Tag: aloha

  • Cameron Crowe Making Joni Mitchell Movie

    Joni Mitchell in Martin Scorsese's 'The Last Waltz.'
    Joni Mitchell in Martin Scorsese’s ‘The Last Waltz.’

    It’s been a quiet few years for Cameron Crowe in terms of narrative output on big or small screens. Though he had a great run from the time he wrote ‘Fast Times at Ridgemont High’ (based on his own experiences going undercover at a high school), and created the hit movies ‘Say Anything’, ‘Singles’, ‘Jerry Maguire’, ‘Almost Famous’ and ‘Vanilla Sky’, he saw his most recent movie, ‘Aloha’ fail to connect with audiences and criticized for some dodgy racial elements (Emma Stone as a native Hawaiian just didn’t fly), and on TV, his Showtime series ‘Roadies’ (which trod similar ground to ‘Almost Famous’ but in the present day as opposed to the 1970s) was cancelled after one season.

    Now, though, after a more recent fallow period (more on that below), it appears he’s back with a new planned movie that means a lot to him.

    According to Above The Line’s Jeff Schneider, Crowe has been busy writing a film about legendary folk singer Joni Mitchell.

    While little concrete is known about the movie yet, it apparently stretches further than a conventional biopic, driven by Crowe’s close friendship with Mitchell, who he has known since he was a young journalist working for Rolling Stone magazine, which published his profile of her in 1979.

    Joni Mitchell in Martin Scorsese's 'The Last Waltz.'
    Joni Mitchell in Martin Scorsese’s ‘The Last Waltz.’

    Joni Mitchell’s story

    The Canadian-American musician, producer, and painter was one of the most influential singer-songwriters to emerge from the 1960s folk music circuit and became known for her starkly personal lyrics and unconventional compositions which grew to incorporate pop and jazz elements. In her career, she has won 10 Grammy Awards and induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1997.

    Her hits include ‘Both Sides Now’, ‘River’, ‘Big Yellow Taxi’ and ‘Woodstock’, while one of her albums, ‘Blue’, is considered among the greatest of all time.

    Mitchell suffered a brain aneurysm in 2015 but recovered enough to make a rare public appearance at Clive Davis’ annual pre-Grammy party, escorted by Crowe.

    Writer, director and producer Cameron Crowe.
    Writer, director and producer Cameron Crowe.

    Related Article: David Crosby Dies at the Age of 81

    What has Cameron Crowe been up to since ‘Roadies’?

    Crowe hasn’t exactly been sitting around since ‘Aloha’ and ‘Roadies’, though –– he’s produced a documentary about David Crosby called ‘Remember My Name’ and directed the short Stevie Nicks: Show Them the Way’.

    And Crowe was also busy getting the stage musical based on ‘Almost Famous’, which is now playing on Broadway.

    He’s reportedly been at work on the Mitchell movie during pandemic but has yet to reveal what form it’ll take or whether various actors will be playing her in the course of the film. At 79, Mitchell remains as vital as ever, and is involved with the movie, which means Crowe should enjoy full access to her back catalogue and real insight into her life and career.

    With luck, this could bring Crowe back to make more movies, though as of right now, we don’t know where the new film is set up.

    Producer Cameron Crowe, David Crosby and director A. J. Eaton from 'David Crosby: Remember My Name.'
    (L to R) Producer Cameron Crowe, David Crosby and director A. J. Eaton from ‘David Crosby: Remember My Name.’

    Other Cameron Crowe Movies:

    Buy Cameron Crowe Movies On Amazon

  • Every Cameron Crowe Movie, Ranked

    Every Cameron Crowe Movie, Ranked

    20th Century Fox

    There are few contemporary filmmakers who have more successfully helped audiences navigate the treacherous waters of relationships than Cameron Crowe. After his illustrious time as a teenage reporter for Rolling Stone, Crowe began his career as a social documentarian of sorts — going undercover to report on the life of the modern teenager — where he seemed to learn quickly about the journeys that are common to adolescents. But each of his subsequent films has showcased not only his own maturity as a filmmaker, but that of viewers growing up with his films. Crowe became a chronicler, and a guide, for life’s twists and turns, imparting important life lessons via vivid, specific stories that are emotionally powerful and deeply relatable. To commemorate his 62nd birthday on July 13, Moviefone takes a look back at his body of work, ranking his various film projects as portraits, some more successful than others, of life’s big and little changes and how best to process and transcend them. (Crowe’s Elton John-Leon Russell documentary “The Union” is excluded from this list because it is currently unavailable to stream anywhere. Hopefully that’ll change)

    11. “Aloha” (2015)

    Columbia Pictures

    Despite featuring a lead character whose last name is very similar to this author’s, Crowe’s most recent big-screen effort proved to be his least effective. From its woeful but well-intentioned cultural representation (Emma Stone as half-Hawaiian Allison Ng) to its half-baked romance between Ng and military contractor Brian Gilcrest (Bradley Cooper) to its sociopolitical maneuvering (its climax involves a missile strike), this emotionally underwhelming dramedy (a passion project for the filmmaker that for many years existed under the title “Deep Tiki”) assembles a lot of intriguing pieces that never quite fit together.

    10. “Elizabethtown” (2005) 

    Paramount

    There are so, so many individual parts that work in this 2005 drama about failed sneaker designer Drew Baylor (Orlando Bloom), his father’s funeral, and Claire (Kirsten Dunst), the flight attendant so perky that she inspired the movie trope Manic Pixie Dream Girl, that it comes as no small heartbreak that they don’t add up to a truly special whole, undone by a repetitive story and some very bad casting decisions (Bloom might be many things but a romantic comedy lead is not one of them). But Crowe’s gifts for weaving moments of magical humanism remain sharp even if they aren’t as focused as in previous years.

    9. “We Bought A Zoo” (2011) 

    20th Century Fox

    Based on the real-life memoir by Benjamin Mee, Crowe’s second meditation on grief and redemption is slightly more grounded than the first, but it still involves a dad (Matt Damon) who randomly decides to purchase and try and run a zoo in the wake of his wife’s death. He finds a budding new romance with a comely, very receptive young woman (Scarlett Johansson). While some of the idiosyncrasies of the plot are of course excusable because they actually happened, again Crowe doesn’t quite synthesize his story’s darker themes with his more whimsical ones, although the score by Sigur Ros mainstay Jonsi is genuinely lovely.

    8. “The Wild Life” (1984) 

    Universal

    Directed by Art Linson (“Where The Buffalo Roam”), this Crowe script marked his first original work after “Fast Times,” and it was a thoughtful if somewhat predictable comedy about postgraduate teens finding their way through life and love after high school. Better known as the show of promise that led James L. Brooks to bankroll his first directorial effort than as an especially memorable ‘80s teen film, it manages to offer some nice grace notes to a genre that wasn’t often marked by anything original, much less sensitive.

    7. “Vanilla Sky” (2001) 

    Paramount

    Hot off of the tremendous success (critical, if not commercial) of “Almost Famous,” Crowe reunited with his “Jerry Maguire” star Tom Cruise for this English-language reimagining of the Spanish film “Abre Los Ojos,” in which then up-and-comer Penelope Cruz would reprise her role from the original. Unfortunately, much of the dreamlike magic of the original is lost in translation, although again he conjures some truly unique moments on screen — including shots of Cruise running through a completely empty New York City — and the chemistry between Cruise and Cruz is absolutely undeniable.

    6. “Pearl Jam Twenty” (2011) 

    PBS

    Crowe returned to the music-oriented material that dominated much of his journalism career and ventured into documentary filmmaking in the last decade with this retrospective portrait of Pearl Jam’s debut album and the unconventional career that evolved for the band from that early, potentially overwhelming success. Bereft of too much drama — which the band seemed to have relatively little of — it feels less like a tell-all than a victory lap, but anyone who came up in the era of grunge will find plenty to entertain them.

    5. “Singles” (1992) 

    Warner Bros.

    After “Say Anything…,” Crowe evidenced his willingness to grow up on screen both as a storyteller and via his characters with this drama about young Seattle professionals at the time when alternative music was exploding into the mainstream. Kyra Sedgwick and Campbell Scott pay two lovers trying to work through their own anxieties and insecurities in order to be partners for one another, while grunge luminaries pepper the background of scenes to give the film prescient authority about a pivotal musical and cultural moment.

    4. “Jerry Maguire” (1996) 

    TriStar

    Crowe’s biggest box office success came with this Billy Wilder-influenced story about a failed sports agent who develops a debilitating conscience in an industry without one . The romance between Tom Cruise’s title character and his secretary Dorothy (Renee Zellweger, breaking through in a big way) is sometimes a little uneven, even bordering on disastrous, but the fact that the movie knows that it’s borderline disastrous — and errs on the side of hope rather than convenient happiness — is what makes this story such an inspiring and romantic crowd-pleaser. Crowe’s entire career has always walked that fine line between genuine and saccharine and here that line is razor-thin.

    3. “Say Anything…” (1989) 

    20th Century Fox

    Working with James J. Brooks (“Terms of Endearment”) in his corner, Crowe wrote and directed this great little movie about aspiring kickboxer Lloyd Dobler (John Cusack in a star-making role) and the overachieving classmate  (Ione Skye) he falls in love with. Crowe absolutely perfectly captures the awkward and delightful little moments of discovery between two people learning how to love one another, while also expertly chronicling that tough moment between school and adulthood where every choice feels like a life-changing moment.

    2. “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” (1982) 

    Universal

    Directed by Amy Heckerling in her own feature debut, Crowe’s adaptation of his own captures the fun, silliness and pain of high school via a colorful cast of characters based on the real students he went to school with while undercover in San Diego for Rolling Stone. An uncommonly serious and sensitive depiction of pivotal adolescent moments, including first jobs, class struggles and sex, Crowe’s writing offers what has become a familiar outlook for him about his subjects (one of ultimate hope) without shying away from tougher topics like heartbreak and failure as the characters embark on adulthood. How many abortions have been depicted on screen in the years since, especially in what was ostensibly a wacky teen comedy? Exactly.

    1. “Almost Famous” (2000) 

    DreamWorks

    Crowe deservedly won an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for this semi-autobiographical account of the former reporter’s earliest days working for Rolling Stone magazine. Dealing with an unrequited crush on Penny Lane (Kate Hudson in a role that broke out another promising actress) while trying to navigate the vagaries of reporting on bands that he once idolized, the filmmaker’s stand-in William Miller (Patrick Fugit) piercingly captures the optimism, dashed hopes, heartbreak and advancing maturity of a young man forced to grow up faster than he’s ready. Teaching us that “honest and unmerciful” is the best way to go through life, Crowe reminds audiences what it’s like to be young, and how to grow older with grace and sensitivity.

  • Golden Globes 2019: Emma Stone Yells ‘I’m Sorry’ After ‘Aloha’ Asian Joke

    Golden Globes 2019: Emma Stone Yells ‘I’m Sorry’ After ‘Aloha’ Asian Joke

    The Favourite Emma Stone
    Fox Searchlight

    Emma Stone is sorry!

    During the opening monologue at the 2019 Golden Globes, co-host Sandra Oh made a joke about “Crazy Rich Asians” — which led Stone (nominated for supporting actress in “The Favourite”) to make her vocal apology.

    Oh said, “It is the first studio film with an Asian-American lead since ‘Ghost in the Shell’ and ‘Aloha.’”

    Cameron Crowe’s 2015 film “Aloha” starred Stone as Allison Ng, a character of Asian descent. Her casting caused an uproar and Stone herself said of the experience, “I’ve learned on a macro level about the insane history of whitewashing in Hollywood and how prevalent the problem truly is. It’s ignited a conversation that’s very important.”

    Clearly, the lesson stuck because after Oh delivered her zinger, Stone is heard shouting “I’m sorry!” Unfortunately, the moment wasn’t caught on screen.

    https://twitter.com/louiscomet/status/1082083102158176256

  • Cameron Crowe Posts ‘Heart-Felt Apology’ After Emma Stone ‘Aloha’ Backlash

    L-r, Emma Stone, Bradley Cooper and Rachel McAdams star in Columbia Pictures' "Aloha."Cameron Crowe is feeling misunderstood. The “Aloha” director even called his movie “misunderstood” right in the first sentence of his new blog post, which references the Sony hack that initially dissed the movie and goes on to acknowledge whitewashing criticism. The June 2 post is titled “A Comment on Allison Ng,” focusing on the casting of Emma Stone as Allison Ng, described as quarter Asian and quarter Hawaiian.

    Here’s part of the post, which includes an apology from Crowe to anyone who was offended:

    Thank you so much for all the impassioned comments regarding the casting of the wonderful Emma Stone in the part of Allison Ng. I have heard your words and your disappointment, and I offer you a heart-felt apology to all who felt this was an odd or misguided casting choice. As far back as 2007, Captain Allison Ng was written to be a super-proud ¼ Hawaiian who was frustrated that, by all outward appearances, she looked nothing like one. A half-Chinese father was meant to show the surprising mix of cultures often prevalent in Hawaii. Extremely proud of her unlikely heritage, she feels personally compelled to over-explain every chance she gets. The character was based on a real-life, red-headed local who did just that.”

    He later added, “We were extremely proud to present the island, the locals and the film community with many jobs for over four months. Emma Stone was chief among those who did tireless research, and if any part of her fine characterization has caused consternation and controversy, I am the one to blame.”

    Anytime there’s backlash, there’s always an eye-rolling backlash to the backlash, but the initial disappointment that many Hawaiians shared was that the movie chose to focus mainly on white characters when ostensibly celebrating a location populated largely by non-Caucasians. There are so few Asian characters in major roles on TV and in movies, it just felt like a slap in the face to some viewers to give a partial Chinese role to Emma Stone. But with this post, Crowe at least got to explain his intentions and defend one of his lead actresses, who perhaps unexpectedly ended up in the middle of a larger race debate.

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  • ‘San Andreas’ vs. ‘Aloha’: A Cautionary Box Office Tale

    san andreas vs alohaEveryone complains that Hollywood doesn’t make original movies anymore, but when the studios actually do, they don’t always know how to sell them. That was the lesson of “Tomorrowland” last weekend, and it’s the source of this weekend’s cautionary box office tale involving two more original wide-release movies, “San Andreas” and “Aloha.”

    Neither movie got very good reviews, but “San Andreas” was generally considered a sure thing, while “Aloha” was expected to disappoint. In fact, “San Andreas” opened on top with an estimated $53.0 million, well above the $35-to-$40 million pundits had predicted. Conversely, “Aloha” debuted in sixth place with an estimated $10.0 million, at the bottom end of its meager $10-$13 million expectations.

    Though one is a big-budget disaster movie and the other a mid-budget romantic dramedy, the two films had a lot more in common than you might think. And yet, those elements proved an asset to one and a detriment to the other. Turns out these things matter — except when they suddenly don’t. No wonder predictions for both films were so far off.

    Here’s what each movie had going for it — or against it.

    Star power. “San Andreas” and “Aloha” both feature A-list male leads coming off the biggest hits of their careers — “Furious 7” for Dwayne Johnson and “American Sniper” for Bradley Cooper. Of course, the disaster movie is a perfect fit for Johnson’s action-hero résumé. Three-time Oscar nominee Cooper is a more versatile actor, but maybe his strong identification with “Sniper” hurt him with audiences who have a hard time seeing such an intense dramatic actor play a low-key romantic lead. (He hasn’t really played this sort of part too often, and even in “Silver Linings Playbook,” he was more intense than charming or funny.) That’s not a knock on Cooper’s performance, just an observation that The Rock has made a career out of satisfying audience expectations, while Cooper routinely defies them.

    The fact that “Aloha” also has Emma Stone and Rachel McAdams — and that neither of them helped sell tickets — seems further proof that stardom doesn’t matter that much at the box office. Paradoxically, “San Andreas” shouldn’t have needed any star power at all; disaster movies are all about the spectacle of destruction, not the actors dwarfed by the spectacle. And yet, if Johnson weren’t the star, “San Andreas” probably would have made just the $35 to $40 million that observers had predicted.

    Female appeal. “Aloha” was thought to be strong counterprogramming to “San Andreas.” After all, it’s a romance with a handsome leading man and a spunky-everygirl leading lady (Emma Stone). Indeed, Sony exit polling showed an audience for “Aloha” that was 64 percent women. But “San Andreas” wasn’t the macho action fest that Sony might have wanted as competition. Exit polling by Warner Bros. revealed an audience that was 51 percent female. Indeed, Johnson seems to appeal to women as much as he does to men, which is one reason for the success of his “Fast and Furious” installments. Plus, “Aloha” had to go up against several other recent releases with strong appeal to women, including “Pitch Perfect 2” (No. 2 this week with an estimated $14.8 million), feminist action epic “Mad Max: Fury Road” (No. 4 with an estimated $13.6 million), and even “The Avengers: Age of Ultron” (at No. 5 in its fifth weekend, still pulling in an estimated $10.9 million, for a slight edge over “Aloha” that may vanish when final figures are released on Monday).

    Older audience appeal. “Aloha” is certainly a movie for grown-ups, and Sony polling found 57 percent of its audience to be over the age of 30. But “San Andreas” pulled in older moviegoers in even bigger numbers, with 70 percent of its audience over age 25. With both films competing for the same ticketbuyers, “Aloha” didn’t really stand a chance.

    Director with a track record. Not that “San Andreas” shooter Brad Peyton has much of one. It’s only his third major release, after the “Cats & Dogs” sequel and the “Journey to the Center of the Earth” sequel. Still, the latter movie proved that he and Johnson can make hits together. Plus, all three of his wide releases have been in 3D, which turned out to be a huge plus this time. “San Andreas” made 44 percent of its earnings from 3D screenings, which is a high fraction these days for a 3D movie.

    “Aloha” writer/director Cameron Crowe has a track record, too, but it’s a lot more mixed. He specializes in thoughtful romances, though it’s been a long time since his biggest hits. “Jerry Maguire” was 19 years ago and “Vanilla Sky” 14 years ago. (Yes, “Say Anything” and “Almost Famous” are modern classics, but they weren’t box office hits.) A decade ago, he flopped with “Elizabethtown” (a film with a similar plot to that of “Aloha”), and while he had a modest hit four years ago with family dramedy “We Bought a Zoo,” it was anyone’s guess whether or not he’d be able to return to the good graces of audiences and critics this time out.

    At any rate, he’s no longer a name that sells tickets. Neither is the obscure Peyton. So all that mattered was whether they could deliver on screen. Which brings us to…

    Disregard for critics. Disaster movies seldom appeal to critics. The stories tend to be thin and the characters even thinner. But they’re also critic-proof; audiences find them escapist and cathartic. That was certainly true this time with “San Andreas,” which got mixed reviews but received an A- grade at CinemaScore, indicating very good word-of-mouth among ticketbuyers.

    Reviews do matter, however, for grown-up, character-driven movies like “Aloha,” and unfortunately, they were almost uniformly terrible. It didn’t help that Sony didn’t screen the film for critics until Tuesday, three days before it opened, a tactic that critics often see as a sign that the studio isn’t expecting positive reviews. Given the late screenings and Crowe’s lackluster recent track record, it’s possible that there was some reflexive groupthink going on here. But audiences haven’t responded well either, giving the movie a B- grade at CinemaScore, a sign of weak word-of-mouth.

    Setting. Moviegoers have shelled out to see Los Angeles destroyed by earthquakes, aliens, even volcanoes for at least the last four decades (since Charlton Heston, the Rock of 1974, saved Angelenos from Sensurround vibrations in “Earthquake”). Maybe there’s some schadenfreude involved. Maybe it’s just Hollywood externalizing its own self-loathing. Or maybe, with all the real tremors, mudslides, wildfires, droughts, and other catastrophes inflicted upon southern California, waiting for the Big One isn’t that far-fetched a disaster-movie premise. In any case, “San Andreas” is just the latest film in a successful pattern.

    You’d think Hawaii would make a scenic enough setting to ensure the success of “Aloha,” but here, the setting backfired, earning the movie a wave of bad press from Asian-American activists who decried the movie for whitewashing the island state with a predominantly caucasian cast. (Why there weren’t similar complaints a few years ago for “The Descendants” is a mystery, but at least some of those characters were fully aware of their status as relative carpetbaggers and colonialists.) True, there were probably few potential moviegoers who were aware of the controversy and fewer still who let it dissuade them from buying tickets. But it couldn’t have helped.

    Simple title. At least the title “San Andreas” tells you exactly what you’re getting: an earthquake disaster movie set in California. The title “Aloha” tells you you’re getting a movie set in Hawaii, but beyond that, what it promises is ambiguous. Again, it all comes down to marketing. Looks like both films delivered on the promise of their titles.
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  • Emma Stone Facts: 13 Things You (Probably) Don’t Know About the ‘Aloha’ Star

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    Emma Stone is one of the most delightful and adored ladies in show business, so it’s no surprise that she’s currently making Bradley Cooper fall in love with her in “Aloha.” She’s made us laugh in movies like “Easy A” and “Superbad” and wowed us with her dramatic acting chops in movies like “The Help” and “Birdman.” What can’t she do?

    From the quirky way she convinced her parents to let her act to who she taught to text, here are the 13 things you probably didn’t know about Emma Stone.

    [Source: IMDB, MTV, Nylon]

  • ‘Aloha’ Accused of Being Too White, Sony Defends Cameron Crowe

    L-r, Emma Stone, Bradley Cooper and Rachel McAdams star in Columbia Pictures' "Aloha."It took them a few days, but Sony finally commented on complaints that writer/director Cameron Crowe’s new movie “Aloha” — starring Bradley Cooper, Emma Stone, Rachel McAdams, Bill Murray, John Krasinski, Danny McBride, and Alec Baldwin — is jam-packed with white people, like the ones named above, while relegating people of color to the sidelines.

    “Caucasians only make up 30 percent of the population [of Hawaii], but from watching this film, you’d think they made up 99 percent,” said Media Action Network for Asian Americans rep Guy Aoki (via New York Post). “This comes in a long line of films — ‘The Descendants,’ ’50 First Dates,’ ‘Blue Crush,’ ‘Pearl Harbor’ — that uses Hawaii for its exotic backdrop but goes out of its way to exclude the very people who live there. It’s an insult to the diverse culture and fabric of Hawaii.”

    Aoki said the biggest roles for Asian-Pacific Islanders in “Aloha” are “Indian pedestrian,” “upscale Japanese tourist” and “upscale restaurant guest.” Director Crowe said that he wanted to play off the rich history of Hawaii, but Aoki countered, “How can you educate your audience to the ‘rich history’ of Hawaii by using mostly white people and excluding the majority of the people who live there and who helped build that history — APIs?”

    A spokesperson for Sony just stepped in to defend “Aloha,” with this statement (via Entertainment Weekly):

    While some have been quick to judge a movie they haven’t seen and a script they haven’t read, the film Aloha respectfully showcases the spirit and culture of the Hawaiian people. Filmmaker Cameron Crowe spent years researching this project and many months on location in Hawaii, cultivating relationships with leading local voices. He earned the trust of many Hawaiian community leaders, including Dennis ‘Bumpy’ Kanahele, who plays a key role in the film.”

    There were separate complaints about use of the word “aloha” itself, but that seems to have sidelined the larger point MANAA was making about representing the majority of the people in the location you’re supposedly there to showcase. It’s possible this will just get more people interested in watching “Aloha” — either to see if the complaints are justified or in a backlash statement against “oversensitivity.” But it might just be forgotten until the next movie comes around to re-launch the whitewashing debate.

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  • Say ‘Aloha’ to the First Trailer for Cameron Crowe’s New Movie (VIDEO)

    aloha trailerSometimes you just need a little chatty, whimsical Cameron Crowe romantic comedy in your life. The first trailer for Crowe’s new movie, “Aloha,” certainly demonstrates that.

    Originally called “Deep Tiki,” the film was ready to go a few years ago with a much different cast (led by Ben Stiller), before being reassembled with Bradley Cooper and Emma Stone in the primary roles. The film concerns a disgraced defense contractor who is sent to Hawaii to supervise a satellite array and, while there, true to form, falls in love. The ridiculously starry cast also includes Rachel McAdams, Alec Baldwin, Bill Murray, John Krasinski, Danny McBride and Jay Baruchel. There will also, presumably, be well-known pop songs expertly placed for maximum emotional devastation.

    What’s interesting about the film, which at one point also went by the name “Volcano Romance,” is that there was, at least initially, an element of magic and mysticism which has either a) been cut from the film entirely or b) proved too hard to introduce in an initial trailer meant to get everyone (including soccer moms and guidance counselors) excited about the movie. Hopefully the Polynesian mysticism and talking computer made the final cut. Without these elements, the trailer makes it seem almost too conventionally Cameron Crowe-y. But we will see…

    Not to temper the enthusiasm but this is the first movie Crowe has written and directed since 2005 “Elizabethtown,” an embarrassing debacle that he hasn’t completely atoned for. (2011’s “We Bought a Zoo,” Crowe’s last film, saw him working from another writer’s screenplay.) Here’s hoping that he’s communed with the island gods adn reconnected with his creative mojo.%Slideshow-206962%