Résumés(1)

En 1973, William a 15 ans et une seule passion : le rock. Lorsque le célèbre magazine Rolling Stone lui confie un reportage sur le groupe qui monte, Stillwater, c'est pour l'aspirant journaliste la chance et l'aventure de sa vie. Malgré les objections de sa mère, William part en tournée avec le groupe. Il découvre les musiciens, menés par le charismatique guitariste Russell Hammond et le chanteur Jeff Bebe. Avec la complicité d'une séduisante groupie, Penny Lane, William se fait accepter dans le cercle des intimes du groupe. Bientôt, il ne se contente plus seulement d'être un simple observateur, il participe de plus en plus à la vie de la troupe. Il découvre ce qui fait la démesure de la musique et de la vie. Mais en s'impliquant sur le plan personnel, d'autres sentiments surgissent, contradictoires et puissants, inoubliables et fascinants. William n'oubliera jamais cette fabuleuse période... (Sony Pictures Releasing France)

(plus)

Vidéo (1)

Bande-annonce 1

Critiques (10)

J*A*S*M 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais A very pleasant film. I’m pretty far from a rock fan, and going on tour with a band is the last thing I could wish for, but this film has such an easygoing and lovely atmosphere that it almost made me feel like going to see a concert (but only quietly, from the backstage :-D). Anyway, a little paradoxically, the character that I found the most likeable was mum McDormand. ()

Matty 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Next to Will’s rehearsals for adulthood, an ordinary school leaving exam seems needlessly stressful, boring and practically useless for practical life. His wild adventure does not provoke envy, because we subconsciously detect the absence of a family relationship between reality and such elegant twists of fate, but we get joy from the fact that we can share it with him from the first guitar riff to the last kiss goodbye. Gathering material for an article in a national magazine, being surrounded by girls for whom the hippie era never ended and having the chance to listen live in person to the best rock musicians to ever shake the ground under our feet. For Crowe, the overall arrangement is more important than the strength of the dramatic arc. During the first and most amazing trip of his life, Will recognised that something started when reading To Kill a Mockingbird, but definitely nothing ended. Besides a number of hard lessons, he also receives a few gentler ones and anyone who has seen two or more works of the road-movie subgenre can’t expect any big surprises. Besides Will, one of the “initiators”, Russell (Billy Crudup), is set on taking the position of lead character. Both of them have a claim to it. The end of the film suffers from the same dualism, when only the latter (after the conclusion of the romantic storyline) is the official one. Some of the subplots come to nothing and their importance for the main plot isn’t clear (the sister). Addressing these minor issues in a great emotional film with a soundtrack that knows what high-quality music is would indicate that one is an old fuddy-duddy who didn’t understand anything. Unfortunately, words do not suffice to prove such understanding, or to convey the absolutely good feeling that I got from the film. 85% ()

Annonces

Lima 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Cameron Crowe is a rock fan through and through, and you can feel it in some of his films from a hundred lengths of Wembley Stadium. Almost Famous is a nostalgic reminiscence of a time when rock music set the direction and its representatives were social icons: the golden 70s. A nice, clever story, with many life truths and likeable, unassuming faces. And I’m throwing in the fifth star for the incredibly funny "manifesto" of sincerity in the airplane scene. Now, tell me, can you resist a film that has lines like this?: “If you think Mick Jagger will still be out there trying to be a rock star at age fifty, then you are sadly, sadly mistaken. ()

Kaka 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais An unusual film experience, whose greatest advantage are gripping concert scenes that take the viewer to the very edge of ecstasy, and I'm not even a big fan of rock music. Cameron Crowe's concept of the story and rock as art and cult is impressive, despite the uneven pace. The whole film carries a haze of nostalgic atmosphere from the 1970s, which speaks to me even though I wasn't born at that time. And that was, in my opinion, Crowe's main intention, to appeal to a wide range of audiences and show what that era was like, and he succeeded to the dot. In his rendition, it is truly outstanding. ()

novoten 

Toutes les critiques de l’utilisateur·trice

anglais Dear film, the profaned term "like real life" fits you like few others. Poor William accidentally gets into the backstage of a rock concert in the role of a semi-amateur journalist and from there, it's just a step to his involvement in the big tour of his favorite band. And on top of that, it seems like he has fallen in love with a fellow traveling fan, whom he will never have. If there was something captivating about this film for me, it was precisely William's storyline with Penny Lane, which emotionally practically broke me apart, and during most of their dialogues, I honestly had an authentic feeling in my stomach that would be enough for me to never forget Almost Famous for the rest of my life. Here, Crowe hit the bulls-eye and it's even more of a pity that their story, in a way, remains untold, and the film focuses more on the bromance of the main character with Russell in the remaining runtime. ()

Photos (50)