FM (1978) Poster

(1978)

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7/10
Turn Your Radio On
virek21320 May 2005
It may not be a cinematic masterpiece, but the 1978 movie FM has something going for it as, admittedly in its dated late 1970s way, it somehow foresaw the corporate turn that the radio media would take in years to come. And it does so with a wall-to-wall soundtrack of late 70s Top 40 memories that now fall under the rubric of Classic Rock. In essence, this is the classic rock response to the disco onslaught of Saturday NIGHT FEVER.

Michael Brandon is Jeff Dugan, the program director at QSKY radio in Los Angeles who oversees an on-air staff of wild and crazy disc jockeys (Alex Karras; Cleavon Little; Eileen Brennan; Cassie Yates; Martin Mull) that, through playing what the L.A. populace wants to hear and with limited commercial interruptions, has made the radio station Number One in the second largest media market in the nation. Things seem to be looking up, until "the boys upstairs" decide how much better things could be if more commercials were aired between blasts of Steely Dan, Queen, and Boston. Naturally, this doesn't sit well with Dugan and his merry band, but the top brass envision QSKY just becoming one big infomercial. This, however, leads to an insane backlash from the QSKY staff and, eventually, a takeover of the station that nearly results in rioting on the streets.

This is definitely pretty thin stuff for a film that was allegedly the inspiration for CBS-TV's fine sitcom "WKRP In Cincinnati" (though the pilot of that series was being filmed at the same time FM was being filmed, so the resemblance is only coincidental). But while this film is no NETWORK, in terms of films that attack the decay of the media, FM still works in getting its situations across. Maybe the idea that a radio station's staff would rail against corporate interference sounds a bit daft, but the notion that a big conglomerate (Clear Channel, for example) would turn a radio station into one big box in which the music is only the filler between attempts to part listeners from their hard-earned money isn't so easy to laugh at anymore.

FM has a lot going for it. For one, it was the only feature film directed by John A. Alonzo, one of Hollywood's premiere cinematographers; his credits include CHINATOWN, BLACK Sunday, SCARFACE, and parts of Steven Spielberg's CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND. And for another, that wall-to-wall soundtrack of what we now call classic rock is enhanced by actual concert footage of Jimmy Buffett and Linda Ronstadt. Buffett's performance of "Livingston Saturday Night" reminds one of what he was decades before his Margaritaville was hijacked by Nashville pretenders like Kenny Chesney and Toby Keith. And Linda, normally a very stage-shy performer, asserts herself boldly on searing renditions of "Tumbling Dice" and "Poor, Poor, Pitiful Me", then pays a heartfelt tribute to Elvis by doing the King's 1956 classic "Love Me Tender."

I can't help but give FM a rating of "7" because it reminds one of what the radio was like before corporate interference and MTV began to slowly corrupt and destroy it, and because it is an interesting time capsule of life in Los Angeles at the end of the 1970s.
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7/10
Now a nostalgic look back at 70's rock radio
johno-2119 July 2006
A film with a great soundtrack of the late 70's rock era although it belies the lyrics from the title song where Steely Dan sings about setting the mood for getting it on with a girl with funk and reggae because there is no funk or reggae in the movie. The film has a simple premise in the radio station staff rebels over the commercialization of what is a commercialized business to begin with. This is not a public or college station but regular commercial station but they take on the corporate world in a strike against the stations plans to be top 40 rock rather than free-form album rock with non-stop music and enlist their listeners help in their fight against the man. Despite this most of the songs in the movie aren't deep album cut album rock but mostly top 40 rock single releases. It does feature a great soundtrack in music by Steely Dan, The Eagles, Boston, Steve Miller, Boz Scaggs, Tom Petty, Bob Seger, Joe Walsh, The Doobie Brothers, Queen, Billy Joel, Walter Egan, Foreigner, Reo Speedwagon, and concert footage of Jimmy Buffett and Linda Ronstadt. A good cast which includes Eileen Brenna, Martin Mull, Clevon Little, Michael Brandon, Alex Karas and James Keach. There are some moments of good satirical comedy but kind of weak as a story but that's OK because it's fun ride in a rambling sort of way. David Myers is the film's cinematographer who compiled quite a resume in the 70's in music films and documentaries photographing Woodstock, Mads Dogs & Englishmen, The Grateful Dead, Soul to soul, Wattstax, Elvis on Tour and Renaldo & Clara. John Alonzo directs in his first and only theatrical film. He did go on to direct a couple of made-for TV movies but he had been a cinematographer and returned to photographing films. He had been a cinematographer on such films as Vanishing Point, Harold & Maude, sounder, Lady Sings the Blues and Chinatown and continued filming up until his death with such films as Scarface, Star Trek: Generations, Steel Magnolias and Cool World. although not a great film, this movie is worth a look. It debuted on screens in the spring of 1978 and is a great snapshot and soundtrack of the late 70's rock radio. I would give it a 7.0 out of 10.
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6/10
kick off your high heel sneakers
tvspace30 April 2008
FM is kind of silly and broad... the characters are two-dimensional weirdos out of a TV sitcom, and the plot feels paint-by-numbers. Despite this, the movie is quite charming and for me, poignant, because it manages to capture something about the now-departed era when rock music and FM radio were a cultural force to be reckoned with. In a time when music listeners are far more likely to be isolated in their iPod headphones, it's somewhat painful to realize what has been lost in music in terms of the communal listening experience that a locally-run, idiosyncratic radio station provided. When the plot briefly passes through the Tower Records on Sunset Boulevard --- now as lost to the ages as the library at Alexandria --- you are confronted with the fact that the entire culture of rock n' roll that many of us grew up with at the center of our lives -- radio, record stores, and arena concerts -- is essentially a thing of the past. Even though this isn't a great movie, it does a great job of taking you back in time to that era.

The soundtrack is pretty middle of the road, but it's good to hear songs that the years have ground into mush briefly re-contextualized into their natural habitat. I can't think of a better way to hear a lot of late 70's radio fodder ("Baby Come Back"; Billy Joel) than within the confines of this movie.
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7/10
Is this really all the "FM" there is?
jpowell68-122 September 2006
Warning: Spoilers
Just got the VHS at a local dollar store, of all places. Hadn't seen this movie in years, and $1 was cheaper than I could rent it, so it came home with me. I must say, I enjoyed the film much more this time than the first time I saw it. It did not seem to drag in the concert portions as much; in fact, it seemed like a much shorter movie than I remembered all around.

Then it dawned on me that I hadn't seen a few of the scenes I was anticipating...so I started trying to figure out what I must have seen several years back. I have memories of a scene with Eileen Brennan as the DJ "Mother", where we learn she IS in fact a single mother, tucking in her daughter. Also a scene where "Mother" is in the control room, talking to another staffer about how smooth it is when she "plays the radio". I had thought this movie was rated R when it first appeared (the video is PG) due to nudity, and again that the concert scenes were much longer. None of this was in the version I saw last night on the Anchor Bay VHS, circa 1998, 104 minutes long. (I thought there were more scenes of Alex Karras' character, the DJ "Doc Holiday"; and more exposition of the love story between GM Jeff Dugan and the other female jock Laura Coe, too.)

Is there a director's cut of this film floating around out there somewhere??? Did I make those scenes up in my head after reading "FM" the novel, upon which the movie is based? Does anyone else know of the scenes I *think* I remember, but are not included in this particular release? After watching this version, I wondered if this was not the one they cleaned up and shortened a little for use on TV in the early '80's, or something like that.

Having said all that...it's an amusing story. Working in radio since 1984, I can tell you it's not like "FM" anymore--you wouldn't see broadcast carts, open-reel tape decks, or record albums these days. Even fewer and fewer CD players; it's all computerized. And if they thought they had problems with tight corporate control THEN...they never anticipated what radio would become in thirty more years after that movie was made. In a technical sense, radio wasn't even like the movie depicts at the time it was made (1978). In the station studio interior shots, there is odd placement of sound equipment, just sitting around the general manager's office and even in illogical places in the control room, where in a real radio station it would be nonsensical and nonfunctional to place these items (not to mention hookup would be a nightmare). It seems this must have been done to have gratuitous appearance of switches and knobs in nearly every scene, to remind us this was a movie about radio. Kind of a quaint touch. (Announcer mikes in a stereo array, with a left mike and right mike, is never done anymore either. It's no longer novel to have the DJ's voice drift back and forth between your speakers.) The part about the owner coming across the country and deciding when he gets there to hand the station back to the music guy and fire the money guys is also pure fantasy. But it's a fun film, and of course an enjoyable bit of nostalgia to see Linda Ronstadt in her youthful prime, and Jimmy Buffet when he still had hair on top.

Anybody catch that Q-SKY, the call letters, couldn't really be used in the US? All stations east of the Mississippi River start with W, all west start with K, since an act of Congress back in the 1930's (though there are some stations that predate that act which are grandfathered to their previous calls to this day), but none start with a Q. And, 71.1 FM is somewhere off the left of the broadcast dial (which actually starts at about 88.1), so obviously we are talking in every respect about a radio station in some alternate universe. But it does contain a LOT of great music and a humorous glimpse of '70's culture. A modern-day classic? Maybe not. But a fun little romp; well worth my dollar invested.
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Forgettable Story , Memorable Music
Schlockmeister13 May 2001
This movie was very popular in 1978, largely on the strength of it's soundtrack. FM radio itself was just busting out in many smaller towns and the idea of this whole new spectrum of radio sound was a very new thing. This movie is the story of one LA FM station, they play cool music, promote cool concerts and take over the station when things go wrong for them. The story is largely forgettable, but in all actuality, it was all a promotion for the double-LP soundtrack ( now to be found in almost any thrift shop in the US ). Steely Dan make a good showing as does Linda Ronstadt. Jimmy Buffett does well also, this was just before he started becoming just a parody of himself as he began catering more to an audience of drunken yuppie "parrotheads". It's hard to want to recommend this movie, if you are interested in the time and the music back then, definately go see this. If you are a fan of "WKRP in Cincinatti", and heard that that TV show was based on this one, don't go in expecting a movie version of WKRP.
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7/10
Comment on the movie, "FM"
zekemike29 November 2005
I was in radio in the area the movie took place in the late 1970's, most of my friends felt the movie was molded after 94.7 KMET, "The Mighty Met" which at the time was king, with KLOS always nipping at their heels. Sadly, corporate money won out, the MET went "NEW AGE" and KLOS survived. Remember Paraquat, Ace "Space" Young, "The Gonzer" and Jim Ladd to mention a few Met Cats! None of us even thought about "WKRP in Cincinnatti" as a off shoot to "FM" although it was a great show. Myself and many others worked at a station much like "WKRP" at one time or another! "FM" was excellent and reflected a wild time in radio, when there was some pretty weird music out there and some great ones too!
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7/10
Prophetic indeed
russelljdj9 April 2006
Hindsight beings what it is now some 27 years after it's release, FM fore tells the impending doom of commercial radio! If you're in the radio business you'll get the meaning of that for sure. FM also spawned the first multi artist soundtrack album that sold very well. The Movie can be a bit slow in places, but it chillingly fore tells the coming doom of radio under corporate control, over commercialization, and the stripping of the Jocks influence and power. Nice musical performances from Linda Ronstadt who was actually played on Rock Radio then, and Jimmy Buffett. Good lightweight entertainment. Tune in turn on, and never come down to earth with Q Sky!
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2/10
Think of FM as a time capsule.
oakwoodmac27 January 2003
Absolutely void of any semblance to a comedy, FM fails to deliver anything more than than the soundtrack offers. A weak plot, a pathetic climax, and cardboard characters force this career-killing turkey of a movie to the discount rack. To enjoy this movie, just think of it as a time capsule. Linda Ronstadt was thin and at her peak. Tom Petty was just breaking out with Breakdown. REO Speedwagon had yet to be accused of High Infidelity. There is a certain novelty in viewing a snapshot of 1978 with endless shelves of vinyl albums and tape cartridges. The FM soundtrack was and still is one of the best 70's pop/rock compilation albums. Due to legal bickering between record labels, the soundtrack has only recently made its way to compact disc. Save your money by renting the movie and buying the soundtrack, preferably on vinyl.
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10/10
Check out this funny little flick!
pmc-318 November 2002
This little gem is one of the most under-appreciated movies of the late 1970s. It's an episodic comedy with serious undertones. The film perfectly captures the feel of the late 1970s. The casting is great, with a passionate performance by Michael Brandon and a very funny one by Martin Mull. The background music is just right and the concert appearances of Jimmy Buffett and Linda Ronstadt add to the late 1970s atmosphere. Despite what other reviews have stated, Tom Petty does NOT appear in concert, he's being interviewed at the radio station. REO Speedwagon also appears at a record store signing. If you're a fan of WKRP, then check out this movie.
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7/10
No Static at All
stephie117527 December 2005
This movie, and its soundtrack is the history of late 70's classic rock 101. Taylor, Walsh, Steely Dan, Rondstat. They are all there. And behind the music portrayed a Los Angles radio station with a band of misfits, and its eccentric station manager who wanted to run the station with a college style and no commercials. Martin Mull in his movie debut takes the cheese with his portrayal of Eric Swan, an egotistical babe magnet with the heart of 10 year old child. The movie even shows some excellent concert footage from Linda Rondstat, and Jimmy Buffett.

This movie has been playing a lot on the Sundance Channel because this really was an indie movie. The movie did look a little low budget. It took a while for the VHS to come out, and now it is on DVD. This is truly one of my favorite movies of all time.
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4/10
A Party Crashed
A_Minor_Blip2 March 2010
Warning: Spoilers
The Steely Dan title-song playing as a big orange sun rises above a dusty city skyline anticipates heaven for rock fans and "no static at all". For the next twenty minutes, through a handing-off of various turns at the mic - as we meet each disc jockey working at the little-guy radio station playing wall-to-wall music - the good times continue to roll. The cool, down-to-earth boss (Michael Brandon), also a DJ, fights to keep the airwaves commercial free, providing the dream radio station "for the people".

The neverending (airwave) tunes are great, the live performances pretty good, and the eclectic cast of disc jockeys are decent enough - including Martin Mull, Cleavon Little, Cassie Yates, Alex Karras and Eileen Brennan - but the initial spontaneous fun (reminiscent of CAR WASH) is soon marred by a story involving villainous corporate goons forcing Army commercials on the station, turning a laidback character-study into typical underdog vs big business fare... and guess who wins?
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8/10
Memorable Concert Footage
jeffrey-w-taylor129 March 2005
I have the movie on VHS, and share it with some of the younger generations. I had the opportunity to see FM in the theatre, during my Sr. year in High School. Awesome concert footage of Jimmy Buffet and Linda Ronstadt in their prime. In addition to the movie being enjoyable to those discovering FM Radio in its infancy, the Soundtrack was one of the best compilations I've heard. It was released as a two album set, well worth the experience. Martin Mull and Eileen Brennan, turn in wonderful performances, as well as Clevon Little as the Night DJ "The Prince of Darkness". If you want to take a step back in time to the beginnings of FM Radio, this is the ticket.
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7/10
If you like 70's rock you have to see this
jjnxn-11 August 2013
70's time capsule is chock full of fantastic music, the soundtrack is justly famous, and excellent actors. The basic story line is David vs. Goliath but is entertainingly played and provides a look at what FM radio used to be and shows what's been lost by the homogenization of the airwaves, at least the non satellite airwaves.

Good concert footage of Jimmy Buffet and Linda Ronstadt give a sense of what live concerts were at the time. Of the performers while all are good a few stand out. Martin Mull is a hoot as the egotistical and somewhat child like disc jockey Eric Swan and the great Eileen Brennan makes a lot out of her small part as the world weary DJ Mother. No one did world weary as well as Eileen Brennan. Not a great picture but for any music lover unmissable.
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4/10
watchable...but where's the laughs?
Twins6512 February 2007
Warning: Spoilers
I just watched FM for the first time in almost 29 years, and while I certainly can't say it's a bad movie, there surely is a reason I hadn't revisited it since The Jimmy Carter Era. It just doesn't entertain like a movie should.

The main story with Michael Brandon as a "stick-to-your-guns" radio station GM was OK, but other than the scene with the dope-smokin' army pitchmen, there weren't many attempts at laughter. And this sure looks like it's presented as a comedy.

Alongside a low-key Eileen Brennan's smoky voiced hippy DJ and Alex Karras' woefully miscast "country rebel", there was no way I could believe these were the main jocks at the top-rated rock station in LA. Only Martin Mull's Eric Swan (and his over-inflated, fragile ego) seemed to ring true.

So look at it on face value...if you care to see what bland, mainstream FM radio looked and sounded like in the late 70's (Eagles, Foreigner, Boston---god, they're still in heavy rotation in Chicago in 2007!), give FM a viewing. Just don't expect to enjoy it..
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Great film, only if you like flicks about Radio
robertbass321 May 2003
This is one of my favorite "Radio" themed films, mainly because I work in radio. The characters in this movie remind me of many of my fellow co-works, on many levels.

The film's plot centers on Station Manager and Morning Man Jeff Dugan. Dugan has the right idea, in keeping the station "Q-Sky" as uncommercial as possible. He LOVES playing GOOD music and so dislikes the idea of selling too much airtime to advertisers. Especially when it is the Army that wants to buy airtime, with high spot rotation in prime time hours.

That doesn't sit well with Dugan, and he tries his best to avoid "cashing in" on the deal. Wow, imagine that, a Station Manager who refuses good money! Dugan even attempts to ignore his corporate boss' desire to accept this package. Dugan finally gets so tired of saying "no, no, no!" to the Army and his boss, that he quits.

The rest of the on-air and support staff like Dugan a lot, and they dislike the fact that he quit. So they plot revenge against the same people Dugan was fighting with. Their idea of revenge is to go on strike, on the air. They dump all the commercials and go wall-to-wall music.

If you tried something like this in corporate radio today, kiss your job goodbye. So many radio stations today have taken the approach that Dugan so willingly and unselfishly fought against.

So if you like films about radio, or if you want to get a glimpse of how radio really "should be" today, you might find this film worth watching. This movie includes a good musical soundtrack, with bits of songs that were big in the 70's
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7/10
Nice flick from the late seventies; watch for great songs from Linda Ronstadt and Jimmy Buffett
inkblot1124 May 2017
Jeff (Michael Brandon) is the manager for a very popular radio station in Los Angeles. He has an arsenal of great disc jockeys: Mother (Eileen Brennan), Swan (Martin Mull), Prince (Cleavon Little) and Doc (Alex Karras). In addition, the station's motto is as little advertising as possible, resulting in more songs played. But, the middle management may be out to change this. They want Jeff to honor a proposal with the US Army to run quite a few recruitment spots. Also, the station endures personal problems in breakups, breakdowns, agent loss, and rival attacks. For his part, Jeff pulls off quite a feat by airing a Linda Ronstadt concert live which was sponsored by a different radio station! Finally, push comes to shove. If Jeff doesn't cooperate, he's gone. Will his loyal staff take this sitting down? This obviously dated but nice flick from 1978 has a sensational cast, a great soundtrack, and live performances by Ronstadt and Buffet. What a treat! Yes, the hair styles, costumes, and sets look "lost in the seventies" but the script has universal truths which never grow old. The direction is capable, too. FM is a fine curiosity piece especially given the musical appearances. Sound good?
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6/10
an odd film,dated even as it was being made?
ib011f9545i5 May 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This is a 1978 film with a plot that might have made sense 4 or 5 years before that.

The plot involves an FM radio station in Los Angeles in conflict with the commercial realities of the radio business.

I was 17 in 1978 (In Britain not the USA) and the 1970s fake hipness seen in this film rings true and is an embarassment to remember.

But if you don't think about it too much it is a fun film for a music fan,like Empire Records or High Fidelity.

The lead is Michael Brandon who I don't think was ever a big star.

British people remember him in the not very good Dempsey and Makepeace cop show.

It is a fun film but I doubt it is a cult film in anyone's eyes.
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7/10
A time capsule
BandSAboutMovies15 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Michael Brandon (Four Flies on Grey Velvet) stars as Jeff Dugan, the ultra-cool program director at Q-SKY Radio, LA's number one rock station. Never mind the fact that the station has the frequency 71.1, which is impossible in the US as the FCC frequency range goes from 87.8 to 108.0. Also, in the US, there are no radio stations with "Q" prefixes: East of the Mississippi, all stations begin with "W," while stations west of the Mississippi start "K." There's only one major exception - KDKA in Pittsburgh. In Canada, stations use "C," while "X" is utilized for stations in Mexico.

Q-SKY has all manner of crazy on-air personalities, like Mother, who sounds a lot like Alison Steele, the Nightbird, who also inspired Stevie in The Fog (others have said she's based on Mary "The Burner" Turner from KMET). She's played by Eileen Brennan from The Last Picture Show. There's also The Prince of Darkness (Cleavon Little, who beyond Blazing Saddles, Surf II and Once Bitten also played the DJ Super Soul in the movie that inspired Tarantino's Death Proof, Vanishing Point), low rated Doc Holliday (former Detroit Lion Alex Karras), his replacement Laura Coe (Cassie Yates, The Evil) and Eric Swan (Martin Mull!) who is obsessed with being a success in show business and with women.

Despite Jeff getting the station to number one in the number two market in the country, his corporate bosses only want him to sell more advertising time. Then, sales manager Regis Lamar gets him a deal to advertise for the Army, he refuses. His bosses order him to run the ads so he quits. The remaining DJs protest by locking themselves in and even physically battling the police.

Everything works out - the station's owner (Norman Lloyd, Jaws of Satan and Amityville 4: The Evil Escapes) is inspired by the DJs and fires the sales staff. Meanwhile, dumped by his true love and fired by his manager, Eric Swan has a mental breakdown while on the air.

Director John A. Alonzo, then noted as a cinematographer on Vanishing Point, Chinatown, Black Sunday and - after this film - Scarface, made his directorial debut with FM.

Screenwriter Ezra Sacks worked at Los Angeles' fabled FM station KMET in the early 70's when AOR - Album Oriented Rock - was in its infancy and being created by KMET program director Mike Herrington. The Army commercial incident depicted by Sacks in the film is based on an actual on-air incident in which KMET's top-rated nighttime DJ, Jim Ladd (On the Air Live with Captain Midnight) ran an anti-army commentary on the air after running an army spot. The incident is chronicled in Ladd's autobiography, Radio Waves: Life and Evolution on the FM Dial.

The head of MCA Irving Azoff participated in the making of the film as executive producer, but he disowned it before release and asked that his name be removed from the credits, as he felt that the film was "not an authentic representation of the music business" and that the studio didn't give him creative control over the film, particularly when it came to the music. Then again, nearly every band in this movie was on MCA. You know - a movie all about rock and roll and rebellion with Jimmy Buffett in it. A negative soundtrack review by Rolling Stone magazine pointed out the music was heavily biased towards "commercial" musicians who Irving Azoff managed - in conflict with the so-called rebellious, progressive-underground rock format practiced by the very stations on which FM's faux-station was based.

Another funny point of contention is that AM stations made their own edit of the movie's theme song, Steely Dan's "FM (No Static at All)," by clumsily interjecting the letter A in the title from the song "Aja" so that the song became "AM" on their channels.

Finally, while some claim that the TV show WKRP in Cincinnati was based on FM - an easy mistake, with so many characters seeming so similar (WKRP's "Venus Flytrap" vs. FM's "Prince of Darkness" in particular) - WKRP series creator Hugh Wilson has claimed that the sitcom was already in development and I've also read that a pilot had already been shot. Seeing as how the show debuted in September and this movie came out in April, that was a real worry. But by the time the show aired on CBS, many had forgotten this movie.

For years, this has been a difficult release. The soundtrack gave the film issues when it was released, with multiple versions being released due to the lack of clearing music rights. In fact, this movie was originally on our list of movies that have never been on released on DVD until Arrow made the announcement that they were releasing it.

The film includes "acting" appearances by Tom Petty and REO Speedwagon, along with live performances by Linda Ronstadt and Jimmy Buffett (who recite a few lines of dialog in the process); Steely Dan performs the title theme, which became a real-life radio hit. The Eagles, James Taylor, Bob Seger, Dan Fogelberg, Billy Joel, and Queen were also featured on the Platinum-plus soundtrack album. While the soundtrack became more popular than the actual film it promoted and there was a need to repress copies, it was stymied by clearance rights; it was remedied by having a group of session musicians - Studio 78 - cut an all-covers version for bargain label, Pickwick.

In addition to a high definition 1080p presentation of the film - transferred from original film elements - this blu ray also includes new interviews with the movie's star Michael Brandon, its writer Ezra Stacks and a video appreciation of the era of FM radio and the soundtrack of the film by Glenn Kenny.
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5/10
Skip the movie, buy the soundtrack
pt86853 October 2005
Bottom line: FM was a mediocre movie with a great soundtrack. I enjoyed all of the concert footage in the film (mostly Linda Ronstadt and Jimmy Buffet), but the comedy wasn't good, and the story was just plain awful.

You've probably already read the synopsis so I'll spare you the details. The setting and situation were ripe for big laughs, but they never came. In fact, WKRP (which was being created at the same time as the movie FM) made much better comedy from virtually the same raw material.

As for the premise, I found it patently hypocritical that FM station employees would be so offended at the idea of commercializing their station with ads, when that's in fact exactly what they do for a living. Radio exists because it sells records and concerts. It is by nature a commercial enterprise. DJs are the basically used car salesmen of the recording industry.

Now I don't think there's anything wrong with this arrangement. In fact, I think it's a great deal for the radio audience; we get to sample the songs, and even fall in love with them before we decide to buy the recording.

But the holier-than-thou attitude displayed in this movie is very disappointing. At one point in the film, Tom Petty (whom I love) is brought into the booth to be interviewed by the DJ while they play tracks from his latest album, "Damn the Torpedoes." Meanwhile, the station manager is trying his hardest to prevent commercials from airing on "his" radio station.

I wanted to shout, "Hey, dude! There's a commercial for Tom Petty's album playing on your station right now! Hello! Kids are going to pay $10 for the record and Tom's going to get $1. The rest goes to some giant recording industry mega-corp." Basically, the screenwriters wrote the DJ's as self-indulgent children, the station manager as a self-centered prick, and the owners as pure evil assholes. This made it hard for me to root for anyone.

The movie would have been sharper if the screenwriters had made the station manager more reasonable to contrast with the owners. Instead of objecting to all advertising, for example, the manager could have told the owners he was willing to do 20% more ads at 10% higher rates. Then have the owners shoot back at him with something like "you'll do it our way or you're out on your ass." Then I would have rooted for the station manager a lot more.

Of course, I would have forgiven any flaws in the premise if the movie had just been funnier.

By the way, if you want to read a contemporary review, there still one available at the NY Times website written by veteran critic Jane Maslin (http://movies2.nytimes.com/gst/movies/movie.html?v_id=16493).
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10/10
The Un-Official True Story of LA Radio Station KMET-FM's Demise
pgardner28 August 2005
Warning: Spoilers
If you lived in Los Angeles during the 60's and 70's, you'll definitely understand and relate to this wonderful "un-official" send-up of what happened to shut down real rock 'n roll at radio station KMET-FM, the last surviving "underground" FM radio station of the 70's.

Conglomerate KLOS-FM and independent KMET-FM were in a ratings and cultural battle that pushed the envelope of radio decency and the right to free speech unlike no other.

The radio personalities: B. Mitchell Reid, Mary "Mounds" Turner, etc.

Situations like "Champagne PayDays" where the DJ's would drink while spinning records, as well as "suspected" pot-smoking while on-the-air, along with playing as few commercials as possible, helped to bring down the station at the middle of the seventies. If you were there and want to reminisce, or, if you wanna see what it was like during a time when 'the people' REALLY controlled the airwaves, FM is the movie for you.

Plus... you can't beat the music and the performances by artists and stars of the era.

IF YOU LIKE ROCK 'N ROLL and YOU BELIEVE THAT IT WILL LIVE ON FOREVER, then, "FM" IS THE MOVIE FOR YOU!
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2/10
Huh?
MikeK198729 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
How is this supposed to be a film celebrating the underdog? This station plays nothing but hits! Now if this was an FM rock station that was playing the REAL groundbreaking music of the 70's; like say... Black Sabbath, Yes, or Pink Floyd, instead of the commercial dross of The Eagles, Steely Dan, and Fleetwood Mac, then maybe I'd actually care a little bit about their plight against the corporate hostile takeover. But all I hear is phony-baloney FM rebellion over a backdrop of 70's AM Gold.

Granted, I wasn't alive in the 70's, so I'd have no idea what it was REALLY like, but I have expert help from older friends and family of mine who have gladly informed me that my opinion on this movie is correct, that this doesn't represent what really was the music of an FM rock station. And to be fair, this IS what FM "Classic Rock" stations are now, so do I really need to be alive in the 70's to know the difference? I mean, for the movie itself, the acting is just OK for what sounded like a pretty lackluster script, but the message just gets lost in the commercial bent of the soundtrack. I think what this movie tried to do and ultimately failed at, celebrating the independent spirit while having a good time with the music you love, was done correctly in both "Dazed and Confused" and "Almost Famous".

And, yes, while there are a lot of commercial songs from the 70's in both films as well, those soundtracks to those movies work better in terms of connecting with the character arcs and the overall plot, as opposed to just offering a backdrop of... "Hey Look! We're hip and cool! We got Jimmy Buffett and Linda Rondstadt to be in this film! But we're still sticking it to the man!"
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8/10
Find it, watch it, and enjoy....
papamac63016 January 2007
As someone who works in "the business", I did notice that FM has its share of inaccuracies and things that don't quite work...big whoop...do not let those deter you from enjoying a movie that has been underrated and under-appreciated...with a cast that works well together and a killer soundtrack, FM tracks the musings of a station in LA that takes its music and its audience seriously...without commercial interruption...Michael Brandon is superb as the hero, Jeff Dugan... Martin Mull is great as an over-the-top DJ, Eric Swan...Eileen Brennan as Mother, the late Cleavon Little as the Prince of Darkness, and Cassie Yates as Laura Coe make up an air staff that I would love to work with...the bad guys are Albert Driscoll, a company exec who doesn't understand anything beyond the bottom line, Regis Lamar, a "flunky" salesman who is doing what he's being told- even though he tries to understand what the radio people are doing, and Michael J Carlyle, a greasy radio exec not unlike a few in radio...and all through the movie, the fact that it is fun to work in radio is very evident...one note...Alex Karras as the Cowboy is a little bit of miscasting...not sure why he was put in there other than his character was in the book...but overall the quality and flow is excellent...and, as its catchphrase goes, "no static at all"...for those of you who are historians of radio, you will love the dual mikes they use at QSKY...brings back the memories...you're probably going to have to find the movie online somewhere, since it's unusual to locate it in a rental store, but it is a nice addition to a library...and try to find a brand new copy...WITH the poster!
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4/10
Not as good as "WKRP"
memery-112 November 2007
Warning: Spoilers
In some ways, this films seems to be a blueprint for the sit-come "WKRP," but it's just not quite as good. For one, the music selected for the soundtrack (save of course for the great Steely Dan title track) is middle of the road white man's rock...Ronstadt, Buffett, etc. While the audience is supposed to cheer for the charismatic jocks as they fight the "man," it's hard not to roll one's eyes at the script. Eileen Brennan plays Mother, a burnt out jock who wants to see what life is like when she's not on an "ego trip for five hours a night". Give me a break. Like DJing at the hottest L.A. station is such a grind! Then, the Ronstadt concert is broadcast live on the air at the last minute!!! Logistically and legally, this is impossible. The message is not to sell out, which isn't a bad statement. When you consider the alternatives, however, how can one NOT sell out? What harm would come of running a few lame commercials as opposed to losing a job playing rock n' roll? As mentioned, the only positive thing about FM is that probably had a hand in spawning "WKRP" (the Dugan and Prince of Darkness characters are pretty much carbon copies of Andy Travis and Venus Fly Trap).
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A great bit of lost history.
mwartoad14 November 2011
I was just listening to the radio this morning and found it to be an audio wasteland. Old recycled songs, babbling morning DJ's proving their stupidity to the world, homogenized-musical crustaceans, that were probably run through the marketing department. Basically the same crap as everyday.

So if it is the same crap as always then why would someone keep turning it on all the time? The reason is that when I was young radio was not like that. It was this freewheeling truly rebellious format with DJ's who really cared about the music. Sure many of these DJ's were bought off but not all. There was areal sense of excitement when a new band or artist came out. I remember one station had what was called side Sunday, where they would play one entire side about 4-7 songs from an album, uninterrupted.

This movie catches that spirit of the fight for the soul of radio. One side are there rebels lead by Jeff Dugan who are going to do it there way at all costs. On the other side are the corporate marketing types who just want more money.

It is not a very heavy movie and probably resembles a light Marx brother flick. But, it still has it's moments. I like who Dugan keeps on fighting the battle and finding funny ways to thwart his antagonist while having to deal with the insanity of his staff. Eileen Brennan is especially good as the burnt out and weary mother character.

I guess the real sad ending is that the force of the spirit of radio may win the battle but, in the long run they lose the war, the number crunchers win out and destroy the that goose that lays the golden egg.
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2/10
Static on the radio
moonspinner553 June 2007
Torpid comedy, a would-be free-for-all mired in a rabble-rousing rut, concerns radio disc-jockeys banding together to prevent the hostile takeover of their station by corporate suits. The trouble with these kinds of plots, where the good guys are goofy rebels and the bad guys are smarmy jerks in ties, is that the filmmakers have to give us something to go on in the way of character development in order to make us care--and most don't have the wit or the energy to do so. "FM" is all a contrivance; we're automatically supposed to be charmed by the hard-working DJs and hiss the big business bullies. I didn't particularly find the wacky DJs charming, while the live concert scenes with Tom Petty, Linda Ronstadt and Jimmy Buffett aren't anything special (they have nothing to do with the story, anyway). The film might appeal to fans of the TV sitcom "WKRP in Cincinnati" (which may have been inspired by this mess), but others should find comfort in a different station. * from ****
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