Tag Archives: Almost Famous

Cameron Talks to MovieFone

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Cameron did another quick email interview with the folks over at MovieFone. Topics included Say Anything…, Almost Famous and his Oscar win for Best Original Screenplay. Here’s the highlights:

Moviefone: Compared with the other four films you wrote and directed yourself, where does ‘Almost Famous’ rank in terms of importance to you personally?
Cameron Crowe: [The most important is] definitely ‘Almost Famous,’ a script that was in my drawer as a passion project for a long time. I wanted to make a movie that paid tribute to a lot of very vivid characters I met [back] in the day, and also I wanted to make a movie about loving music. Every character, in some way or another, is dedicated to the way music can make you feel. On the right day, the right song can last forever.

I still make a mix CD every month, as a diary for how that month felt. ‘Almost Famous’ was like a mix in movie form. That’s the way it felt to be 15 and falling in love with life and music.

Were you any more or less meticulous about song selection on ‘Almost Famous’ than you had been on previous films?
I’m always meticulous, but in many ways the song chooses the scene. There is usually a song that I’ve written the scene to, like Led Zeppelin’s ‘Misty Mountain Hop,’or there is only one song that was meant to be in that spot. Songs are sacred things and you have to earn them. People hear them in a new way thanks to a movie, and you want the movie to always do the song justice. Take Cat Stevens’ ‘The Wind’ or Elton John’s ‘Tiny Dancer’ in ‘Almost Famous’ — they were the only two songs that worked. You know when it’s right.

You’ve gone on record saying that Billy Idol’s 1986 song ‘To Be a Lover’ was your inspiration for the boom box scene in ‘Say Anything …,’ so we were wondering if ‘Tiny Dancer’ was your first choice.
‘To Be a Lover’ was a song I liked for [exactly] one day — the day I wrote that scene. It never worked for the scene the day before or after. John Cusack is playing Fishbone’s ‘Bonin’ in the Boneyard’ in the actual scene, but when we put the movie together, it didn’t work at all. He seemed like a crazed Fishbone fan who just happened to be outside her window.

But with ‘In Your Eyes,’ it was like his life was leading to that moment. We were lucky Peter Gabriel let us use it. It’s a mystical kind of marriage, when a song works with film. I live for those kinds of marriages. It’s always fun to find that connection as a director.

‘Tiny Dancer’ was always the choice [for the ‘Almost Famous’ scene]. It was always my favorite song from the ‘Madman Across the Water’ album, and always felt like the perfect song that could bring a band back together. It’s also about the road and about the women you sometimes meet on tour. Thanks again to Elton for giving us all the separated tracks so that we could mix it especially for the movie.

What has Elton John said to you about that scene?
He’s discussed the song a lot, and it’s now a perennial in his live show. He also gives the movie credit for its resurgence, which is ridiculously generous. My mom called me one night not too long ago and said, “Quick — turn on the TV. Elton John is thanking you for ‘Almost Famous.'” I turned on the TV. It was surreal. He’s a completely surprising, generous artist whose work just gets stronger.

Of all the memorable scenes in the film, why do you think the ‘Tiny Dancer’ one has remained so indelible?
Because everybody in the scene loved the song so much and loved singing it — except for Noah Taylor, who plays the road manager. He loathed the song. He’s a punk-rocker through and through. If you look at his face, he’s in exquisite pain!

How satisfying was it for you that your script for ‘Almost Famous’ beat out, say, ‘Gladiator’ for Best Original Screenplay?
I was in shock. Fully expected Kenneth Lonergan’s wonderful script for ‘You Can Count On Me’ to win, and when they announced my name, the world turned psychedelic. I still don’t remember what happened next. I think [presenter] Tom Hanks saw the panic in my eyes and said, “Turn around, say a few words, have fun …” What I said at the podium, I have no idea.

“I am a golden god!” vs. “Show me the money!” — which quote wins?
“Show me the money,” because I just heard Obama quote it in the State of the Union address.

Last question: Whatever happened to Lloyd’s boom box, by the way?
It’s in my garage. I think I’ll play a Fishbone cassette on it tonight, in your honor.

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Feb 11, 2011

Bootleg Cut Blu-ray Easter Eggs!

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Did you pick up your Almost Famous – Untitled – The Bootleg Cut Blu-ray yet from Best Buy? If you so, you might be wondering if the very cool easter eggs from the DVD have been carried over? The answer is a resounding yes! Here’s the details:

  • #1 – From the “Special Features” menu,  highlight the microphone that marks Crowe’s audio introduction to “Love Comes and Goes,” and press left to uncover a blue vinyl record icon. Press enter to access the 5-minute “Leslie” scene that doesn’t appear in either cut of the film. Crowe reveals in his 1-minute intro for the scene that it was an homage to Truffaut’s Stolen Kisses.
  • #2 – From the “Special Features” menu, highlight “Stairway” and press right to uncover a yellow vinyl record icon. Press enter to access the very first take of the first shot of Philip Seymour Hoffman playing Lester Bangs, preceded by a 1-½ minute introduction in which Crowe explains why this particular take is so special, yet so haunting,
  • #3 – From the “Special Features” menu, highlight “Script” and press right to uncover a red vinyl record icon. Press enter for 9 minutes of multiple takes of a scene between Penny Lane and William on the tour bus, with a 1-minute intro in which Crowe explains how much of a perfectionist he can be during filming.
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Feb 4, 2011

Crowe Looks Back and Ahead..

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NY Post film critic Lou Lumenick catches up briefly with Cameron via email to celebrate the Blu-ray release of Almost Famous – The Bootleg Cut. Cameron also touches on Elizabethtown, Pearl Jam Twenty and We Bought a Zoo. Here’s the choicest quotes:

On Almost Famous, The Bootleg Cut & Support from Fans and DreamWorks

“It’s the one movie I’ve done that I hear about the most,” Crowe tells The Post. “Wherever I am, it seems, somebody comes up and says something about ‘Almost Famous.’ ” “Often it’s a button-down business type who looks like somebody’s accountant uncle, and they take you aside and say wistfully, ‘I followed Deep Purple to 25 cities in the early ’70s. ‘Almost Famous’ is my life,” says Crowe, 53. “And we have a moment talking about music, and vinyl. It’s the reason I made the movie.”

“We had the commercial capital, thanks to DreamWorks, to make the movie with all the love and time to get it pretty right,” Crowe recalls. “Big props to the cast, too, who really felt the movie as we were making it. Kate Hudson dancing on that arena floor will always be one of the favorite things I was very lucky enough to be behind the camera and watch happen. Movies tend to communicate the spirit of the people who made it, maybe that’s why it lasted.”

Crowe calls the 162-minute “Untitled” version, which adds 40 minutes and was previously available on DVD, “the full movie. The theatrical cut of ‘Almost Famous’ was honed through public screenings. On the big screen, I think the cross-country tour was a little exhausting for some people (just like life) . . . but for home viewing, ‘Untitled’ is made for you to put it on pause, grab a beer, and then back on the road to visit the next city. “Also there are some sub-plots in the longer version that I do miss in the theatrical version — for example Jeff Bebe (Jason Lee) has a secret coke problem and other little side-stories that I will always love. Either version is there for whatever mood you’re in, or how long you want to tour with Stillwater.”

On Elizabethtown

“Elizabethtown,” Crowe says, “was a big, open-hearted movie that worked for some people, maybe not for others. But for me it will always be about the final road trip, and the music of My Morning Jacket and Tom Petty and Ryan Adams. Also it was a chance to film in Kentucky and pay a little tribute to my Dad, who grew up there.”

On Pearl Jam Twenty

Crowe calls it “our equal-part tribute to Bob Dylan’s ‘Don’t Look Back’ and The Who’s ‘The Kids Are Alright.’ When I first moved to Seattle in the mid-’80s, that now-hallowed music scene was starting to come together and I was fortunate to have a front-row seat to the formation and the early shows of Pearl Jam. We gave them jobs on ‘Singles’ to keep the band afloat.”  “They became good friends of mine, and about 10 years ago we started talking about a project that would use all the archival stuff the band had never shown to the public. The time finally came to tell that story. Jeff Ament, the bassist and creative architect of the band in many ways, said to me, ‘I’m expecting to learn things about our little band that I never knew. I hope it’s a little bit like group therapy.’ ”

On We Bought a Zoo

Crowe e-mails that it’s “probably closest to ‘Almost Famous’ or ‘Jerry Maguire’ in the mix of comedy and drama. It’s a fun movie with a smokin’ cast, and I think everybody is bringing something new to it. We’re almost two weeks in, and every day has been a blast. It’s also a little bit of a tribute to the great Bill Forsyth comedy, ‘Local Hero.’ I’m really excited . . . tomorrow Peter Riegert, the star of that movie, is playing a juicy part with Matt Damon. Should be good.”

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Feb 1, 2011

Almost Famous: Bootleg Cut Blu Out This Sunday!

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Don’t forget that the Best Buy exclusive (at least for now) of Almost Famous – The Bootleg Cut arrives on Blu-ray this Sunday in beautiful High Definition and a sparkling DTS-HD 5.1 sound mix. On top of this wonderful news, it will be on sale for only $14.99! This is the longer, extended version, so hang on to your DVD so that you’ll have the theatrical version as well. Here’s a list of the extra features which is a nice combination of the extras from both of the previous DVD releases:

  • Cameron Crowe Audio Introduction
  • Audio Commentary with Cameron Crowe, Andy Fischer, Scott Martin, Ivan Carona,Mark Atkinson and Alice Crowe
  • The Making of Almost Famous (24:50) (Standard Definition)
  • Interview with Lester Bangs (1:55) (Standard Definition)
  • Cameron Crowe’s Top Albums of 1973 (3:52): (High Definition)
  • “Fever Dog” Music Video (4:42) (High Definition)
  • “Love Comes and Goes” Audio Demo (3:53)
  • Rolling Stone Articles (1080p)
    • “The Alman Brothers” — December 6, 1973
    • “Led Zeppelin” — March 13, 1975
    • Neil Young — August 14, 1975
    • Peter Frampton — February 10, 1977
    • Fleetwood Mac — March 24, 1977
    • Van Morrison — May 19, 1977
    • Joni Mitchell — July 26, 1979
  • B-Sides (5:21): (Standard Definition)
  • Cleveland Concert (15:45) (Standard Definition)
  • “Small Time Blues” (2:55) (Standard Definition)
  • “Stairway to Heaven” Deleted Scene (12:13): (Standard Definition)
  • Almost Famous Script (High Definition)
  • Theatrical Trailer (2:33) (High Definition)
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Jan 28, 2011

Paste’s 10 Best Movie Soundtrack

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As part of their Best of the Decade series, the always great Paste magazine shares their 10 Best Movie Soundtracks. Vanilla Sky lands at #8 and Almost Famous was their #5 choice. Here’s what they said:

8. Vanilla Sky (2001)

Cameron Crowe’s follow-up to Almost Famous was confusing, aching and beautiful, and the music and that played throughout its disorienting scenes—eerie selections from Radiohead and Jeff Buckly, plus oddly jaunty moments thanks to Peter Gabriel Todd Rundgren—perfectly augmented that off-kilter mood. As a bonus, Crowe tossed Sigur Ros in the mix three years before Steve Zissou and his crew confronted the jaguar shark to the tune of “Staralfur.”

5. Almost Famous (2000)

The soundtrack of this decade’s best cinematic ode to the glory years of rock ‘n’ roll could’ve just been a greatest hits of assorted tunes by Led Zeppelin, The Who and The Allman Brothers. While those bands do show up, the compilation plays more like the best classic rock mixtape your dad never made, including perfect live versions (Bowie covering The Velvet Underground’s “I’m Waiting for the Man”) and under-appreciated album cuts (The Who’s “Sparks” from Tommy). And after the movie’s sing-along scene, only the soulless can resist “Tiny Dancer.”

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Dec 15, 2009

The Beard Is Fake, right?…or is it?

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Jimmy-Fallon-Almost-Famous

By now I’m sure you’ve seen Jimmy Fallon’s new late night talk show. If you recall, Jimmy played Stillwater’s 2nd manager in Almost Famous, Dennis. There’s a nice interview with Jimmy and he does mention a bit about the film. Here’s the relevant quote:

“Cameron Crowe is a genius. If he asked me to deliver coffee to the set of a new movie right now, I would do it. On Almost Famous I had a beard that everyone thinks is fake, but it’s not. I was sitting next to my mother during the premiere and she kept asking me when I would be in the movie. I pointed myself out and she didn’t believe me because of the beard.”

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Apr 30, 2009

Holiday Leftovers

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leftovers

I hope everyone had a happy holiday and a safe new year. Here’s a roundup for news tidbits from the past few weeks or so. More love from Entertainment Weekly on their Top 1000 of the past 25 years in a few categories.

In the 25 Best Soundtracks Since ‘83Almost Famous lands at #23, while Singles was ranked #13.

For the 25 All Time Best High School Movies, we had two Crowe related films make the cut:

  • 11.Say Anything…
Go on: Hoist that boom box above your head and turn up ‘’In Your Eyes.’’ Stand motionless with a fixed expression of unrequited but determined love. And watch Cameron Crowe’s ode to young passion, which made John Cusack the thinking teen’s heartthrob and should have done the same for Ione Skye. If the postgraduation romance between an earnest kickboxer and a sheltered valedictorian doesn’t win you over, repeat steps one and two and listen closer. —Hannah Tucker
  • 2. Fast Times at Ridgemont High
 – When screenwriter Cameron Crowe went undercover to observe the species Teenagerus americanus, he returned with more than the usual grab-bag of anecdotes about horny, apple-pie-humping guys and the popularity-obsessed girls who must fight them off with a stick. He returned with 24-karat truth. To watch Fast Times today is to know exactly what it felt like to be fixated on sex, drugs, and rock & roll in Southern California circa 1982. It also launched careers and dished out still-relevant life lessons: Jennifer Jason Leigh (relax your throat muscles when fellating a carrot), Phoebe Cates (always knock before entering a bathroom), and Judge Reinhold (see above). And Sean Penn’s Jeff Spicoli, with his checkerboard Vans and bong-hit grin, was a geyser of catchphrases (‘’Aloha, Mr. Hand!’’). The film never strains for coming-of-age treacle. Maybe that’s why it still feels so…right. Especially Damone’s sage advice: ‘’When it comes down to making out, whenever possible put on side one of Led Zeppelin IV.’’ —Chris Nashawaty

 

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Jan 6, 2009

Empire Magazine – 500 Greatest Movies of All Time

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empire500greatest

Empire Magazine has just published their 500 Greatest Movies of All Time. The films were chosen by readers, critics and a panel of Hollywood insiders (including Quentin Tarantino, Sam Mendes, Mike Leigh, Guillermo Del Toro, Pedro Almodovar and Cameron Crowe).

Here’s the Top 10:

  1. The Godfather (Francis Ford Coppola, 1972)
  2. Raiders of the Lost Ark (Steven Spielberg, 1981)
  3. Star Wars Episode V: Empire Strikes Back (Irvin Kershner,1980)
  4. Shawshank Redemption (Frank Darabont, 1994)
  5. Jaws (Steven Spielberg, 1975)
  6. GoodFellas (Martin Scorsese, 1990)
  7. Apocalypse Now (Francis Ford Coppola, 1979)
  8. Singin’ in the Rain (Stanley Donen, Gene Kelly, 1952)
  9. Pulp Fiction (Quentin Tarantino, 1994)
  10. Fight Club (David Fincher, 1999)

FYI. Almost Famous landed at #142 and Jerry Maguire made the cut at #420.

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Oct 5, 2008

  • Almost Famous- Paramount+, AMC+
  • David Crosby: Remember My Name- Starz
  • Elizabethtown- FUBO
  • Say Anything...- Disney+, Hulu, AMC+
  • Vanilla Sky- Paramount+,Showtime
  • We Bought A Zoo- Disney+, Roku