Dont Look Back has been very well received by critics. It has a rating of 91% on
Rotten Tomatoes based on 55 reviews. The websites critics consensus reads, "
Dont [sic] Look Back leaves the mysteries of Dylan largely intact while offering a gripping verite-style account of a pivotal moment in his incredible career." The film received a 5-star review from
AllMovie and has a
Metacritic score of 84, indicating "universal acclaim". In August 1967, a
Newsweek reviewer wrote, "
Dont Look Back is really about fame and how it menaces art, about the press and how it categorizes, bowdlerizes, sterilizes, universalizes or conventionalizes an original like Dylan into something it can dimly understand".
Kurt Cobain identified it as the only "good documentary about rock and roll" in a 1991 interview with his
Nirvana bandmates, a sentiment with which
Dave Grohl concurred. The film has been parodied and paid homage to by many other films and television shows including
This Is Spinal Tap,
All You Need Is Cash,
Bob Roberts, and
Documentary Now!. The opening sequence featuring "
Subterranean Homesick Blues" has likewise inspired many music videos, including
INXS' "
Mediate",
MC Evidence's "The Far Left,"
"Weird Al" Yankovic's "
Bob",
Hozier's "
Almost (Sweet Music)",
Kim Gordon's "Bye Bye 25", and
Margo Price's "Don't Wake Me Up", and was cited by journalist
Roger Friedman as "the most copied, most revered, music video of all time".
Home media Dont Look Back has been released and re-released on home video in many formats, from VHS to Blu-ray, over the decades. A digitally remastered deluxe DVD edition was released on February 27, 2007. The two-disc edition contained the remastered film, five additional audio tracks, commentary by filmmaker D. A. Pennebaker and Tour Road Manager Bob Neuwirth, an alternative version of the video for "Subterranean Homesick Blues", the original companion book edited by D. A. Pennebaker to coincide with the film's release in 1968, a flip-book for a section of the "Subterranean Homesick Blues" video, and a brand new documentary by D. A. Pennebaker and edited by Walker Lamond called
65 Revisited. The DVD packaging was also given new artwork. On November 24, 2015,
The Criterion Collection released a newly restored
4K transfer of the film on Blu-ray and DVD. The Criterion version contained new special features. ==See also==