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Beware, beware, Rolling Stone magazineâŚ
Music, inarguably, is the hero, the emotional engine in Almost Famous, the Cameron Crowe-written, -directed (and -lived, as the story is autobiographicalish) film set in early 1970âs San Diego. (Donât deny you got goose bumps, in spite of yourself, during the Tiny Dancer sing-along-on-the-tour-bus scene. Maybe you teared up during the Tangerine-soaked happy ending?)
Rolling Stone magazine, too, is a touchstone in Croweâs storyâfeared, loathed, and coveted. A thing to beware of, as told by the always striking Philip Seymour Hoffman, playing Lester Bangs, the rock critic, Creem editor, and mentor to the movieâs young protagonist and aspiring rock journalist, William Miller. âDonât let those swill merchants rewrite you,â Bangs warns fifteen-year-old William, who has been handed an assignment by Rolling Stone to go on the road with the up-and-coming rock band, Stillwater. Indeed, the magazineâs music editor, Ben Fong-Torresâthis being a different era in magazine journalism and, in the end, a movieâtracks William down by (push-button) phone, having seen some of his âgood, solid stuffâ in local papers, to ask if he has âany ideas.â Watch the credulous Fong-Torres and incredulous William negotiate (yes, thatâs Rainn Wilson, doing an early sort of Dwight Schrute):
And so, with a promise to his widowed motherâFrances McDormand, hilarious and endearing in a Mama-Grizzly-meets-Helicopter-Mom roleâto be gone âno more than four daysâ (a promise which, as the movie moves along, morphs into âbe home by graduationâ), William gets on the bus for Stillwaterâs âAlmost Famous â73 Tour.â The music fan/reporter sets off equipped with note pad, pen, messenger bag, Sears cassette tape recorder with mic (a Smith Corona Galaxie Deluxe awaits on his desk in his bedroom at home), his virginity, and these additional bits of advice from Lester Bangs:
You got an honest face and theyâre going to tell you everything. You can not make friends with the rock stars. If youâre going to be a true journalist, a rock journalist, first youâll never get paid much but you will get free records from the record companiesâŚ.Theyâre gonna buy you drinks, youâre gonna meet girls, theyâre gonna try to fly you places for free, offer you drugs, and I know it sounds great but these people are not your friends. These are people who want you to write sanctimonious stories about the genius of rock stars. Theyâll ruin rock and roll and strangle everything we love about it and then it just becomes an industry of cool.
And:
You have to make your reputation on being honest and unmerciful.
To Stillwaterâs lead singer, Jeff Bebe (Jason Lee), young reporter William is âthe enemyâ who âwrites what he sees,â the kid who âlooks harmlessâ but ârepresent[s] the magazine that trashed Layla, broke up Cream, ripped every album Led Zeppelin ever madeââalthough, Bebe concedes, âit would be cool to be on the cover.â Russell Hammond (Billy Crudup), Stillwaterâs lead guitarist whose âgood looks are becoming a problemâ for the band, is more trusting of William, assuring bandmates to âsay what you want, he wonât write itâ and, at one point, asking William, off-the-record, to âjust make us look cool,â to which the ever-earnest William replies, âI will quote you warmly and accurately.â To Stillwaterâs biggest fan, not-a-groupie Penny Lane (Kate Hudson), William is âtoo sweet for rock and rollââand a way to get time with Hammond (whom William confesses to Lane that he, too, âlikes,â before asking her to keep that âbetween us because I am a professional.â)
And of course one roots, throughout, for this budding âprofessional,â as he navigates between road life and real life, having doors repeatedly slammed in his face: a stage door, to his lame protest, âSir, I am a journalist;â multiple hotel room doors (âGo away,â shouts Hammond, the elusive interview, âIâm in a truthful moodâ), and, eventually, the door to Rolling Stone itself, as the draft William files (or, transmits via âmojo,â which Fong-Torres explains is âa very modern machine that transmits pages over the telephoneâ and âonly takes eighteen minutes a pageâ) is dismissed as a âpuff piece,â and then the presumably more honest and unmerciful rewrite is spiked after Stillwaterâs Hammond denies everything in it.
In times of reporting trouble and writerâs block, we see William turn to the seasoned Bangs, who at one point laughingly explains how to handle Fong-Torresâs questions about the storyâs progress: âTell him, you know, itâs a think piece. About a mid-level band struggling with their own limitations in the harsh face of stardom. Heâll wet himself.â Watch, here, as the smarmy Fong-Torres pretty well wets himself, offering to âget [William] a thousand more wordsâ and confirming the piece is âin consideration for the coverâ (repeating, for emphasis, âthe cover of Rolling Stone magazine.â)
In the endâafter William follows the band from Cleveland to Topeka to Greeneville to New York City, babysits Russell Hammond through a bad acid trip (the âI am a golden god!â scene), falls in love with Penny Lane and out-of-love, at least a little, with Hammond, writes in the quiet of a hotel bath tub, endures a âdefloweringâ at the hands of Laneâs fellow non-groupies, rescues Lane from a quaallude OD, and misses his high school graduationâWilliam gets (thanks to the crafty, big-hearted Penny Lane) that interview with HammondâŚ
WILLIAM MILLER: So, Russell, what do you love about music?
RUSSELL HAMMOND: To begin with, everything.
âŚand, finally, the cover of Rolling Stone:
Almost Famous, chock full though it is of journalistic relics (although, Creem is mounting a newsstand comeback!), was no mawkish nostalgia trip for Crowe; it is a storyâan Oscar-winning screen playâ about relationships, trust, money and motivation, told with heart, told in scenes, in moments (when a certain sort of music was having its moment). One such momentâmemorable, at least, for those who work in journalismâcomes when Stillwaterâs lead singer, enraged after being reached by a Rolling Stone fact-checker and realizing that, in Williamâs story, the bandmates look âlike buffoons,â screams (to the band, himself, the universe): âHe was never a person! He was a journalist!â
And here, one more moment (cue those goose bumps):
Last week: The Big Clock
Next up: Ace in the Hole
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