Almost Famous [DVD]
M**N
A film showing the naive teen who years to be a music critic
The film shows how anything is possible if you follow your dreams, at times both funny & touching about music business
S**Y
Purposeful depiction of the significant rock and roll era
Ambitious journalist William Miller (Fugit) sets out on tour with a rock and roll band who is trying to make it into the music businessWith everything printed in gossip magazines and internet blogs it is sure difficult to think of a time when we were reliant on a minimal selection of reading material to find out about the rock stars of the 60's and 70's.Almost famous makes me sad. I am nearly 21 and having seen this film a couple of times have felt I have missed perhaps the greatest segment of music to exist, the rock and roll, the raves, the parties, the time when no one cared, the time of individuals, the time of proper meaningful music.Cameron Crowe's picture is a provocative look into the aftermath of the apparent dying faze of rock and roll. The descent of music culture is apparent when scripting is shockingly poignant in some opening sequences here. Phillip Seymour Hoffman's protagonist Lester Bangs makes the point of how certain bands meet the right criteria to defy the odds and play with soul and purpose. When watching his portrayal of the journalist it is hard to disagree with him as he is so accurate.Rock and roll and music practically has died. U2 have lost their originality and meaning, Led Zeppelin has been replaced by a number of pretenders whilst your rock stars have fallen by the wayside. Now we have repetitious artists such as Cascada clogging up the charts with pretentious dance music.The point of this film of course is to show the decline of the industry by depicting a wannabe band trying to make it big in the difficult business. Living the life of a rock star certainly seems glamorous for the stars as they enjoy parties, take drugs and have sex. But Crowe's scripting leaves an underlying feeling of sadness for the music industry and the central character, of himself played with quiet solitude by Patrick Fugit.Fugit balances the need to do the right thing and the urge to be his own person well, balancing on teenage hormones and aspirations, whilst a sparkling sophisticated Kate Hudson gives him food for thought. Billy Crudup is your most interesting star being that little too arrogant and overly pretentious with a quite demeanour to fit the portrayal of a modern musician.As based on Cameron Crowe's experiences as a journalist growing up in this industry it is unfitting to question realism in context and whilst jokes and humorous ideologies such as confession of sexual orientation are squeezed in, this believes and intrigues.As before, this 2000 picture does make me feel sad. Our music has dissolved into overly repetitious dance music with no purpose.Fittingly the score for this picture encodes the classics from the day and brimming with drama and humour, is an important viewing9/10
S**L
Great [and Not-So-Great] Version of a Great Movie
[Amazon migrated my original review of this great movie across to the Blu-Ray edition from the Region 1 "Boot Cut". Unfortunately this means that a lot of it is completely inaccurate! The Boot Cut has great extras, such as the superb commentary, and the Blu-Ray has nothing much aside from the extended version of the film. Quite why it was possible to do more with the DVD format than it is with Blu-Ray I'm not sure, but with no Stillwater CD, no "Stairway to Heaven" scene, no deleted scenes etc. this is an opportunity badly missed. Still, it's the extended version and the film really is wonderful ... so it keeps its 5 stars either way.]"Almost Famous" is a truly great film about music by someone who was also a great rock journalist. If you missed it in cinemas, this is a great opportunity to pick it up for home viewing.The three discs here are a short CD by "Stillwater" (the fictional band from the film), a DVD of the original theatrical release and the main event: a DVD of the Director's Cut with a commentary by Cameron Crowe and his mother.The longer version, it should be noted, takes what was already a brilliant autobiographical film and adds some key scenes, most of which explore further the rock world of the early seventies. Crowe himself wanted to tell not merely a love story, but - more importantly - the love story between a band and its fans. The additional detail really "sells" this aspect of the film, most notably in an extraordinarily moving scene when Kate Hudson's character is thrown a birthday party by the band. If you haven't seen this version, you haven't really seen the film: it really does make that much difference.Finally, the commentary, which is one of the most informative that I've encountered. Crowe's mom (played to great effect in the film by Frances McDormand) provides a wonderful foil to Crowe himself as they talk about how closely events in the film tracked the actual events of his life as a journalist with Rolling Stone. If you think that the movie is inauthentic before you hear the commentary, you will have changed your mind by the end of it. Both come across as really warm, funny people as well, which is more than can be said for most commentators on DVDs.One niggle: there's an important scene that was deleted presumably because Crowe couldn't get permission to use "Stairway to Heaven". It's here as an extra on the disc (you have to play your own CD along with it) but isn't incorporated into the "Untitled" Director's Cut. It's a shame that in this area the copyright holder spoiled what was in every other respect a great DVD version of one of the better films of recent years.
A**R
Such a great film!
This film gave me a love for Elton Johns Tiny Dancer !
S**.
top quality
One of the best films
M**R
Great film about music industry journalism
Really enjoyed watching this again and introducing it to my teenage son.
B**Y
plot wise? questionable. nostalgia wise? great.
honestly the plot and acting in this film arent great. there are some cheesy and predictable lines and the main actor isn't great. but in terms of 70s nostalgia and music, it's entertaining. I enjoyed it overall and the set/costume designs were well thought out.
T**N
“We are like no-one else I know!” [Anita]
This 2000 humorous drama starts in 1969 but is set mainly in 1973 when 15-year-old William aspires to be a rock journalist and gets a break when rock journalist Lester Bangs, gives him a $35 assignment to review a Black Sabbath concert. But how is William going to get in and can he be objective?The film has some strong characters that are all well acted but it’s the music that really pulls this together. It’s a coming of age ‘road trip’ just without all the sugar coated clichés, preferring to let the characters carry on in self delusion as they lurch from one situation to the next and compared to most other movies in the genre, this really doesn’t go anywhere or solve any problems.The single disc offers scene selections, subtitles [English, Spanish, Portuguese, or off], audio set-up [English/Spanish], special features [music video, behind the scenes, theatrical trailers] and play. Rated 15 this uses the F word about a dozen times, but other than that there is little here to visually offend, although there are many adult references and discussions, especially related to drugs. This isn’t a belly laugh film, mainly humorous, but I felt let down at the end and wanted more –but not in a sequel kind of way.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 months ago