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Cameron Crowe

Author of Almost Famous [2000 film]

41+ Works 2,994 Members 43 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Cameron Crowe is the writer-director of "Say Anything..." & "Singles". His latest film is "Almost Famous", the screenplay of which is also available from Faber. (Bowker Author Biography)
Image credit: Cameron Crowe

Works by Cameron Crowe

Almost Famous [2000 film] (2000) — Director/Screenwriter — 369 copies, 7 reviews
Jerry Maguire [1996 film] (1996) — Director/Screenwriter — 344 copies, 1 review
Conversations with Wilder (1999) 344 copies, 9 reviews
We Bought a Zoo [2011 film] (2012) — Director/Screenwriter — 339 copies, 3 reviews
Say Anything [1989 film] (1989) — Director — 330 copies, 2 reviews
Elizabethtown [2005 film] (2005) — Director/Screenwriter — 240 copies, 2 reviews
Vanilla Sky [2001 film] (2001) — Director/Screenwriter — 213 copies, 2 reviews
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1981) — Author — 187 copies, 5 reviews
The Uncool: A Memoir (2025) 167 copies, 7 reviews
Almost Famous [screenplay] (2000) 105 copies, 2 reviews
Singles [1992 film] (1992) — Director/Screenwriter — 100 copies, 1 review
Aloha [2015 film] (2015) — Director — 66 copies
Vanilla Sky [screenplay] (2002) 25 copies, 1 review
Double Feature: A Few Good Men & Jerry Maguire (2007) — Director — 21 copies
Almost Famous: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack (2000) — Producer — 19 copies
Elizabethtown [screenplay] (2005) 17 copies
Pearl Jam Twenty [2011 documentary] (2011) — Director — 13 copies
Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers - Playback (2000) — Director — 6 copies
Romedies Collection Vol.1 (2017) — Director — 3 copies
4 Film Favorites: Coming of Age Films [DVD] (2016) — Director — 2 copies
Almost Famous: Music From The Motion Picture (2000) — Producer — 1 copy

Associated Works

We Bought a Zoo (2008) — some editions — 723 copies, 51 reviews
Fast Times at Ridgemont High [1982 film] (1982) — Screenwriter — 275 copies, 2 reviews
Biograph (1985) — Liner Notes — 54 copies
An All-Star Tribute to Brian Wilson [DVD] (2001) — Contributor — 4 copies
NME 23 October 1993 (1993) — Contributor — 1 copy, 1 review

Tagged

Billy Wilder (12) biography (25) Blu-ray (20) Cameron Crowe (11) CD (10) cinema (23) comedy (73) directors (10) drama (93) DVD (230) family (23) fiction (36) film (92) interviews (20) memoir (16) movie (73) movies (48) music (51) non-fiction (30) read (12) romance (62) romantic comedy (18) science fiction (10) screenplay (22) soundtrack (12) sports (12) to-read (37) Tom Cruise (18) video (12) watched (11)

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1957-07-13
Gender
male
Education
University of San Diego High School
Occupations
film director
screenwriter
journalist
Organizations
Rolling Stone
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
Palm Springs, California, USA
Places of residence
Indio, California, USA
San Diego, California, USA
Associated Place (for map)
California, USA

Members

Reviews

49 reviews
This is a lightning-speed read as Crowe recounts one fascinating adventure with rock stars after another. It's heartening to see the kindness he received as a teenage interviewer from Kris Kristofferson, and the time he spent with David Bowie is fascinating. Ronnie Wood comes across as a truly great guy as well. There are lots of other stories as well, and he had memorable meetings with so many stars who were lost to us--Jim Croce and his guitarist Maury Muehleisen, Gram Parsons, and Ronnie show more Van Zant of Lynryd Skynrd, for example. It's also a moving story about his family, his two older sisters, his mother and father.

But the whole time I'm reading it, there's also a feeling of skepticism. Some of these stories seem a bit embellished perhaps? There are also a few factual errors, such as the site of the plane crash that killed Jim Croce. Mostly, though, there are just big holes in this selective memoir. Nancy Wilson (of Heart) whom Crowe was married to for 24 years is mentioned only once in the narrative, as his then girlfriend, and she is mentioned in the thanks part at the end. Of course, Crowe also leaves out his failed movies and other ventures, but I hate to think he considers his marriage that much of a failure.

So, in any case, if you are fascinated with rock music, you'll find a lot to like here. But, like me, you may find that while Crowe's tone seems confessional, he's hiding an awful lot.
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½
Given that the 2000 film Almost Famous is widely known to be a semi-autobiographical version of Cameron Crowe’s time as a teenage journalist for Rolling Stone magazine (for which Crowe won a Best Original Screenplay Oscar), you might think you already know his story.

Or, knowing that he went on to write and direct movies like Say Anything, Singles, Jerry Maguire, and more, that he’s obviously had a very cushy life.

The Uncool is Crowe’s real memoir and puts the lie to both these show more assumptions.

For one thing, the Almost Famous account of young William Miller following fictional band Stillwater doesn’t come even close to Crowe’s actual early achievements.

From writing record reviews at the age of 14 for a San Diego free underground paper, through interviewing farm worker and political activist Cesar Chavez, to writing for Creem at the invitation of Lester Bangs (still 14), Crowe talked his way backstage to interview the early Eagles, then Kris Kristofferson, Jim Croce, Gram Parsons, Jerry Garcia, Gregg Allman, Todd Rundgren, Robert Plant and Jimmy Page, Ron Wood, David Bowie (spending 18 months with him), Fleetwood Mac, Peter Tosh and Bunny Wailer, and Joni Mitchell.

Among others. How he managed that at such a young age makes great reading.

I couldn’t help thinking how when I was a 12-year-old in my bedroom in Claremont, Tasmania, trying to work out how Jim Croce used harmonics in Time in a Bottle, Crowe – two years older than me – was interviewing the man himself.

And then there’s his family life. While Frances McDormand was indelible as his fictional mother in Almost Famous, the real story of Crowe’s family, especially his mother, Alice, is much more moving.

The Uncool also covers the uncomfortable time when Crowe was 21 and “washed up” at Rolling Stone, usurped by a hungrier writer eager to cover newer music.

At this point, Crowe realises that starting professional life so young has meant he has nothing more than a high school diploma he received in the mail to prepare him for another career.

He has the idea of impersonating a high school student to write a story about modern teenagers. That became Crowe’s book Fast Times at Ridgemont High, which became the movie of the same name, for which Crowe wrote the screenplay.

Crowe’s profile of Sean Penn during the making of the movie is, frankly, worth the price of the book alone.

Despite studio scepticism, the movie is a hit, credited as uncovering a new movie audience. When Todd Rundgren later convinces Crowe to film him playing a new song, he feels a new rapture for filmmaking, “like writing but without a pen”.

“Congratulations,” said Tom Petty, “you’re a director.”

Crowe bookends his memoir with the preparations for and eventual Broadway debut of Almost Famous: The Musical, adapted for the stage by Crowe himself. This, like all the anecdotes in the book, is interspersed with highly emotional family drama.

It’s no surprise that Crowe is a terrific writer with fantastic material. I suppose it also shouldn’t surprise that someone so good, so young at getting people to open up to him should open so much about himself.

If any of the names in this review ring a bell or strike a chord with you (musical pun intended), you’ll find The Uncool an absolute delight.

Highly recommended.
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Of course, I had to read Cameron Crowe's memoir, and of course, I was delighted by it. I've been a fan ever since I picked up a copy of Fast Times at Ridgemont High from a bargain table at Waldenbooks around '82. I loved the book, which was better than the film (which was still fun). You can't get that book anymore; it sells used for over $1k.

In '85, I had a roommate who had attended Claremont High, which was the real Ridgemont.

His film Singles remains the closest thing I have to a memoir show more of my life in the early '90s. I'm not in the film, but it perfectly captured the feelings I had as a single and my dating life. It was also one of the many reasons I ended up moving to the Seattle region.

And since I love music, this was a fantastic memoir not only of Crowe's family life but also of his rock interviews and the basis for his later film, Almost Famous. Pick it up if you are a fan of the 70s.
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This film, set in the US, is based on a true story about a real zoo in the UK, although many of the details have been changed. It makes for a very interesting couple of hours, and has a good balance of themes. There are a couple of low-key romance elements, nicely done in an entirely family-friendly way. There’s some humour, mixed with some mild suspense and some quite moving scenes too.

We enjoyed this film very much, and would recommend it highly.
½

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Associated Authors

Billy Wilder Contributor
Aline Brosh McKenna Screenwriter
Alejandro Amenabar Screenwriter
Rob Reiner Director
Danny Bramson Producer
Mike Newell Director
Kelly Makin Director
Doug Dowdle Director
Dean Parisot Director
Jesse Dylan Director
Mark Waters Director
David Frankel Director
Dennis Dugan Director
Jason Lee Actor
Cameron Diaz Actress, Actor
Jay Mohr Actor
Lucy Liu Actor
Anne Dudley Composer
Richard Gibbs Composer
Ione Skye Actor
Tommy Lee Actor
Ken Leung Actor
The Who Contributor
David Bowie Contributor
Thunderclap Newman Contributor
Yusuf Islam Contributor
Yes Contributor
Led Zeppelin Contributor
Elton John Contributor
The Beach Boys Contributor
The Seeds Contributor
Stillwater Contributor
Todd Rundgren Contributor
Rod Stewart Contributor
Simon & Garfunkel Contributor
Lynyrd Skynyrd Contributor
Clarence Carter Contributor
Tom Petty Actor

Statistics

Works
41
Also by
8
Members
2,994
Popularity
#8,521
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
43
ISBNs
78
Languages
6
Favorited
1

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