • @smileybyronbay
    @smileybyronbay 4 роки тому +5

    I think in "Somebody else", they say that the house/museum he enters in this doco was proved not to be where he lived. But it is currently the "Rimbaud museum". His place was concluded to be demolished by memory from that book, but they have a rough estimate of its location, the street it was on. This doco was made in 1990 or something, before they made it the museum and long before the "Somebody else" came out. Still a good docume tary though, nice find!!.

  • @theart8039
    @theart8039 5 років тому +8

    I have been looking for this documentar for many years, As a distant cousin of his, I too stood at Steamer Point aged 6 , but I didnt know who was my ancestor; but I walked in his exact steps. Our family still dont talk of him much, and I want to change that

    • @justinbordwell9282
      @justinbordwell9282 Рік тому

      Do you carry the name rimbaud as well?

    • @theart8039
      @theart8039 Рік тому +2

      @@justinbordwell9282 No but my great Grandmother was Rimbault. My surname is Carpentier but on my 16th Birthday 2 years ago we went to Rimbaud grave in Charleville to lay some flowers. We are working with a DNA company now to trace back to Fredrick ( my great great Uncle) and there is a documentary planned sometime

  • @antwortmir4451
    @antwortmir4451 4 роки тому +8

    Definitely something! Rimbaud's commercial odyssey told without melodramatic hoopla. Down to earth narrative (but) without becoming dull or sarcastic

  • @olcotttheosophy
    @olcotttheosophy 5 років тому +6

    I read about Arthur Rimbaud (1854-'91) in the The Beacon. The Beacon journal would have given more coverage for him including his photo. His poemsand world view became popular.

    • @olcotttheosophy
      @olcotttheosophy 5 років тому

      I have no idea to buy this book. But If it is sent to me I can read it.

  • @mikehuffman5460
    @mikehuffman5460 5 років тому +1

    This is very good.

  • @SECTOSECTO
    @SECTOSECTO Рік тому

    Fabulous Narration

  • @helenamaria710
    @helenamaria710 2 роки тому +5

    Amazing how free people were to roam about in those days. With money...one could spend months in any European country ...as he did. Times have changed!!😮

    • @TedATL1
      @TedATL1 Місяць тому

      Huh? There's never been more "roaming" in all of history than there is right now. Moreover, RImbaud lived in
      poverty most of the time after he left home. Also as a Frenchman, he had access to all the French colonies in Africa
      at that time, as well as the French authorities in those territories.

  • @arthurrimbaud8508
    @arthurrimbaud8508 4 роки тому +14

    I dig Bob Dylan's music

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +1

      Me too...x a poet

  • @PAULLONDEN
    @PAULLONDEN 10 місяців тому

    Now that was interesting !

  • @juicylucy5797
    @juicylucy5797 3 роки тому +7

    Rimbaud the failed business man is also another literary invention of Rimbaud, carefully crafted to avoid having to give his fortune to the French tax office. See Graham Robb's excellent biography for more details.

    • @Santyago1966
      @Santyago1966 3 роки тому

      Really?? Was he working on his image after he left poetry aside?...

  • @thinkerly1
    @thinkerly1 2 роки тому +3

    When he was having trouble getting on the train because he did not have written permission from the station, this shows two things: 1) He should have paid the station master to give him written permission or 2) he should have paid the guy blocking him. Poor places run on bribery.

  • @springheeledjack165
    @springheeledjack165 4 роки тому +7

    I love the style of this documentary, but its more about the region than Rimbaud.

    • @petercrossley2956
      @petercrossley2956 Рік тому

      I say it again, what has this film to do with poetic genius ?

  • @charlesheck6812
    @charlesheck6812 2 роки тому +1

    The stuffy comments aside, Dylan is a phenomenal lyricist and poet who has had an immeasurable impact on the culture internationally for 60 years. That you “don’t get him” means nothing. Dylan’s art, however, means a great deal to a great many people. Move on to another documentary if it incites your baser reflexes.

  • @tattoofthesun
    @tattoofthesun 5 років тому +7

    Wonder if they sell this Kat on amazon

  • @jackwild8019
    @jackwild8019 Рік тому +3

    He was the vagabond poet also beloved by Jim Morrison and all true bohemians adrift in the theatre of the absurd and the fleeting 🎭

    • @Shadowsuit
      @Shadowsuit 8 місяців тому +1

      Rimbaud was nothing alike them, they wished just 1 minute to have his freedom. He did really what the wind expected of him. Those Dylan and Morrison are just fakes, wishing to just touch his freedom. They are pathetic copies

  • @andersliljevall2946
    @andersliljevall2946 3 роки тому +2

    R. was a strong person. 10 years in that place would kill anyone

  • @robroudil
    @robroudil 2 роки тому +2

    Thank you for this very sensitive film about my beloved "King Arthur". At this moment of my life (75) when poetry is, as always has been, more and more present. Rimbaud' Bateau Ivre, is for me like an almost everyday prayer. So, these days i've watched some movies, documentaries about Rimbaud' last years, yours is one of the most moving ' have seen. Most french are so pretentious and self confident on their knowings and culture that it made lot of their films dishonest and so far from Rimbaud. Rimbaud did not flee, he escaped those people ! "Tu as bien fait de partir Arthur Rimbaud" is a poem by René Char, that you should read, if you read these lines. Thank You. Robert

  • @velocitygirl8551
    @velocitygirl8551 2 роки тому +1

    Loved your opening!! Wonderful documentary!!

  • @gregphilipmusic
    @gregphilipmusic 2 роки тому

    Very well done Chris! Thanks!

  • @jaycovia7551
    @jaycovia7551 4 роки тому +4

    The man shaking his head at 46:58 says it all.

    • @davidkorgan7069
      @davidkorgan7069 4 роки тому

      haha yes might as well be Rimbaud reincarnated. What he left, his turds, they grovel in, not knowing it is just the purity of a very good person that he had and what he was refusing was this kinda domestic shit.

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому

      Well what do you expect. Rimbaud never made back to his beloved Harar.

  • @robanderson1470
    @robanderson1470 2 роки тому

    Does anyone know the song that was playing when he spoke to that lady in French in her home?

  • @MrVink-nd6bw
    @MrVink-nd6bw 4 роки тому +2

    22:36 Not the Dutch navy, but the Dutch East Indies Army - which was basically a Dutch version of the Foreign Legion.

  • @tattoofthesun
    @tattoofthesun 5 років тому +5

    LMAO WHEN he starts flipping out about channel 4

  • @kosovoblues5019
    @kosovoblues5019 4 роки тому +7

    don't think that Rimbaud inspired Dylan ,at least in the early days. Who took the path of Rimbaud visions and others ,was one of the few true poets of the rock era,J.Morrison

    • @marko0samec
      @marko0samec 3 роки тому

      exactly - BRAVO!!!

    • @LordStompyHarpLoonyTunes
      @LordStompyHarpLoonyTunes 2 роки тому

      In Ray Manzarek's book he claims Jim had read all of Nietzsche's works by the age of 21. Jim's IQ was tested at university it was 149. The guy was next level genius in any sense of the word

  • @AntiqueCarsRCool
    @AntiqueCarsRCool 2 роки тому

    Very exciting!!!

  • @kimmccabe1422
    @kimmccabe1422 2 роки тому +1

    Awesome poet. @Dylan (Dylan Thomas, Rimbaud) and Beatles (stolen nursery rhymes), Bob Marley (The Bible) for ex. -Ain't nothing new under the sun. But once in a while we get the genuine original writer like here

  • @marcobagut
    @marcobagut 4 роки тому +1

    He was high at the end of the documentary...

  • @juicylucy5797
    @juicylucy5797 3 роки тому

    "Coffee, Frankincense and Khat" Take me to to Djibouti!

  • @PAULLONDEN
    @PAULLONDEN 9 місяців тому

    Kat seems indeed somewhat necessary to get through hot humid climates.

  • @steveparadise
    @steveparadise 4 роки тому +5

    Best part of this was the dude feeding a wild hyena

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому

      That was a real horror show.

  • @yobhsiFehT
    @yobhsiFehT 3 роки тому

    If anyone can tell me the music playing around 17:00, I will be very grateful! 😳😍

    • @yobhsiFehT
      @yobhsiFehT 3 роки тому

      I take it back! The whole soundtrack, please! lol

    • @beavisbonce
      @beavisbonce 3 роки тому +1

      Darude sandstorm

  • @marclayne9261
    @marclayne9261 2 роки тому

    My father fought with the, Legion, Indochina....1950---53....

  • @Dazbog373
    @Dazbog373 3 роки тому +3

    I wonder if Ilham Omar was a refugee of this war. Great documentary about so much more than the enfant terrible of French symbolism.

  • @fathole7576
    @fathole7576 5 років тому +2

    Dam he finnneee

    • @LayeDiaw
      @LayeDiaw 5 років тому

      Fat hole lol
      Fat hole. Which hole are you referring to?
      Arthur Rimbaud was my favorite poet growing up.

    • @Yeah--mn9qk
      @Yeah--mn9qk 4 роки тому

      LayeDiaw was arthur gay or bi?

    • @fatnsassy99
      @fatnsassy99 4 роки тому

      @@Yeah--mn9qk he's noted to have a violent relationship with another poet. He was shot by said poet but died of cancer when he was 37

    • @golpeshiharan2215
      @golpeshiharan2215 4 роки тому

      @@Yeah--mn9qk bi

  • @HalaFoundation
    @HalaFoundation 2 роки тому

    No Rimbaud. Lots of qat.

  • @ManalDammaj
    @ManalDammaj 4 роки тому

    In which year was this video made?

  • @fussypeg8561
    @fussypeg8561 11 місяців тому

    Rimbaud has not gotten what he wanted: to unravel the deepest mystery of life...... to come by it, he seems to have believed you should always drive yourself beyond your limits. He certainly did this physically and so destroyed his chances. Must have been fooled by his own illusion.

  • @maync1
    @maync1 Рік тому

    Non-stop smoker from another age.

  • @danton17100
    @danton17100 5 років тому +51

    bob dylan reference is cringe

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +1

      I thought it was beautifully cringy.

    • @starvingbuddha7622
      @starvingbuddha7622 3 роки тому

      For me it was Morrison and Bauhaus

  • @hyoroemonmeto6874
    @hyoroemonmeto6874 3 роки тому

    Vampire Bund send me here

  • @chopin65
    @chopin65 5 років тому +6

    Not much on Rimbaud. Some drug use.

    • @the19thcentury81
      @the19thcentury81 4 роки тому

      We might not have ever heard of him if his father had been there to care for his son along with the rest of his progeny.

  • @naryjones1279
    @naryjones1279 4 роки тому +14

    It's not necessary to read Rimbaud"d s poetry in a gloomy voice - He was a light person, Libra

    • @Goatchild90
      @Goatchild90 4 роки тому

      You know it ♎♎♎

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +1

      there was nothing gloomy about the recitation. It was just clear-voiced & sensitive & touching. Effective? Inspiring!

    • @FACEGRINDproductions
      @FACEGRINDproductions 3 роки тому

      Triple Libra, at that! I was stoked to find out that and also that I was Libra dominant after reading him. Always wondered if that was a factor that drew me to him

    • @Santyago1966
      @Santyago1966 3 роки тому

      A gloomy tone in poetry always gives a sense of importance of what you read haha

    • @danielalexandermclachlanga3781
      @danielalexandermclachlanga3781 2 роки тому

      @@FACEGRINDproductions Arthur was Libra sun and Libra Moon ..... and Scorpio Ascendant ....

  • @porkyparry1
    @porkyparry1 Рік тому

    Verlaine for me, but he had the misfortune of being not photogenic

  • @chrisrees7054
    @chrisrees7054 Рік тому

    I'm pretty sure he inspired Patti Smith as well.

  • @TedATL1
    @TedATL1 Місяць тому

    All the focus on Rimbaud in Africa is a little odd, since his writing was finished before he ever went to Africa, i.e. it was not
    an influence. He stopped writing at 20. Nor were his years in Africa particularly interesting in and of themselves. At that time, the
    1880s, there were lots of French people venturing out into the French colonies of Africa, just as there were lots of English.
    But I guess it adds some romance to the bohemian myth.

  • @christohr9957
    @christohr9957 4 роки тому +1

    The man who inspired Bob Dylan (and Jim Morrison).

    • @christohr9957
      @christohr9957 4 роки тому +2

      After reading/hearing Rimbaud, I can see the similarities in Morrison, Dylan, not so much ... guess it’s all perception.

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +1

      Bod Dylan did read Rimbaud... through Joan Baez, Patti Smith, Allen Ginsberg, etc. Rimbaud became popular in America in the 60s.

    • @juicylucy5797
      @juicylucy5797 3 роки тому +1

      @@timetheory84 Dylan's love of surreal juxtapositions is classic Rimbaud, his entire lyrical output draws heavily on Rimbaud. Morrison's whole delivery is a carbon copy of Kerouac on the Steve Allan show.

    • @juicylucy5797
      @juicylucy5797 3 роки тому +2

      @@timetheory84 "The motorcycle black Madonna
      Two-wheeled gypsy queenAnd her silver-studded phantom cause
      The gray flannel dwarf to scream"
      Woody Guthrie never came up with lyrics like that, he sang songs about Oakies.

    • @petercrossley2956
      @petercrossley2956 Рік тому

      Yes, but what part of this egocentric travelogue deals with that connection ?

  • @blossie33
    @blossie33 2 роки тому

    Great to see this again - I remember watching it on TV! A fascinating and poetic film on a very interesting character.

  • @Xonline9
    @Xonline9 4 роки тому

    my guys eating Khat like it's heroin

  • @mollkatless
    @mollkatless Рік тому +1

    At 7:00 mark, are those really French Legionaries or the Village People pretending to be Legionaries? I just ask, because, you know, those dudes are wearing really small little shorts, and I can't imagine too many heteros signing up for those short-shorts - just wow :(

  • @parrmik
    @parrmik 3 роки тому +2

    5% rimbaud , 95% the woes of the horn of africa.

  • @clgraff76
    @clgraff76 9 місяців тому

    The man who made this smokes 10 thousand packs of cigarettes a day.

  • @mollkatless
    @mollkatless Рік тому

    Why do the Brits refer to him as: RAMbo, when the rest of the planet refers to him as RIMbo?

  • @aminoto-3
    @aminoto-3 2 роки тому

    Another reason not to join the French Foreign Legion… 6:29.. look at the state of the fuckin hot pants they make you wear.
    EDIT.. £1800/month in 1994… I’d put up with the hot pants..

  • @kosovoblues5019
    @kosovoblues5019 4 роки тому +4

    military are the same almost everywhere : brainwashed

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому

      & dangerous killers

  • @grahambates7162
    @grahambates7162 5 років тому

    I thought Rimbaud actually died in hospital in France after the amputation of his leg, due to the cancer having already spread. Charles Nicholl, at the end of this doco tells us he died in transit - I don't think that's correct.

    • @daviddd99
      @daviddd99 5 років тому +2

      I think maybe the 'in transit' remark refers to his attempt to return to Africa after his amputation and sojourn in France. After staying at the family farm in Roche, he went to Marseilles and died in hospital there.

    • @Yeah--mn9qk
      @Yeah--mn9qk 4 роки тому

      david sloan was he bisexual or gay

    • @grahambates7162
      @grahambates7162 4 роки тому +1

      @@Yeah--mn9qk He was sexual.

    • @daviddd99
      @daviddd99 4 роки тому +1

      @@Yeah--mn9qk According to Graham Robb's biography and the famous affair he had with Verlaine, the rational conclusion must be that he was bisexual.

    • @Yeah--mn9qk
      @Yeah--mn9qk 4 роки тому +1

      david sloan has he been with a girl before?

  • @bmf1949
    @bmf1949 3 роки тому +2

    Frankly this isn’t a documentary about Rimbaud (or even Dylan) Disappointing.

  • @ryanjeanes5253
    @ryanjeanes5253 3 роки тому

    sad

  • @cromlechvortex1089
    @cromlechvortex1089 4 роки тому +1

    Who's Bob Dylan except another plunderer of ideas ? Does it have an original style like for example David Bowie or Jim Morrison ?

    • @Goatchild90
      @Goatchild90 4 роки тому +2

      lol at David Bowie not being a plunderer of ideas

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +1

      Who cares? Every artist is an inspired plunderer of beauty. Name me who hasn't done it? It's called Tradition!

    • @cromlechvortex1089
      @cromlechvortex1089 4 роки тому +1

      ​@@middayz Except that he's not an artist ... but just a businessman. His music is lousy. His nasal songs are unbearable ... Maybe the texts are interesting (and again ... it's very politicized ... with a socialist ideology which serves to divide the American people ..)
      To say that he is inspired by Arthur Rimbaud is a joke! I am French and I studied Arthur Rimbaud ... He was a Parnassian poet ... who had no political "mission" ...

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +1

      @@cromlechvortex1089 His latest work it's not that inspiring to me personally. & his voice with that twang or drawl speech is quite annoying, I must admit. His socialist ideology? Com'on. Let's be honest: Didn't Rimbaud has one? I think so. He wouldn't have care a bit about joining France's National Front or voting for Trump here in the US...

  • @emrebaranbayak6737
    @emrebaranbayak6737 11 місяців тому +1

    bro just called rimbaud the man who inspired bob dylan lmao tell me you're american without telling me you're american

  • @LordStompyHarpLoonyTunes
    @LordStompyHarpLoonyTunes 2 роки тому +1

    Bob Dylan was a profit. Rimbaud was a great poet & existentialist misanthrope. He really provided a foundation for a somewhat narcissistic existentialist artistic vein that a lot of famous 20th century artists mined later on...the difference being Rimbaud was the real deal hard life drifter & man of fortune & those that came later in his footsteps were somewhat cushioned from the extreme hardships he willingly endured by the luxuries of the 20th century

  • @nicholasreid1836
    @nicholasreid1836 4 роки тому +6

    Nicholl is a very good writer and his book about Rimbaud, "Somebody Else" is a good book, but this is a dreadful "documentary", not only ill-informed about Africa but making far too many bows to pop culture idiots who have probably not read a thing Rimbaud wrote (and certainly not in the original French).

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому

      Como'n reid, This isn't a pop film. & he just mention Bob Dylan. How many bows is that?

    • @nicholasreid1836
      @nicholasreid1836 4 роки тому +2

      @@middayz Rimbaud is basically one of those literary figures whom a mass of people claim to admire without actually having read him. It's the "legend" of his life that they have swallowed - the bohemian runaway and teenage literary genius. Hence idiotic statements about "the man who inspired Bob Dylan" (as if that were anything to shout about). I stick by my view that most of the chatter one hears about him comes from people who have not read what he wrote - which is the only way to judge the worth of any literary figure (and how many have read him in French - only if you do that can you have the least grasp of how good or bad he was as a poet).. Poor Rimbaud! This documentary does not live up to Nicholl's book - wherein, despite his very good research, he certainly panders to pop culture by too many statements of the "he inspired Bob Dylan" variety. My own view is that Rimbaud grew up when he left the small, rather precious, literary circles (especially Verlaine) that were mentally strangling him... and he ceased to write poetry because he had nothing more to say, and realised that some much-admired poetry was often immature kidstuff. By the way, as John Ralston Saul notes in his book "Voltaire's Bastards", much so-called "rebellious" pop art (Morrison, Dylan etc.) is in no way rebellious at all, even if it sometimes references the likes of Rimbaud and other iconic "rebel" figures. Being expressed by high-slalaried pop figures, it has little to do with rebellion or noncomformity and is the height of conformism... and certainly has nothing to do with the ragged outcast that the teenage Rimbaud certainly was.

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому

      @@nicholasreid1836 thank you, alright! Rimbaud is more than just a pop legend to me as well. But there's nothing wrong with Nicholl saying that he inspired Bob Dylan (which is true in a way, even though to me he inspired Jim Morrison more than any other pop American singer: It is very clear when you read Jim Morrison's The Lords & The New Creatures, etc.).
      If it wasn't for Rimbaud, a Dylan or Morrison never would have started singing in such a powerful way... Nonconformity & rebelling against injustice was part of their agenda alright. Do you know what I mean?
      & one thing for sure: Nicholl was reading Rimbaud in the French original, you can tell in the movie when he is holding a book in his hand & reads from the popular Gallimard edition.

    • @nicholasreid1836
      @nicholasreid1836 4 роки тому +2

      @@middayz Thank you. I could go on with this banter, but I do not wish to be fractious. Being a "noncomformist" or "rebel" now means little more than striking a pose in public (often with great material reward). Young Rimbaud, with the intelligence of an adult but [when he wrote his poetry] the sensibility of an adolescent, went through, and grew out of, the "rebel" stage - essentially a sulky teenage thing - and of course he received no material reward as he lived before the age of publicised "celebrity". I really will leave it at that, but I'm sure you will have more to say. Nicholl's book is a very good one, despite his pandering to pop culture in places.Cheers.

  • @joejones9520
    @joejones9520 4 роки тому +2

    doesnt seem to have anything to do with rimbaud, main purpose seems to be to show how awful the non-western world is!

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому +1

      How awful WAR IS. Besides, he never found much left of Rimbaud. And he mentions Russia China & USA bombshells deals. Sad.

  • @FlLou
    @FlLou 2 роки тому +2

    Is it just me or did anyone else want to reach through the screen and hit the "historian/travel writer" in the head. How gloomy, pessimistic
    and bored he seemed about the whole thing. It wasn't so much about Rimbaud but the uninspired ramblings of Nicholl and about how he hated the assignment he was given by Channel 4.

    • @darknes5inside
      @darknes5inside 2 роки тому +1

      Its just you...

    • @petercrossley2956
      @petercrossley2956 Рік тому +1

      No it isn't just you. As a Rimbaud scholar this piece of point;ess ego-driven travelogue is more boring than dirt.

  • @suejowell
    @suejowell 4 роки тому +1

    arrogant pons..blunders about in Africa travelling first class and name dropping....sorrrry....x Arthur

    • @middayz
      @middayz 4 роки тому

      Was he trying to travel first class?...It didn't look like it from watching the film, com'on. Sorry Arthur...x Sue

  • @drewaldrich711
    @drewaldrich711 2 роки тому +1

    why do we have to suffer through the film maker's travels? boring and off subject

  • @yuriandropov2114
    @yuriandropov2114 5 років тому

    Again... bullshit. What proof does this guy have that Rimbaud every set foot in any of these places where he supposedly lived?

    • @user-io2xb5ur4t
      @user-io2xb5ur4t 5 років тому

      Dear useless fuck. If you read "Arthur Rimbaud complete works" translated by paul schmidt you'll notice that rimb kept in touch with his family by messages throughout his years on the road. And that's how They rely on this track of order of his journey.