May 29, 2015
There was a time when it was enough for a filmmaker to make a great movie, and nothing else mattered. There were writers and directors whose name on a poster signified that viewers were in for a treat, whether they were seeing a movie by Preston Sturges or John Ford, Alfred Hitchcock or Frank Capra, Steven Spielberg or Martin Scorsese.
For just over a decade, Cameron Crowe was among those greats, with classics like “Say Anything,” “Jerry Maguire” and his tour de force, “Almost Famous,” all coming between 1989 and 2000. But then he fell from grace, and fell hard, with a disastrous 2005 movie called “Elizabethtown,” a highly personal tribute to his then-recently deceased father that was such a bomb it derailed both his own career and the careers of its stars, Kirsten Dunst and Orlando Bloom.
Fast forward to this weekend, when Crowe’s new movie “Aloha” hits theatres with a cast that’s almost too good to be true. Bradley Cooper, fresh off the $500 million worldwide smash “American Sniper,” is the head of an ensemble that includes Rachel McAdams, Emma Stone, Bill Murray, Alec Baldwin, Danny McBride and John Krasinski of “The Office” – and yet, the movie has garnered near-poisonous advance word of mouth, largely because industry insiders are criticizing its marketing campaign.
The good news for viewers is, this is a great movie, filled with all the hallmarks that make Crowe one of our most vital filmmakers: vibrant performances, memorable dialogue and situations that truly wrap viewers into moral dilemmas that are comic and heartbreaking all at once. The bad news for Sony, which has to market it, is that this is a movie that can’t be defined and dumbed-down in a sentence, like “Hot Pursuit” and “Mad Max,” “Pitch Perfect 2” and the upcoming “Spy,” and the resulting billboards and posters are more confusing than enlightening about its plot.