Robbie Robertson is one of rock's great storytellers.
Whether recounting in song about "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down" or on film about being a "Carny," Robertson manifests a flair for crafting characters, detail and drama.
Since his last waltz with the Band in 1976, Robertson has recorded a handful of disparate solo albums, produced records for others and scored several Martin Scorsese movies, most recently "The Irishman." He stars in a new documentary, "Once Were Brothers" — opening Friday at the Lagoon Cinema in Minneapolis — based on his 2016 memoir, "Testimony."
Robertson's fascination with film goes way back.
"At a very young age, I went to movies and went into another world and it felt good to me. I lived inside those stories," he said recently from Los Angeles. "If I hadn't gotten so addicted to music, I feel like I would have been a [screen]writer or a director."
The Rock Hall of Famer was so enamored of movies that he once sent music to director Ingmar Bergman, unsolicited. "He sent a thing back, saying, 'I work with my little community of actors and cinematographers and musicians. … Because there is a such a difference in our cultures, I don't know if we'll ever be able to find a way to do that.' "
In a wide-ranging interview, Robertson, 76, talked about his new documentary as well as his relationship with Bob Dylan, who used the Band as his backup group on his first electric tour in 1965 and on his 1974 comeback tour.
Q: Why did you make this movie?