FLYHAWK14 said:
Plot summary: William Miller is a 15 year old kid, hired by Rolling Stone magazine to tour with, and write about Stillwater, an up and coming rock band. This wonderfully witty coming of age film follows William as he falls face first to confront life, love, and lingo.
I know there's more but that's the basic plot of the movie
You really can't link it superficially to Skrzynecki, like saying that the protagonists go on the same type of journey. However, you would be able to link it through concepts about the Journey - eg obstacles faced on every journey, benefits of the Journey, changes undergone because of the Journey.
Remember, the AoS paper focus is on
concepts, not the text/journey itself. As long as you're able to link the texts through an idea about the Journey, then you're good, even if the Journeys are really, really different.
From the plot summary, I would say that the main concepts presented about the Journey in Almost Famous would be:
1. the journey leads to new experiences
2. a journey cannot be predicted
3. a journey leads to changes in the individual(s) undergoing the journey
For Skrzynecki, the poems that have the same concepts would be:
New experiences: Crossing the Red Sea, leaving home, a drive in the country and Postcards (to an extent)
A journey cannot be predicted: Immigrants at central station, migrant hostel, crossing the red sea (to an extent) and a drive in the country (to an extent)
Changes undergone by protagonist: Feliks Skrzynecki, migrant hostel, crossing the red sea (to an extent) and leaving home (to an extent)
Now, I didn't study Feliks Skrzynecki and Leaving Home in great detail, so take any advice I give about those two poems with a grain of salt. There are probably plenty more concepts in the film that I don't know about and many other ways of linking the two texts than through what I said.
I also have a feeling that I left out a few poems, but I can't remember what they are (or the complete list of Skrzynecki poems for that matter), so don't think that this is be all and end all. I also haven't seen the film, so all this is just my opinion about what the film is about and I could be completely, utterly and horrifyingly
WRONG!
Linking the texts is ultimately up to you and if anything of what I said seems hinky, then it probably is.