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Greatest Film Scores: The List

October 31st, 2005 Rubin Safaya No comments

For those who don’t have iTunes installed, and just want to read the list (relating to the previous post), here it is:

 
Alexander Nevsky, Op. 78: V. Death to the Blasphemer! (Peregrinus expectavi) - Evgenia Gorohovskaya, St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra & Yuri Temirkanov
Alexander Nevsky, Op. 78: XII. The Battle on the Ice - The Duel with the Grand Master - Evgenia Gorohovskaya, St. Petersburg Philharmonic Orchestra & Yuri Temirkanov
Prelude - Joel McNeely & Royal Scottish National Orchestra
Chronicle Scherzo - Joel McNeely & Royal Scottish National Orchestra
Bagdad - Bernard Herrmann
The Bay - Bernard Herrmann
The Thief of Bagdad: Overture / The Market At Basra - City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra
Main Title - Alex North
The Third Man Theme - Various Artists
L’illusionista - Nino Rota
Guido E Luisa - Nino Rota
La Dolce Vita (Arrivederci Roma - Caracalla’s la Bersagliera) - Nino Rota
La Dolce Vita (finale) - Nino Rota
La Dolce Vita Nella Villa Di Fregene (Can Can - Jingle Bells - Blues - La Dolce Vita - Why Wait) - Nino Rota
Main Title Theme from “To Kill a Mockingbird” - Elmer Bernstein
Also Sprach Zarathustra - Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra
The Blue Danube - Berlin Philharmonic
Lux Aeterna - Stuttgart Schola Cantorum
Charade (Main Title) - Henry Mancini
Breakfast At Tiffany’s - Henry Mancini
Everybody’s Talkin’ - Harry Nilsson
Amarcord - Nino Rota
Patton: Main Title - Royal Scottish National Orchestra
Patton: Attack - Royal Scottish National Orchestra
Tubular Bells (Opening Theme) - Mike Oldfield
The Imperial March (From “The Empire Strikes Back”) - John Williams
Prologue and Main Title - John Williams
March from Raiders of the Lost Ark - John Williams and the Boston Pops Orchestra
Carmina Burana: O Fortuna - Boston Symphony Orchestra & Seiji Ozawa
The Planets, Op. 32: I. Mars, the Bringer of War - London Symphony Orchestra & Sir Colin Davis
The Planets, Op. 32: IV. Jupiter, the Bringer of Jollity - London Symphony Orchestra & Sir Colin Davis
The Planets, Op. 32: VII. Neptune, the Mystic - London Symphony Orchestra, Sir Colin Davis & Women of the London Symphony Chorus
Yeager’s Triumph (From “The Right Stuff”) - Bill Conti
Conan: the Barbarian - Anvil of Crom - Various Artists
Conan the Barbarian “Suite” - City of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra
Kinematic - Vangelis
Deliverance - Vangelis
Theme from Antarctica - Vangelis
Passion - Peter Gabriel
The Feeling Begins - Peter Gabriel
La Petite Fille De La Mer - Vangelis
Opening Titles (From Mutiny on the Bounty) - Vangelis
Closing Titles (From Mutiny on the Bounty) - Vangelis
The Drums of Gaugamela - Vangelis
Titans - Vangelis
The Player (From “The Player”) - Thomas Newman
Theme from Schindler’s List (Reprise) - Itzhak Perlman
Main Title (From “The Last of the Mohicans”) - Trevor Jones
The Rach. 3, Pt. 1 - David Helfgott & Ricky Edwards
The Tale of Tsar Saltan: The Flight of the Bumble-Bee - David Helfgott
Take Us Out - Goldsmith, Jerry
Main Title - Joshua Bell, Philharmonia Orchestra, Esa-Pekka Salonen
The Steward of Gondor - Howard Shore & Billy Boyd
Into the West - Howard Shore & Annie Lennox
Lux Aeterna - Clint Mansell
Unbreakable - James Newton Howard
The Orange Man - James Newton Howard
De Usuahia a la Quiaca - Gustavo Santaolalla
Amores Perros (Instrumental) - Gustavo Santaolalla
Asphalt Groovin’ - Rolfe Kent
Molossus - Hans Zimmer & James Newton Howard

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Greatest Film Scores 1938-2005

October 30th, 2005 Rubin Safaya No comments

Recently, poking around the iTunes Music Store, I decided to put together an iMix compilation, titled “Greatest Film Scores,” covering the best cinematic scores from 1938 to 2005.

The list is in no particular order of preference, but I did try to arrange it chronologically. I began with Sergei Prokofiev’s “Alexander Nevsky” for a couple of reasons. The music, used in Sergei Eisenstein’s screen adaptation of the same story, is incredibly powerful and is perhaps the earliest, excluding house orchestra accompaniments of silent films, score that defined the art of film scoring. Countless film composers, including the borderline plagiarist James Horner, have recycled themes from Shostakovich and Prokofiev—chiefly “Nevsky.”

I’m not a huge fan of Herrmann, as it could be argued he fathered the concept of bombastic, visual cueing in which the score is used as lead to cue the audience to laugh, scream, cry or what have you… rather than the more subtle workings of say, Nino Rota, whose jibes came at you so subtly and steadily that his music toys with your subconscious. So I included a couple of pieces of Herrman’s that get overlooked in most “best of” lists because everyone goes for his more popular, but not necessarily more creative, works (”Psycho” comes to mind).

It was only logical to include the zither theme from “The Third Man” after Rota’s work on “La Dolce Vita” and “8 1/2″… these are themes you cannot stop whistling once they get inside your head. Later in the chronology, I return to Rota with Fellini’s 1974 masterpiece, “Amarcord.”

Elmer Bernstein’s theme from “To Kill a Mockingbird”… If I close my eyes listening to it, I can see Atticus talking with Scout about the pocketwatch in that most memorable scene at Scout’s bedside. Alex North’s music for “A Streetcar Named Desire”… The big, brassy swagger and the percussive shuffle invoke a thousand images of detective pulp fictions with their requisite, casual voice-overs.

What can be said about the classical selections for Kubrick’s “2001″ that is not said by the music itself? Absolutely nothing, except that once you have seen Kubrick’s masterpiece, you cannot hear these classical pieces in any context without imagining yourself in final approach to the space station (”The Blue Danube”), or overlooking the monolith as the sun emerges behind it (”Also Sprach Zarathustra”), or on the moon’s surface with the survey team encountering the first monolith (”Lux Aeterna”).

Henry Mancini was an obvious choice. However, everyone prefers to cite “The Pink Panther” and “Moon River” out of his massive repertoire. Why not the tantalizing “Charade” and the sublime “Breakfast at Tiffany’s”?

There are perhaps only two or three lyrically-accompanied songs on my list. This is chiefly a list of scores, but it’s important to recognize Harry Nilsson’s “Everybody’s Talkin’” as it is not merely a popular country/folk song, but an inextricable component of the score for “Midnight Cowboy”. All I see in my head when I hear that song is the naive Joe Buck, ambling the streets of New York.

“Patton” is a testament to the evocative genius of Jerry Goldsmith, one of the most prolific film composers of the latter 20th century. How many TV shows and films that parody war have made reference to the echoing trumpets, and how many hero stories have echoed the “Attack” theme?

There’s a certain oddity to the fact that an abbreviated version of “Tubular Bells” by Mike Oldfield, arguably a new age composition, is forever to be associated with William Friedkin’s “The Exorcist”. More importantly, it became the template for psychological thriller/horror film music for an entire generation thereafter

Much too much noise is made about John Williams, a composer who is constantly credited as being one of the greatest. Rarely is it noted how often he attempts to reinvent (and sometimes blatantly plagiarize) Gustav Holst’s “The Planets Suite”, or how often he recycles his own work (the love theme in “Star Wars: Episode II” is the children’s theme from “Hook”; every other chase sequence music in the Indiana Jones films is the Ewok chase music from “Return of the Jedi”)… However, I felt it necessary to recognize his greatest, most original, and perhaps most significant accomplishments in terms of their effect on defining film music for their respective genres. His “Imperial March” will be remembered decades from now as the greatest villain theme of all time. The march from “Raiders of the Lost Ark” is one of the most inspiring, and most fun, pieces ever composed. And, unquestionably, the most awesome and powerful superhero theme music ever devised, for “Superman”… that is, if we’re only counting superheros with super-powers.

John Boorman’s “Excalibur” was not a great fantasy epic, but its most defining instrument would be Carl Orff’s “O Fortuna” from “Carmina Burana”. It is probably the most quoted, most referenced, classical “power” piece… evoking images of vast armies, bloodshed, strife, the workings of swords and sorcery and greater forces beyond imagination.

Next, and finally, we come to Gustav Holst. His “Planets Suite” could be alternatively titled “Film Scoring for Dummies” as it is the most referenced piece in all of cinematic history. Between them, “Mars”, “Neptune” and “Jupiter” bring to mind more images and emotions than all film compositions combined. The pieces I’ve included were used directly in Phil Kaufman’s “The Right Stuff”, along with the themes from “Yeager’s Triumph” by Bill Conti—the greatest conventional hero theme I have ever heard.

I could not find the original score for “Conan: The Barbarian” on the iTunes Music Store. Instead, I’ve included a suite and a re-recording of “Anvil of Crom” as two of my favorite pieces by Basil Poledouris. “Anvil of Crom” is comprised largely of legendary, but appropriately bombastic overtones for its hero. The piece was, in fact, referenced in the title music for “Total Recall”, composed by Jerry Goldsmith. I’ll give Goldsmith a pass on that, because both films featured the larger-than-life Arnold Schwarzenegger, and the music of “Anvil of Crom” is inseparable from the image of Schwarzenegger as the Cimmerian warrior. In other words, the music from “Conan” belongs as much to Schwarzenegger as it does Poledouris.

Peter Gabriel’s combination of synthesizers and acoustic instrumentation for “The Last Temptation of Christ” is surpassed perhaps by only one composer… the progenitor of this genre of film composition, and, by far, the most original composer to ever score for film, Vangelis Papathanassiou. Having rejected formal training, and having performed his first “composition” before an audience by the age of six, Vangelis defined polyphonic synthesis before polyphonic synthesizers existed, and composed, arranged, produced and recorded entirely by himself fusions of electronic and acoustic instruments in a way so unique that various themes from “Chariots of Fire” and “Blade Runner” defined what later became known as the “Vangelis sound” (driven largely by the sawtooth-pulse rhythms from the Oberheim Matrix and Sequential Circuits Prophet-5, among 40-50 other synths in his arsenal). Here in the list are selections from his scores for Koreyoshi Kurahara’s “Antarctica”, Roger Donaldson’s “The Bounty”, Oliver Stone’s “Alexander” (not a great film, but a phenomenal accomplishment for Vangelis). There are two selections excluded only because they were not available on iTunes… Vangelis’ remastered score for “Blade Runner” and his Golden Globe-nominated score for “1492: Conquest of Paradise.” There is an orchestral adaptation of Vangelis’ “Blade Runner” score… but it borders on blasphemy. After numerous complaints that the original Vangelis score had not been released, in the mid-1990s the recording company and the studio persuaded Vangelis to recompile the original elements (reconstructing several compositions entirely from memory). This is the score I would urge you to buy… I greatly regret not being able to include it on the iMix, because it re-defined sci-fi film scores forever. I did not include “Chariots of Fire” because it’s been done too many times, and while it’s a beautiful piece I think it’s misleading to characterize his talent by it… as he has in his repertoire of over 35 solo albums and film scores far greater compositions to share with you.

A couple of selections recorded by David Helfgott himself, the prodigal subject of Scott Hicks’ “Shine”… Rachmaninov’s 3rd, and “Flight of the Bumblebee”, played with such rapid fire precision it is surpassed only by the original recording by Sergei Rachmaninov himself.

Another great hero theme, “Take Us Out” by Jerry Goldsmith, for David Anspaugh’s “Rudy”… about the quintessential underdog, Daniel E. “Rudy” Ruettiger, had to be included. Few pieces become instant classics, but this composition sounds and feels as though it’s been in the American subconscious for a century longer than it has. It has the same effect on our psyche as the characteristically-American compositions of Aaron Copland (”Fanfare for the Common Man” obviously comes to mind).

The greatest epic of the latter 20th century, without question, is Peter Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. While it would be typical to select the main themes, few compositions have stirred so much emotion in so many audiences as Howard Shore’s “The Steward of Gondor” featuring a particularly haunting lyric performed by Billy Boyd, and “Into the West” featuring the valkyrian vocals of Annie Lennox which, sadly, signaled the end of the journey for millions upon millions of Tolkien fans world wide.

Clint Mansell’s “Lux Aeterna”, not to be confused with the original classical composition by Gyorgy Ligeti, is indicative of the simultaneous despondence and accumulating power of drug addiction, a central theme of Darren Aronofsky’s “Reqiuem for a Dream,” a film that Roger Ebert described as playing like a “travelogue of hell.”‘

The selections from “Unbreakable”, score composed by James Newton Howard, are the second selections in a class of “superhero themes” in my list. Howard met with the filmmaker, M. Night Shyamalan, who determined they needed, in this unconventional superhero film, a theme that could evoke an image in five notes or less. With that, this is probably the most efficient composition on the list—conjuring more images with fewer notes than any other. “The Orange Man” is the crescendo, when David Dunn clings to a murderer with all his strength, being tossed about like a rag doll, but refusing to let go until the killer has been taken down.

The most recent selections on the list include the intricate, sad melodies of Gustavo Santaolalla’s guitar work in “Amores Perros” and “Motorcycle Diaries”.

Referencing, appropriately, “The Odd Couple” theme, is Rolfe Kent’s “Asphalt Groovin’”, featured in Alexander Payne’s “Sideways”.

And the list closes with James Newton Howard’s “Molossus” from “Batman Begins”. This is the third superhero theme, ringing in a new kind of caped crusader. The most inspiring moment is a swell in the music perhaps a couple minutes in, where Bruce Wayne rises to his feet, having conquered his childhood fear of bats, to finally embrace them as the symbol he will use to strike fear in the hearts of his enemies.

So that rounds out my list of the Greatest Film Scores. I hope people find this list useful and entertaining, as I think it represents the finest musical arrangements to accompany film since the advent of integrated cinema sound.

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Q & A with Rob McKittrick

October 2nd, 2005 Ken Metzger No comments

Director Rob McKittrick and David Koechner (as Dan) on the set of Waiting.
Photo credit: Steven Teagle. ©2005, Lions Gate Films. Used with permission.

 
Given how long and hard you’ve been trying to get this movie made, the title “Waiting…” probably has even more meaning for you. It’s been a long road getting this film made, hasn’t it?

It’s been an insanely long road. Ultimately everything worked out in what I would consider the best-case scenario, so the wait was worth it. Back in 2000, when I gave up the rights to the script, and as a result gave up my guarantee of being the director, I felt like a sell-out. But who cares now? Not I. I mean, I got all the money for “selling out” and I still ended up being the director. And yes, you are not the first to point out how aptly titled the movie is to the long road to getting it made. I should have renamed the movie, “Just make the fucker.”

On your blog you’ve written quite candidly about your experiences (both good and bad) as a newcomer in Hollywood. What aspect of filmmaking were you least prepared for?

Hmmm… That’s a tough one. In regards to directing “Waiting…” I was so over-prepared when I eventually got to make it. That’s one of the positive by-products of it taking over six fucking years to get made. In the end, I wish I had had an extra week of shooting. Or hell, even an extra three days. There are scenes where I didn’t get all the coverage I would have liked, and as a result either the scene was cut, or it’s not one-hundred percent of what it could have been. But given that we only had 23 days of shooting, it’s a minor miracle that we got as much coverage as we did…

Speaking of your blog, you took a bit of heat for some of the content, most of which was hilarious, by the way. When can we look forward to reading about the further exploits of the “Shitbag Producer” and other tales?

Well, I’ve pretty much told the whole Shitbag producer story. Unless he gets into contact with me and whines like a little bitch or something, there isn’t much more to tell. Actually, there is one new, minor thing… After all these years, I’ve wondered if The Shitbag Producer has maybe learned from his mistakes. After all, it was several years ago, and I think he was only twenty-three at the time. But I found out recently that he blames a mutual friend for all the bad-blood between us. When the Shitbag Producer attempted to blackmail me, a mutual friend tried to play mediator, but The Shitbag Producer flew off the handle and got defensive and bitter (because he knew he was in the wrong and didn’t want to have to justify his actions). That’s when he immediately called me up and threatened me (”You’re gonna be a fucking waiter for the rest of your life!”). So now, after all these years, he blames our mutual friend for causing him to fly off the handle. He takes no responsibility for his own shitbag actions. He takes no responsibility for the fact that he tried to blackmail me. So after all these years it seems he is still the same piece of shit wrapped in a (very short) bag…

This is probably a deeply personal film for you at this point…what do you think will be harder, having gotten the film made or waiting for the reviews?

Are you kidding me? Getting the film made was the hard part. Waiting for the reviews is easy. I don’t expect the movie to be a critical darling or anything. I think some people will really like it, some people will absolutely abhor it. But for me, I put to rest any worries after our first test screening. I was in a theater filled with 250 random people and it played like a motherfucker. That test screening was one of the single greatest moments in my life… Of course I’d love for the movie to get great reviews. Who wouldn’t? But given how many dick jokes and F-bombs (of both the “fuck” and “fag” variety) there are in the movie, I don’t think it’s particularly critic-friendly.

Funny you should say that. -Ed.

Obviously “Waiting…” has it roots in your years as a server…so tell us, knowing what you know, do you ever send food back to the kitchen?

Every now and then. Sending food back isn’t really the problem. It’s how you deal with it. If you are nice and respectful to your server, and explain that a mistake was made, chances are they will jump through hoops to fix it for you, because you’ve been cool with them, and they still want a good tip. If you are an asshole, however, all bets are off. In truth, I only tainted food once, and it wasn’t even for my table. A waitress friend of mine was being abused by a bitchy lady and her two bastard children. I couldn’t let her bitchery go un-punished, so I tea-bagged her and her children’s food.

You’ve taken to the Internet Movie Database message boards to help promote your film and you’ve encountered all internet personality types, including a few trolls here and there…including those that claim that “Waiting…” is a ‘rip-off” of other films. What is your opinion of that criticism, but also, what is your opinion of the films that people claim you are “ripping off”?

Any time you put yourself out there, especially on the internet, you open yourself up for attacks. It goes with the territory. And it depends what they are saying I’m ripping off. If they say I’m ripping off “clerks,” well, they’re partially right. “Clerks” made my movie seem possible. But anyone who has seen the movie will tell you the movies are quite different. I love “Clerks” with all my heart (still Kevin Smith’s best film, by a margin, imho), but “Waiting…” is much more of an ensemble comedy. There are sixteen major characters in my movie. It has a decidely different feel, even if I did draw much inspiration from “clerks.” (dick jokes and witty banter that takes place primarily in one location). Another movie I have been accused of ripping off is a movie called “Waiting”. It’s an indie comedy about waiting tables in a restaurant. But my movie title has a “…” after it. “Waiting…” not “Waiting”. See? Totally different. But seriously, the movie was release in 2000, so I can understand why people might think that, especially since they have the same name. But honestly, I wrote the script back in ‘97, completely unaware that in the collective-conscious someone was thinking of the same thing. I happened across the website one day and my heart sunk. I thought my movie was D.O.A. Once I read the website a bit, I realized that the movies seemed quite different. I have to be honest, I’ve still not seen the other “waiting,” though I know I will eventually. Beyond those two movies, obviously it’s not fair for anyone to call the movie a “Rip-off” since no one has actually seen it yet. But why the fuck am I talking about fairness? It’s the internet for fuck’s sake…

As a first time director what was it like having such a solid cast of comedic actors to work with?

It sucked…

Obviously it fucking rocked. I would say there are at least ten to fifteen big laughs in the movie that I didn’t write. Whenever possible I let the actors have some wiggle room to find some comedy that I hadn’t thought of, and it paid off time after time. Especially with David Koechner and Dane Cook.

That’s another positive thing about it taking so long to get made. Had I made the movie when I was twenty-four, I think I would have been a bit more close-minded about letting the actors ad-lib. But since so much time elasped, I had some distance from the script and was able to be more objective. The best thing is, it still says “Written by” me, and me only. So I get credit for their brilliance anyway.

Was there ever a moment where you wondered what you were doing?

The week before shooting. It was a Sunday and I had the biggest panic attack. It suddenly hit me that I had never directed a thing in my life, and yet in one week’s time I was going to be leading a three-million dollar production. I didn’t tell anybody. I just stayed in my room and shook like a little bitch. I was worried that the fear would come back once I actually got onto set that first day. But as it turned out, since it took soooooo long to get my movie made, being on the set wasn’t nerve-racking at all. It was pure excitement. I was too overjoyed to be worried. And once you get past the first day, the rest is cake.

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