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Almost Famous
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Directed by Cameron Crowe.
Writer and director Cameron Crowe's experiences as a teenage rock journalist -- he was a regular contributor to Rolling Stone while still in high school -- inspired this coming-of-age story about a 15-year-old boy hitting the road with an up-and-coming rock band in the early 1970s. Elaine Miller (Frances McDormand) is a bright, loving, but strict single parent whose distrust of rock music and fears about drug use have helped to drive a wedge between herself and her two children, Anita (Zooey Deschanel) and William (Patrick Fugit). Anita rebels by dropping out of school and becoming a stewardess, but William makes something of his love of rock & roll by writing album reviews for a local underground newspaper. William's work attracts the attention of Lester Bangs (Philip Seymour Hoffman), editor of renegade rock magazine Creem, who takes William under his wing and gives him his first professional writing assignment -- covering a Black Sabbath concert. While William is unable to score an interview with the headliners, the opening act, Stillwater, are more than happy to chat with a reporter, even if he's still too young to drive, and William's piece on the group in Creem gains him a new admirer in Ben Fong-Torres (Terry Chen), an editor at Rolling Stone. Torres offers William an assignment for a 3,000-word cover story on Stillwater, and over the objections of his mother (whose parting words are "Don't use drugs!"), and after some stern advice from Bangs (who says under no circumstances should he become friends with a band he's covering), Williams joins Stillwater on tour, where he becomes friendly with guitarist Russell Hammond (Billy Crudup) and singer Jeff Bebe (Jason Lee). William also becomes enamored of Penny Lane (Kate Hudson), a groupie traveling with the band who is no older than William, but is deeply involved with Russell. Lester Bangs and Ben Fong-Torres, incidentally, were real-life rock writers Crowe worked with closely during his days as a journalist. Almost Famous' original score was composed by Nancy Wilson of Heart (who is also Crowe's wife). ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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unclefesteringunclefestering One of those movies that I'll a ...
by unclefestering in unclefestering Blog
liked it.
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"Almost Famous is one of those movies that will stop me from channel surfing to watch it when it is on. Although it has its flaws, it is one of Cameron Crowe's best and most personal movies. It is right up there with Singles (1992). I loved how this movie really evoked the feeling of the 70s. That mood that what was special about the 60s was slipping away. That feeling is mirrored by the gradual loss of William's innocence as he leaves the shelter of his overprotective mother for the care of Penny Lane. Phillip Seymour Hoffman is great (as always) as the rock critic who is William's mentor and offers advice that is too eagerly discarded until he realizes its worth far too late. It is hard to believe that Crowe could make this and be the force behind the soulless Jerry Maguire (1996). " [More]
marley28marley28 I LOVE THIS MOVIE!
by marley28 in marley28 Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Besides Little Miss Sunshine, this is my favorite movie. I could watch it over and over and over and over! " [More]
marinannmarinann I could watch this movie over a ...
by marinann in marinann Blog
loved it.
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"This movie is just simply wonderful. The story is obviously original because it was based off of the director's own experiences. It's charming and in the end, you'll just smile. Patrick Fugit's innocence and respect for others in this film is refreshing in the environment he's set in. His character is open to new experiences, but knows when things can go too far. Philip Seymour Hoffman is great in this movie too. I like his slightly witty attitude and how he is a lifeline for Fugit's character. Kate Hudson was stunning. Yes, she's beautiful, but her acting was so... real. I was impressed with her performance. No wonder she was nominated for an Oscar for this performance. I recommend this movie to anyone reading this. It's a great film. " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Recasting THE BREAKFAST CLUB ...
by mercurial in Recasting couch
loved it.
"The Breakfast Club Brady Corbet - Andrew Clark (The Athlete) Jay Baruchel - Brian Ralph Johnson (The Brain) Mark Webber - John Bender (The Criminal) Blake Lively - Claire Standish (The Princess) Nora Zehetner - Allison Reynolds (The Basket Case) Paul Giamatti - Richard Vernon (The Principal) Scott Bakula - Carl (The Janitor) Brady Corbet (Funny Games) fits perfectly in the All-American Jock stereotype. Jay Baruchel (Almost Famous) plays the geek better than most. Mark Webber (Stroytelling) is a genuinely disaffected youth. Blake Lively (The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants) looks like a prom queen. Nora Zehetner (Brick) could definitely pull off the fragile, awkward loner. Paul Giamatti (Sideways) will bring a touch of class to the production as the irksome school principal. Scott Bakula (American Beauty) has that wisdom-spouting man with a mop quality that would be perfect for the janitor. " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Top 5 Title Sequences
by mercurial in Top 5
loved it.
"I completely forgot how much I loved the twisted title sequence of Ginger Snaps.http://www.artofthetitle .com/?tag=ginger-snapsPlayfull y dark and really sets the mood for the rest of the film. " [More]
mercurialmercurial Re:Top 5 Title Sequences
by mercurial in Top 5
loved it.
"I've been noticing for the past few years the increased lack of titles in films. I love the classic style of doing a title / credit sequence at the beginning of films, kinda what Woody does for most of his films.Anyways, some of my favorites are:1.) Se7en - Creepy as hell, incredibly inventive, awesomely remixed song and sets the mood for the entire film. Also has one of the best credit sequences that was also inventive (going backwards) and a great song.2.) American Psycho - With the drops of "blood" eventually being nothing more than raspberry sauce on a gourmet dessert: that's was awesome.3.) Dr. Strangelove - Completely original, disturbing (two planes "making love") and a beautiful score that grabs your attention.4.) Beetlejuice - The beautiful aerial shot that makes its way through the country town and up the hill to a house that "WTF! There's a giant tarantula, no wait, it's a miniature model of the house." That was cool.5.) Almost Famous - Simple, yet captur ... " [More]
mercurialmercurial Elizabethtown
by mercurial in Once Again
loved it.
"I still get into heated arguments over my love of this film. For many of the reasons people dislike Elizabethtown I too found myself distracted by them after intially watching it in the theater. I remember eagerly anticipating it after loving the trailer for it and Almost Famous being a film that I instantly fell in love with. Unfortunately when I saw it I couldn't help but go "Eh . . ." The soundtrack was amazing, the cast was great, but somewhere halfway through when the nature of the film does a U-turn and becomes a completely different film, I got distracted. I started ripping to shreds the acting and bemoaning the dialogue as trite and beleagured. It seemed like the film lost itself. Strangely, I didn't really want to see it again. Lucky for me I did and everything was in its right place. " [More]
ottobudottobud Top 5 'Me Decade' Movies (about ...
by ottobud in Filmspotting
loved it.
"How could Adam possibly leave Almost Famous off his list? I don't think it's in the penalty box, is it?Another film I would have added to the list is Forrest Gump. " [More]
JimBellJimBell Almost Famous
by JimBell in JimBell Blog
loved it.
Was this review helpful? [Be the first to tell us!]
"I loved Almost Famous (2000). It was the world I inhabited in my late teens—in my imagination as I ground our hour after hour studying in the library instead of traveling the country with a rock n roll band. But when more than 150 critics place Almost Famous in their top ten of the year, there must be much more going on in the movie. Good acting for one. Kate Hudson, for example, is radiant and convincing—deserving of her Golden Globe award for Best Supporting Actress. For another, the main character is an unusual and interesting kid. Fifteen or sixteen years old, he is totally uncool, and that is his strength. In 1973 that is believable, but I don’t know about today. For another, a relevant theme threads its way unobtrusively through the story: “get real.” When the lead guitar player of the band vows to get real, he drinks LSD, leaps from the roof of a house, and cannot remember later what he said. There must be a better answer, and, to an extent, the ... " [More]
schulenschulen Re: Top Five Movies About Music
by schulen in Top 5
loved it.
"Almost Famous - Philip Seymour Hoffman, explaining the relation of the music geek/journalist to the bands they revere is the moment that this film grows from an excellent comming-of-age story in to a profound and incrediby insightful examination of pop music, people who make pop music, and people who love pop music. Heartworn Highways - Country music was the original punk rock. it was honesty, gritty, rebellious, and aimed at the lowly. Then, it became the most commercially consistent and artistictically-lifeless genre of music not sung by earnest teenage boys. However, country as country was still exists. Rebranned as Americana or another half-dozen other names, there is a thriving community of artists blending folk, Hank Williams era country, and Buddy Holly era rock'n'roll, in to music too twangy for most, and too honest for CMT. This film follows some of the first, and some of the best, very early in their careers. If Townes Van Zandt's sing-along with his elderly ... " [More]
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Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
Depending on when you walk in, Almost Famous is either a coming-of-age drama, a love story, an often funny but sometimes painful look at the bonds of family, or a celebration of the glorious, liberating intoxication of rock & roll. And what's most remarkable about Cameron Crowe's fourth (and best) film is that it covers all these bases with equal skill, and an amiable, sure-footed grace. Crowe has made no secret that this film was based closely on his own experiences as a teenage rock journalist, and he certainly knows the nooks and crannies of life on the road in the 1970s; from the backstage rituals to the endless rounds of hotel parties, the film never hits a false note as it follows Stillwater's steady rise to fame. But more importantly, Crowe knows how to draw characters, and what could have easily been a collection of two-dimensional stereotypes emerges instead as an ensemble of credible, flesh-and-blood people. Elaine (Frances McDormand), the mother who dislikes and distrusts rock & roll, isn't a narrow-minded harridan, but an intelligent and socially progressive woman who doesn't want to see her children fall into a destructive adolescent conformity. The "band-aides," most notably Penny Lane (Kate Hudson), aren't fame-obsessed sexual predators, but devoted fans who have their own way of showing their loyalty to the musicians whose work means so much to them. And 15-year-old William (Patrick Fugit) isn't some youth lost in rock & roll Babylon, but a kid jazzed at living out his dreams and going on his first great adventure, while remaining smart (and grounded) enough to see both the peaks and valleys of the life he's capturing in words. One of Crowe's strongest suits has always been his ability to draw fine performances from his actors, and that's hardly failed him here. Newcomer Patrick Fugit is a marvel of boyish wonder and mature-beyond-his-years perception as William, Frances McDormand does an Oscar-worthy turn as his mother Elaine, Billy Crudup and Jason Lee are superb as the battling frontmen of Stillwater, Kate Hudson delivers a star-making, thoroughly charming performance as Penny, and Philip Seymour Hoffman is superb in an all-too-brief appearance as gonzo rock journalist (and part-time mentor to William) Lester Bangs. And Crowe's strong, clear, but unobtrusive visual sense, as well as his superlative ear for pop music, serve this material splendidly. If Almost Famous has a flaw, it's the noticeable upshift in the rhythm of its last act, which feels like an attempt to rush the film to its conclusion. But if the worst thing you can say about Almost Famous is that you wish it had been a bit longer, it says a lot about how thoroughly pleasurable a film it really is. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
 



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