The Union Documentary To Debut at Tribeca

Comments Off
Share Button

Great news today as Cameron’s documentary The Union about Elton John and Leon Russell’s recently collaboration will open the 10th annual Tribeca Film Festival on April 20th. It will be a free, outdoor screening at the World Financial Plaza, along with a live performance by Elton John. I expect Cameron will be in attendance as well. Here’s the relevant quotes announcing the world premiere:

“It’s a special opportunity to open our 10th festival in this distinct and unique way,” said festival co-founder Jane Rosenthal. “Not only are we inviting the community to join us for the world premiere of Cameron Crowe’s film The Union, but to have Elton, whose music transcends generations, perform after is an extraordinary gift to our festival and more specifically the downtown community.”

Crowe’s film entails a rare look at the writing and recording of John’s most recent album last year with collaborator Leon Russell and producer T Bone Burnett. Bernie Taupin, Neil Young, Brian Wilson, Booker T. Jones, Stevie Nicks and Don Was appear in the documentary.

“As a longtime fan of both artists, it was a pleasure to spend a year filming their collaboration,” said Crowe. “We can’t wait to show it to one of the greatest audiences in the world, the Tribeca Film Festival.”

 

Filed under News

We Bought a Zoo: Making the Scene

Comments Off
Share Button

A great new NPR article/podcast about film locations scouts came out recently. You read the entire piece here, but I’ve included the relevant We Bought a Zoo quotes with location manager Chris Baugh and Cameron Crowe below. Furthermore, you can listen to the NPR audio for the story here.

Near Hollywood, some other streets have been closed in recent weeks for a film called We Bought a Zoo. Director Cameron Crowe was filming in the neighborhood of Los Feliz.

“Yesterday I came in angry,” says local resident Kerry Sutkin. But it didn’t last. “Matt Damon kept walking by.”

Four-legged neighbors? Gotta think of them, too. Miles from Los Feliz, on a 450-acre ranch in Thousand Oaks, location manager Chris Baugh is overseeing the creation of that same film’s zoo — made from scratch just for the movie. There are horses pastured nearby, and while everything seems bucolic and calm at the moment, that could change: Tigers will eventually populate the zoo set.

“Wait till we bring in the big cats,” Baugh says.

Plus, there will be a lot of other creatures on the film — flamingos, llamas, monkeys and the bear. For a six-week shoot, Baugh will also have to provide facilities for the care, feeding and safety of a tamer group (one hopes): the cast and crew.

It must be tempting to throw up your hands, say it’s too difficult, opt to build the zoo on a sound stage instead. But that’s not an option for a location scout.

“We’re not allowed to say no; we have to make it work. So we find a way,” Baugh says.

At a small corner restaurant back in Los Feliz, shooting has begun for the Matt Damon movieWe Bought a Zoo. Location manager Chris Baugh, who was working before on the zoo construction at the ranch, comes to Los Feliz to solve a few problems on the neighborhood set. One question comes from the best boy grip, who wants to know where on the location he can park his car.

It’s little things like that that fill up a location manager’s day. Baugh says it’s like throwing a full-blown wedding for 200 people — in a different place every day for 50 days. Except that at these weddings, commandos drop onto the roof some days, or a machine gun fight begins. And then there’s a tidal wave.

When problems crop up, Baugh says, the cry goes up: ” ‘Get me location, get me locations, where the hell is locations?’ And you have to solve everything.”

Director Cameron Crowe says it’s all worth it, if it helps an actor like Damon.

“What was great was being able to bring him to these places and say, ‘This is what we found.’ And he immediately said, ‘I feel the movie here. I can play this character,’ ” Crowe says.

For Crowe, the long, hard work of location scouting — and set designing, lighting, cinematography, performing, directing, all of it — is most successful when it disappears.

“The movie should make it all feel invisible,” he says. “The movie should make it feel like you’re just viewing somebody living a life. To be living a life on screen, they have to feel like that’s their house, this is where they were born. [They have to be] comfortable enough to make you believe it.”

 

Filed under News

Pearl Jam Twenty: Book and Soundtrack Coming!

Comments Off
Share Button

Don’t forget that Cameron’s Pearl Jam Twenty documentary will be accompanied with the release of a soundtrack and book! The book will include an introduction by Cameron. Amazon shows that the 256 page book will be published by Simon & Schuster with a release date of September 13, 2011. We will keep you posted when more soundtrack details emerge and when we get a release date for the documentary.

Filed under News

Book Introduction: Bob Marley and the Golden Age of Reggae

Comments Off
Share Button

I’m pleased to present Cameron’s introduction to the recent book, Bob Marley and the Golden Age of Reggae. The book written by Roger Steffens and Jeff Walker focuses on the years 1975-1976 and includes some great photographs by Kim Gottlieb-Walker. For additional Bob Marley reading, you might want to check out Cameron’s piece in Rolling Stone that documents the shooting/assassination attempt from December 1976,

Filed under News

Budweiser Super Bowl Tiny Dancer Video

Comments Off
Share Button

Budweiser also ran a “Tiny Dancer” inspired commercial during the Super Bowl…

Filed under News

More San Diego Door

Comments Off
Share Button

In celebration of the recently updated Journalism section, I’m proud to present more rare Cameron Crowe penned reviews,circa 1972, from the San Diego Door. Cameron looks favorably on Mother Hen, Procul Harum: Live in Concert with the Edmonton Symphony, McKendree Spring 3 and Melanie’s Gather Me. On the other hand, there’s not a lotta love for the Raspberries Self Titled debut, Bloodrock Live and Grand Funk Railroad’s album Mark, Don and Mel. There are now 140 Cameron Crowe penned pieces in the Journalism section. Enjoy!

Filed under News

Making of The Union – A Cameron Crowe Documentary

Comments Off
Share Button

Just in case you missed it, Cameron created a documentary on the recent collaboration between Elton John and Leon Russell. This album is their first work together since 1970 and was produced by Oscar and Grammy winning producer T Bone Burnett. Cameron was present during the recording sessions and the resulting studio footage and interviews comprises the Making of the Union mini documentary available exclusively on the deluxe edition of the CD. There are plans for a full length version at some point in the near future.

As you recall, Cameron’s relationship with Sir Elton goes back many years to his days with Rolling Stone. Take a look:

Lastly, in another Crowe connection, the album cover was shot by esteemed photographer Annie Leibovitz. The 6 minute mini-documentary is also on YouTube, but I would seek out the DVD version for the best quality.

Filed under News

Cameron Talks to MovieFone

Comments Off
Share Button

Cameron did another quick email interview with the folks over at MovieFone. Topics included Say Anything…, Almost Famous and his Oscar win for Best Original Screenplay. Here’s the highlights:

Moviefone: Compared with the other four films you wrote and directed yourself, where does ‘Almost Famous’ rank in terms of importance to you personally?
Cameron Crowe: [The most important is] definitely ‘Almost Famous,’ a script that was in my drawer as a passion project for a long time. I wanted to make a movie that paid tribute to a lot of very vivid characters I met [back] in the day, and also I wanted to make a movie about loving music. Every character, in some way or another, is dedicated to the way music can make you feel. On the right day, the right song can last forever.

I still make a mix CD every month, as a diary for how that month felt. ‘Almost Famous’ was like a mix in movie form. That’s the way it felt to be 15 and falling in love with life and music.

Were you any more or less meticulous about song selection on ‘Almost Famous’ than you had been on previous films?
I’m always meticulous, but in many ways the song chooses the scene. There is usually a song that I’ve written the scene to, like Led Zeppelin’s ‘Misty Mountain Hop,’or there is only one song that was meant to be in that spot. Songs are sacred things and you have to earn them. People hear them in a new way thanks to a movie, and you want the movie to always do the song justice. Take Cat Stevens’ ‘The Wind’ or Elton John’s ‘Tiny Dancer’ in ‘Almost Famous’ — they were the only two songs that worked. You know when it’s right.

You’ve gone on record saying that Billy Idol’s 1986 song ‘To Be a Lover’ was your inspiration for the boom box scene in ‘Say Anything …,’ so we were wondering if ‘Tiny Dancer’ was your first choice.
‘To Be a Lover’ was a song I liked for [exactly] one day — the day I wrote that scene. It never worked for the scene the day before or after. John Cusack is playing Fishbone’s ‘Bonin’ in the Boneyard’ in the actual scene, but when we put the movie together, it didn’t work at all. He seemed like a crazed Fishbone fan who just happened to be outside her window.

But with ‘In Your Eyes,’ it was like his life was leading to that moment. We were lucky Peter Gabriel let us use it. It’s a mystical kind of marriage, when a song works with film. I live for those kinds of marriages. It’s always fun to find that connection as a director.

‘Tiny Dancer’ was always the choice [for the ‘Almost Famous’ scene]. It was always my favorite song from the ‘Madman Across the Water’ album, and always felt like the perfect song that could bring a band back together. It’s also about the road and about the women you sometimes meet on tour. Thanks again to Elton for giving us all the separated tracks so that we could mix it especially for the movie.

What has Elton John said to you about that scene?
He’s discussed the song a lot, and it’s now a perennial in his live show. He also gives the movie credit for its resurgence, which is ridiculously generous. My mom called me one night not too long ago and said, “Quick — turn on the TV. Elton John is thanking you for ‘Almost Famous.'” I turned on the TV. It was surreal. He’s a completely surprising, generous artist whose work just gets stronger.

Of all the memorable scenes in the film, why do you think the ‘Tiny Dancer’ one has remained so indelible?
Because everybody in the scene loved the song so much and loved singing it — except for Noah Taylor, who plays the road manager. He loathed the song. He’s a punk-rocker through and through. If you look at his face, he’s in exquisite pain!

How satisfying was it for you that your script for ‘Almost Famous’ beat out, say, ‘Gladiator’ for Best Original Screenplay?
I was in shock. Fully expected Kenneth Lonergan’s wonderful script for ‘You Can Count On Me’ to win, and when they announced my name, the world turned psychedelic. I still don’t remember what happened next. I think [presenter] Tom Hanks saw the panic in my eyes and said, “Turn around, say a few words, have fun …” What I said at the podium, I have no idea.

“I am a golden god!” vs. “Show me the money!” — which quote wins?
“Show me the money,” because I just heard Obama quote it in the State of the Union address.

Last question: Whatever happened to Lloyd’s boom box, by the way?
It’s in my garage. I think I’ll play a Fishbone cassette on it tonight, in your honor.

Filed under News

  • Almost Famous- Paramount+, AMC+
  • David Crosby: Remember My Name- Starz
  • Elizabethtown- FUBO
  • Say Anything...- Disney+, Hulu, AMC+
  • Vanilla Sky- Paramount+,Showtime
  • We Bought A Zoo- Disney+, Roku