Before Their Time: Almost Famous

By Daniel MacDonald

March 12, 2009

I have to drug all my dates to get them to kiss me, too! We should be each other's dealer/wingman!

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Despite his young age (he's 15 when he leaves to tour with the fictional group Stillwater, much to the chagrin of his intellectual worrywart mother, played with gusto by Frances McDormand) William ends up the most mature member of the touring cavalcade. Lead guitarist and emerging celebrity Russell Hammond, a career-launching role for Billy Crudup, is self-involved, self-indulgent, and selfish, requiring William's rescue more than once yet dismissive of the boy when he's not needed. Jeff Bebe, the band's lead singer played by Jason Lee, is insecure and hopelessly jealous of Russell's emerging popularity, letting his short temper threaten to destroy the group. And the object of William's affection, the ethereal free-spirit Penny Lane (Oscar nominee Kate Hudson), is so self-destructive that it's unclear whether she'll survive until the end of the film. By default, William's so much better adjusted than these folks, as he should be: raised in the suburbs, graduating from high school two years early as the product of a loving single-parent home, he is fortunate enough to chase his passion for rock journalism from a place of security.

It is William's normal, middle-class background that makes Almost Famous so accessible - rather than a collection of "inside baseball" trivia about the classic rock scene, appealing only to those who already have an interest in the subject, we can share in William's naivete and be shocked, thrilled, uneasy, and exhilarated right along with him. According to the excellent audio commentary (by Crowe and, improbably, his mother) on the must-see Untitled version of the film, nearly everything in Almost Famous is based, not only on fact, but on his Crowe's own life experiences; however, the incredulity of the situations are never as front and center as are the emotions of the main characters.




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Almost Famous is, first and foremost, about people - people learning to live with each other and with themselves as they chase their dreams. It is the very definition of heartfelt, scenes ringing so true that they give goose bumps, and populated with people who seem to be strikingly well-rounded, living, breathing souls rather than necessities of plot. While Crowe's early films, for example Say Anything... and Singles, were fresh and memorable ("I gave her my heart and she gave me a pen."), and his later movies, like the much maligned Elizabethtown (a movie that may find its way to this column down the road), feature more quirky character-driven storytelling, I don't know how he'll ever manage another picture that is as complete an artistic success as Almost Famous.

There have been plenty of films made about the music industry, but sometimes they can feel like a standard template superimposed over a time and place, so that the music scene becomes little more than a setting for a conventional plot to play out (see the Jennifer Lopez/Marc Anthony drama El Cantante). Almost Famous is more than that - it is a rare film that is to be experienced rather than watched, taking the viewer by the hand and saying, "Trust me, you'll like where we're going."


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