Tag: Alexandre Desplat

  • Giant Movie Monsters Music from Godzilla to Kong

    Giant Movie Monsters Music from Godzilla to Kong

    Super size me!

    We’re thinking big this week, on “Picture Perfect,” with outsized thrills from movies featuring gargantuan creatures.

    We’ll begin with “Godzilla” (2014), the most recent incarnation of the pop-cultural icon, originally a metaphor for the destructive power of nuclear weapons, but now seemingly more of a jack-of-all-trades restorer of natural balance. Either way, it’s generally man’s overweening pride that brings on the destruction. The composer for this latest version was Alexandre Desplat.

    Then we’ll take a storm-swept hot air balloon to “Mysterious Island” (1961). Jules Verne’s novel becomes the framework for a series of battles between a band of castaways and giant creatures at an uncharted locale in the South Pacific. The great Ray Harryhausen provided the special effects – including giant bees, birds and crabs – and Bernard Herrmann underscored the outlandish situations to perfection.

    Henry Mancini gained world-fame for his breezy melodies for “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” and the “Pink Panther” films, but he got his start writing for B-movies of the 1950s. In “Tarantula” (1955), scientists conduct experiments on animals in order to develop a super food nutrient, as a preemptive strike against future overpopulation and world hunger. However, as the countryside becomes littered with cattle carcasses and pools of arachnid venom, clearly something has gone awry. Mancini collaborated on the score with 1950s science fiction maestro Herman Stein. Don’t go into it expecting “Moon River.”

    Finally, we’ll hear selections from literally the 800-pound gorilla of giant monster movies, “King Kong” (1933). Oscar Levant memorably described “Kong” as “a symphony accompanied by a movie.” The music was certainly a great part of the film’s initial – and enduring – success.

    Max Steiner’s concept and execution of the music for “Kong” was really the first of their kind. Thanks to “Kong” and other early efforts by Franz Waxman and Erich Wolfgang Korngold, a prototype of the Hollywood sound was formed, and the spectacular images onscreen, especially those characteristic of the fantasy and adventure genres, were expected to be accompanied by equally lavish and outlandish orchestras.

    No doubt, Hollywood would have figured it out eventually, yet it’s very gratifying to say, if it weren’t for “Kong,” there would be no “Ben-Hur,” there would be no “Star Wars,” there would be no “The Lord of the Rings.” At any rate, “Kong” got there first.

    I hope you’ll join me for these outsized musical adventures this week, on “Picture Perfect,” tonight at 6 ET, with a repeat tomorrow morning at 6; or that you’ll listen to it later as a webcast at wwfm.org.

  • Alexandre Desplat Finally Wins Oscar

    Alexandre Desplat Finally Wins Oscar

    Film composer Alexandre Desplat finally picked up an Oscar last night, after his seventh and eighth nominations, for “The Imitation Game” and “The Grand Budapest Hotel.” He was recognized for his quirky, disjointed and fun score for the latter, which is distinguished by its use of folk instruments such as the balalaika, mandolin and alphorn.

    Of course, I can’t help but feel he coasted to victory on the coattails of the classic Mercury Living Presence recording of “Kamarinskaya,” made by the Osipov State Russian Folk Orchestra, which is used during film’s end credits. It was quoted on at least one occasion last night when an award recipient approached the stage.

    Still, there’s no denying Desplat worked very hard this past year, having written the scores for six films, including “The Monuments Men,” “Godzilla,” “Unbroken” and “Suffragette.” I had an inkling that he was going to win, but wondered if the double nomination would split the vote.

    I can’t say I was all that impressed with most of the nominees, though Gary Yershon’s score for “Mr. Turner” does kind of stick with me, in a desolate, artsy kind of way. At any rate, any year that Hans Zimmer loses is a good year.

    Congratulations, Alexandre Desplat.

    Desplat’s score for “The Grand Budapest Hotel”:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ZM7Iz3eDNU&list=PLlq1il6oOJt0EBgxghlYV-Hk1d5YcUegJ

    Gary Yershon’s music for “Mr. Turner”:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WZlrVf3q3Mc&list=PLZeZu8hkpymOOpWl_smRZEZXoi6NrtxEo

    “Interstellar,” by The Great Satan, Hans Zimmer:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXtOsmwfQXg&list=PLQmB7XebboHxEQ56JWiYGGsTPDyboZsAK

  • Godzilla Music & Dinosaur Movie Soundtracks

    Godzilla Music & Dinosaur Movie Soundtracks

    Godzilla’s coming!

    Although I have a feeling we’re going be deprived of the out-of-sync dubbing and guy-in-a-rubber-suit-stomping-on-models that gave most of the earlier installments their charm, I am cautiously optimistic in that it looks as if at least they’ve tried to handle the latest incarnation with some integrity. We’ll see how overboard they go with the effects. But no superheroes or Transformers is a good sign. Also, it looks like they got some real actors. (R.I.P. Raymond Burr.)

    To mark the release of the new film, this week on “Picture Perfect,” the focus will be on music from dinosaur movies. I know, I know, Godzilla isn’t strictly speaking a dinosaur. How many dinosaurs have atomic breath? However, in researching the show, I did come across an amusing article in Smithsonian Magazine, in which paleontologists speculate what dinosaurs may have been a part of Godzilla’s DNA. Before his radioactive mutation that is. Here’s the link, if you’re interested:

    http://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/what-kind-of-dinosaur-is-godzilla-45639768/?no-ist

    Curiously, the article was written in 2012, so as far as I can tell it’s not a piece of Hollywood merchandising, making it either an admirable display of scientific integrity or a slow day in the newsroom.

    We’ll hear music from the soundtrack for the new “Godzilla,” by Alexandre Desplat; also selections from “The Land Before Time,” by James Horner; “One Million Years B.C.,” by Mario Nascimbene; and “Jurassic Park,” by John Williams.

    I hope you’ll join me for Godzilla and friends, on “Picture Perfect,” this Friday evening at 6 ET. You can listen to it then, or later as a webcast, at http://www.wwfm.org.

    RRRRRRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAAGGGGGGHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!

    PHOTOS: King of the Monsters; Queen of the Fur Bikini

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