Cameron Crowe Movies
A rock journalist turned screenwriter and director,
Cameron Crowe first became known for creating realistic and funny portraits of modern youth. After writing the screenplay for
Amy Heckerling's seminal 1980s teen comedy
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982),
Crowe found further acclaim directing and writing another seminal 1980s teen comedy,
Say Anything... (1989). Following
Singles (1992), his engaging take on romantic angst among a group of young Seattle twentysomethings, he achieved his greatest commercial and critical success to date as the writer, producer, and director of the much-honored
Tom Cruise vehicle
Jerry Maguire (1996).
Born in Palm Springs, CA, but raised in San Diego,
Crowe became a journalist at the age of 15, writing music reviews and articles for such major publications as Creem, Playboy, and Penthouse. A year later, he became a contributing editor for Rolling Stone and was later promoted to associate editor. During this period, he interviewed many rock music legends, including
Bob Dylan,
Neil Young,
Led Zeppelin, and
Eric Clapton. At age the age of 22, he returned to high school to research a book on adolescent life and subsequently adapted the best-selling result into the script for
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982). The film became something of a legend, not only because of its realistic, sensitive, and funny portrayal of teenage travails, but also for launching the careers of some of Hollywood's brightest stars, notably
Sean Penn and
Jennifer Jason Leigh.
Crowe's screenplay netted him a nomination for a Best Screen Adaptation award from the Writers Guild of America.
In 1989,
Crowe continued to mine the lucrative adolescent vein with his directorial debut
Say Anything..., again earning kudos for creating believable multidimensional characters in an age when most teen comedies were relying on sex jokes and flimsy stereotypes. With his next directorial effort, he delved into the lives of a group of friends struggling to become adults in the Seattle-set
Singles (1992). The film was not as well-received as
Say Anything..., but it did feature strong ensemble acting from a cast that included
Matt Dillon,
Bridget Fonda,
Campbell Scott, and
Kyra Sedgwick.
Jerry Maguire represented
Crowe's first foray into exploration of more adult concerns, although its presentation of a young career hotshot who acts upon an internal moral crisis has resonance with his earlier work. One of the biggest hits of 1996, the film was remarkable for bridging the two disparate romantic chick flick and sports movie genres. Following the success of
Maguire, which earned
Crowe a Best Original Screenplay Oscar nomination, as well as a Best Actor Oscar nomination for
Cruise and a Best Supporting Actor statuette for
Cuba Gooding Jr.,
Crowe laid low for awhile, working on his next project. That next project, initially called the "Untitled
Cameron Crowe Project," became
Almost Famous (2000), the semi-autobiographical story of an aspiring teenage rock journalist who is given the chance to follow an up-and-coming rock band as they tour 1970s America. The film, which featured a stellar ensemble cast that included
Billy Crudup,
Kate Hudson,
Philip Seymour Hoffman, and
Patrick Fugit as
Crowe's alter ego, was embraced enthusiastically by critics and audiences alike, furthering its writer/director's reputation as one of Hollywood's most reliable and entertaining filmmakers and winning the Best Film Comedy award at the 2000 Golden Globes. When the time came to announce the winners of the 73rd Annual Academy Awards,
Almost Famous was again victorious, with
Crowe taking home the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay. The following year
Crowe would make his first venture into the land of remakes with
Vanilla Sky. A reworking of Spanish director
Alejandro AmenĂ¡bar's fiercely original
Open Your Eyes,
Crowe retained that film's star,
Penelope Cruz, though he made a noted addition in casting
Jerry Maguire star
Tom Cruise. A surreal romantic thriller dealing with obsessive love, the shallowness of vanity, and the struggle with disfigurement, the film marked
Cruise's first film appearance following the actor's well-publicized breakup with
Nicole Kidman, and served as a catalyst for the budding romance between its two similarly named co-stars. In 2005 he returned as writer/director of Elizabethtown, but the film met with a chilly critical reception and dismal box office.
Crowe spent a few years out of the limelight, but started to recharge himself with a pair of documentaries about rock and roll. The Union captured Elton John recording the album of the same name with Leon Russell, and Pearl Jam Twenty served up an extensive history of the grunge band to celebrate their twentieth anniversary. He returned to fiction film with We Bought a Zoo, starring Matt Damon as a widower adventure writer who fixes up a decrepit zoo with his children.
~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi