by Warner Home Video
| Average Rating: |
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| Sales Rank: | 6411 (lower is better) |
| Price as of: | 12/02/2008 4:10:45 AM MST |
| Price Used: | $5.24 |
| Shipping: | Free Shipping on most orders over $25* |
| Availability: | Usually ships in 24 hours |
| Director: | Alan Parker |
| Release Date: | 2004-06-01 |
| Label: | Warner Home Video |
| UPC: | 012569514522 |
| Binding: | DVD |
| Published By: | Warner Home Video |
| ASIN: | B00008WJBF |
| Category: | DVD |
Actors and Actresses
Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions
Description
At the New York City High School for the Performing Arts, students get specialized training that often leads to success as actors, singers, etc. This movie follows four students from the time when they audition to get into the school, through graduation.
Amazon.com
This early effort by director Alan Parker is lively but jagged as it follows four students through their years in the New York City High School for the Performing Arts. Rather predictably, the kids fall into four clearly defined stereotypes: brazen, gay and hypersensitive, prickly, shy. It makes up for a disjointed presentation with a lot of heart and a great soundtrack (for which it won two Academy Awards). The hopes and disappointments, failures and successes of these teens are fodder for emotional scenes and exuberant dancing in the streets. It also turned out to be the first of many imitators and spawned a popular television series. (It was the breakout film for the short-lived feature film career of Irene Cara, who sang the title song.) --Rochelle O'Gorman
Customer Reviews
To Live Forever - Reviewed on 2008-06-19
1 customer found this review helpful.
After reading a few pages of Richard Yates' celebrated novel A GOOD SCHOOL I tossed it onto the cushions of my bed, rebelliously thinking that if I wanted a disjunctive, multivalent account of four years of high school, the good times and the bad, I would rather be watching the DVD of FAME. Bruno Martelli, the hero, has a supportive father and uncle, a pair of colorful taxi drivers who cheer their boy's talent though they don't fully understand his drive to make music. And yet Bruno suffers from low self-esteem, thinking that he will never score with a girl, which seems sadly true, at least until his musical talent allows him to give Coco, his Puerto Rican muse, the sort of gift which a girl might really appreciate--a brace of pop tunes that might make people "remember her name."
Director Alan Parker struggles with his actors, especially with stolid Lee Curreri in the role of Bruno--he could really have used somebody mercurial or fiery, instead he wound up with a curly-haired pound cake. "Coco" has to do all the work, the impressive Irene Cara, good in both the tender moments and the hard ones, and very affecting in the scene in which she is tricked into taking off her clothes in front of the camera for a con man affecting a French accent and an acquaintance with the films of Jean-Luc "Goddard." The other young players are awfully good, though it is hard to believe that Godspell-like Barry Miller, as a would be standup comic with a Freddie Prinze obsession, is magnetic enough to attract both Doris (Maureen Teefy) and Montgomery McNeil (Paul McCrane), both of whom run quiet circles around the brash young Miller. FAME is sometimes decidedly hard-edged and nasty, which is all to its credit and reflects its appearance at the tail end of the 70s, while the New American Cinema could still get a movie like this made, and the hopeful ending does not feel unjustified--these boys and girls have already lived life hard, and maybe they'll make some use out of all the pain in their lives. Though as Montgomery warns, it's a pie in the face business and there are no guarantees.
It Made Me Want to Come to New York and Jump on a Car - Reviewed on 2007-09-29
1 customer found this review helpful, 1 did not.
"I always wanted to be a dancer when I was younger, and 'Fame' was so inspiring. It made me want to come to New York and jump on a car. I even had a velour 'Fame' tracksuit with gold stitching. I had a 'Fame' bag too!" That's what Victoria Beckham, wife of world-famous British soccer star David Beckham, now playing for Los Angeles, recently said; and let's not forget she's world-famous herself as "Posh," of the 1990's British girl group sensation, "The Spice Girls." But "Fame" (1980), now nearly 30 years old, was such a box office smash, and is so infectious, that even those of us who lived in New York wanted to come here and jump on a car.
The musical-comedy-drama is set in one of New York's specialized music and arts high schools, of which there are a few, admission by audition only. It follows a group of youngsters from audition to graduation: the sweet, sheltered girl; the snooty rich beauty of a ballerina; the manipulative girl; the sensitive gay boy; the skinny, obnoxious Puerto Rican boy,(Barry Miller) who worships the late Freddie Prinze, and wants to be a comic, too; the near-homeless black boy who sure can dance; the ethnic working class boy who thinks he can get all Beethoven down on his synthesizers; the lovely Puerto Rican girl who can really sing(Irene Cara). Ann Meara, well-known, then as now, red-headed comic actress, wife of comic Jerry Stiller and mother of very funny Ben, plays an English teacher. Debbie Allen, talented dancer-choreographer, has a small part as a dance teacher. The Canadian-Chinese Meg Tilly, later an actress( "The Big Chill," "Agnes of God"), plays one of the principal student dancers, without a line of dialogue to her credit. Comic Richard Belzer plays himself, as master of ceremonies at a famous comedy club.
The film was, surprisingly, directed by the British Alan Parker, who'd just horrified us with the hard-to-take "Midnight Express." It was written by Christopher Gore, no relation to Michael Gore, who wrote the score. It's working title was "Hot Lunch," after its intoxicating early dance scene, but there was, just then, a porno film of the same name. That irresistible choreography was by Louis Falco: even "Hot Lunch;" you'd swear the kids were making it up as they went along, but director Parker says Falco got that effect by having the dancers all start a beat or two later than each other. The title song, and "I Sing the Body Electric" were also great dance achievements.
Barry Miller came from attracting notice in 1977's unforgettable "Saturday Night Fever." Irene Cara had been performing since childhood. She won an Oscar and Grammies for her work in "Fame," and went on to have a monster hit, that won an Oscar, a Grammy, and Golden Globes, for her "Flashdance" (1983) song, "What a Feeling." But you'd have to say that none of these kids really did achieve lasting fame: the best-known performers now were the best-known performers then: Meara and Belzer.
Embarassingly enough, until quite recently, I thought the score was by the Italian Giorgio Moroder, patron saint of the synthesizer, and disco: he actually penned Cara's Oscar-winning "Flashdance." But "Fame's" score is by Michael Gore, brother of the 1960's solo singing star Lesley Gore ("It's My Party"). Lesley and Michael co-authored the beautiful "Out Here on My Own," that Cara so touchingly delivers (though you should hear the adult Lesley do it). Both "Out Here on My Own," and the title song were nominated for Best Song Oscars; "Fame" won. But "Fame," movie and song, have to be considered all-around winners.
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Book Subjects
- Actor's Life
- Adult Language
- Adult Situations
- Body Image and Self-Esteem
- Color
- Dance Film
- Dancer's Life
- Drama
- Earnest
- English
- Ensemble Film
- Feature
- Forceful
- Gritty
- High School Life
- Inner City Blues
- Moody
- Movie
- Musical
- Musical Drama