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  4. ``Back Almost Famous'' A music journalist at just 15 years old. Film director Cameron Crowe's gem of an autobiographical film
``Back Almost Famous'' A music journalist at just 15 years old. Film director Cameron Crowe's gem of an autobiographical film

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``Back Almost Famous'' A music journalist at just 15 years old. Film director Cameron Crowe's gem of an autobiographical film

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“Almost Famous” synopsis

Raised by a strict mother, she is an honor student who knows nothing about sex or drugs. A manuscript that William wrote for a local magazine caught the attention of Rolling Stone magazine, and he completely changed his normal life as a 15-year-old and immersed himself in the world of rock. William is assigned to cover a band that is on the verge of breaking out, and meets groupie leader Penny Lane. It was the beginning of a painful love...


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    A very unusual film director who made his industry debut as a music writer for a famous magazine.



    Have you ever thought about the origins of film directors? The most common ones are probably staff members such as assistant directors and film school graduates. There are quite a few patterns in which people have moved on from acting to directing, but if you look into the careers of various directors, you'll find that even among the Big names in film history, there are some oddities.


    Stanley Kubrick, for example, began his career in the industry as a photographer for Look magazine. After Quentin Tarantino dropped out of high school and joined a theater company, he worked as a clerk at a video store in Manhattan Beach, amassing a vast knowledge of film. In the case of Akira Kurosawa, before becoming an assistant director at a film studio, he seriously aspired to become a painter, and at the age of 18 was even selected for the Nika Exhibition.


    One of the most unusual cases involves a film director who was a music journalist and was writing for Rolling Stone magazine at the tender age of 15.


    A true story that is truly "stranger than a novel" about a former genius boy writer who later became a top Hollywood director. The ultimate oddball is Cameron Crowe, the popular director of ` `Say Anything '' (1989) and ` `The Jerry Maguire '' (1996).


    Cameron Crowe was born in California in 1957 and grew up in a strict intellectual family. His father passed away at an early age, and his extremely square mother, a university professor, asked him to become the ``youngest lawyer,'' and he skipped a grade and was placed in a class two years above him.


    On the surface, Cameron was a serious honor student, but under the influence of his rebellious older sister, he became more and more fascinated by rock music. Then, in 1973, an article he wrote for a local San Diego newspaper was praised, and suddenly he was selected by Rolling Stone, a major subculture magazine (launched in 1967. Based in San Francisco at the time. Moved to its current location in New York in 1977). Receive a request. The editor in charge is Ben Von-Torres, a famous journalist of Asian descent. However, Torres said he never expected the person on the other end of the phone to be a 15-year-old kid.


    In this way, Cameron, a young boy, decides to try his hand at reporting on a rock band's tour as a promising new writer. The autobiographical film that depicts this process is his once-in-a-generation masterpiece, ``When I Was Almost Famous'' (2000, winner of the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay).



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    1. CINEMORE
    2. movie
    3. Almost Famous
    4. ``Back Almost Famous'' A music journalist at just 15 years old. Film director Cameron Crowe's gem of an autobiographical film