Tag: Edward Scissorhands

  • Small Town Secrets Dark Suburbia in Film

    Small Town Secrets Dark Suburbia in Film

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” our unifying theme is two-pronged, as we explore the dark underbelly of small-town life and the consequences of bucking conformity.

    The events of “Peyton Place” (1957) unfold in a picturesque New Hampshire town, in which all sorts of sordid goings-on roil beneath the surface. Grace Metalious’ runaway bestseller spawned a film, starring Lana Turner, and also a subsequent TV series, with Mia Farrow. Neither version is nearly as seedy as the original, which was about an idyllic New England community whose residents have more than their share of skeletons in the closet. The score includes one of Franz Waxman’s best-known themes.

    “Far From Heaven” (2002) is set in a Connecticut suburb during the 1950s. Therefore, it makes sense that the filmmakers deliberately attempted to conjure the vibe of a Douglas Sirk film. In common with Sirk melodramas like “All That Heaven Allows” and “Imitation of Life,” “Far From Heaven” deals with social issues, in this instance regarding race, class, gender roles and sexual orientation.

    The score was the last by the great Elmer Bernstein, who had actually been composing for film since the ‘50s. Over the course of his career, he was nominated for 14 Academy Awards. Despite his work on such classics as “The Ten Commandments,” “The Magnificent Seven” and “To Kill a Mockingbird,” his only win would be for “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” of all things, in 1967. He received his final nomination for his work on this film.

    “Edward Scissorhands” (1990) is Tim Burton’s satirical-yet-touching update of the “Frankenstein” tale, transported to a contemporary American suburb. An artificial man with unusual appendages gradually wins over his suspicious neighbors with his aptitude for hairstyling and lawn sculpture. However, things quickly go south. For the very differences for which Edward was briefly celebrated, he is now hunted by an angry mob.

    Burton presents a cookie-cutter suburbia, simultaneously tacky and anonymous. The houses are painted in faded pastels, and everyone follows the same routine. The score, by Danny Elfman, alternately antic and romantic, has proved to be one of his most memorable.

    Finally, we turn to “Kings Row” (1942), based on the novel by Henry Bellamann (one time dean of the Curtis Institute of Music!). The film is a spiritual forerunner, not only of “Peyton Place,” but also, to an extent, of David Lynch’s “Blue Velvet” and “Twin Peaks,” in the sense that it presents life in an idyllic small town that nonetheless casts some very long shadows.

    The film of “Kings Row” accomplishes a remarkable balancing act, in that it manages to maintain an air of hope and optimism, despite all the horrible things that happen to a number of the characters. In this sense, it pulls some of the punches thrown by the original book, in part as a concession to the Hays Code, which forced some of the rougher themes to be altered, dropped or implied. Bellamann’s novel is a much bleaker experience.

    The score was by Erich Wolfgang Korngold, at this point in his career associated with historical adventure films, as Errol Flynn’s regular composer. He wrote the brash theme music for “Kings Row” wholly in this vein, allegedly on an initial assumption drawn from the film’s title. Korngold’s music for this picture was also one of the primary inspirations for John Williams’ main title for “Star Wars.”

    Good fences make good neighbors. Join me for “Suburban and Small Town Blues” this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, now in syndication on KWAX, the radio station of the University of Oregon!


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    THE LOST CHORD, unusual and neglected rep – Saturday at 7:00 PM EDT/4:00 PM PDT

    Stream them, wherever you are, at the link!

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  • Small Town Secrets in Film Scores

    Small Town Secrets in Film Scores

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” at a time when political tensions run high, I have the bad fortune to have selected a rerun centering on films that explore the dark underbelly of small-town life and the consequences of bucking conformity. This is not a veiled dig at those who live in less-populous areas. I prefer to live there myself!

    Be that as it may, in the interest of balance (though again, wholly by coincidence), next week, the focus will shift to film noir in the gritty city. So no rioting, if you please!

    The events of “Peyton Place” (1957) unfold in a picturesque New Hampshire town, in which all sorts of sordid goings-on roil beneath the surface. Grace Metalious’ runaway bestseller spawned a film, starring Lana Turner, and also a subsequent TV series, with Mia Farrow. Neither version is nearly as seedy as the original, which was about an idyllic New England community whose residents have more than their share of skeletons in the closet. The score includes one of Franz Waxman’s best-known themes.

    “Far from Heaven” (2002) is set in a Connecticut suburb during the 1950s. Therefore, it makes sense that the filmmakers deliberately attempt to conjure the vibe of a Douglas Sirk film. In common with Sirk melodramas like “All That Heaven Allows” and “Imitation of Life,” “Far from Heaven” deals with social issues, in this instance regarding race, class, gender roles, and sexual orientation.

    The score was the last by the great Elmer Bernstein, who had actually been composing for film since the ‘50s. Over the course of his career, Bernstein was nominated for 14 Academy Awards. However, despite his work on such classics as “The Ten Commandments,” “The Magnificent Seven” and “To Kill a Mockingbird,” his only Oscar win came with, of all things, “Thoroughly Modern Millie,” in 1967. He received his final nomination for his work on this film.

    “Edward Scissorhands” (1990) is Tim Burton’s satirical-yet-touching update of the “Frankenstein” tale, transported to a contemporary American suburb. An artificial man with unusual appendages gradually wins over his suspicious neighbors with his aptitude for hairstyling and lawn sculpture. However, things quickly go south. For the very differences for which Edward was briefly celebrated, he is now hunted by an angry mob.

    Burton presents a cookie-cutter suburbia, simultaneously tacky and anonymous. The houses are painted in faded pastels, and everyone follows the same routine. The score, by Danny Elfman, alternately antic and romantic, has proved to be one of his most memorable.

    Finally, we turn to “Kings Row” (1942), based on the novel by Henry Bellamann. The film is a spiritual forerunner not only of “Peyton Place,” but also, to an extent, of David Lynch’s “Blue Velvet” and “Twin Peaks,” in the sense that it presents life in an idyllic small town that nonetheless casts some very long shadows.

    The film of “Kings Row” accomplishes a remarkable balancing act, in that it manages to maintain an air of hope and optimism, despite all the horrible things that happen to a number of the characters. To this end, it pulls some of the punches thrown by the original book, in part as a concession to the Hays Code, which forced some of the rougher themes to be altered, dropped, or implied. Bellamann’s novel is a much bleaker experience.

    The score is by Erich Wolfgang Korngold, at this point in his career associated with historical adventure films, as Errol Flynn’s regular composer. He wrote the brash theme music for “Kings Row” wholly in this vein, allegedly on an initial assumption drawn merely from the film’s title.

    Good fences make good neighbors. Join me for “Suburban and Small Town Blues” this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies, this Saturday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.


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  • Dark Secrets of Suburbia: Peyton Place, Kings Row & More

    Dark Secrets of Suburbia: Peyton Place, Kings Row & More

    This week on “Picture Perfect,” we look past the white picket fences and manicured lawns of suburban and small town America to arrive at some disturbing truths.

    Films like “Peyton Place” and “Kings Row” present seemingly idyllic settings full of long shadows and closets heaped with skeletons; while those like “Far from Heaven” and “Edward Scissorhands” explore the themes of isolation and the consequences of bucking conformity.

    For all its Hays Code concessions, “Kings Row” (1942) can be seen as a spiritual forerunner of the films of David Lynch. Yet its makers manage to finesse Henry Bellamann’s novel so that, for all the terrible occurrences, the film is also full of hope and optimism.

    Erich Wolfgang Korngold, at this point in his career associated with historical adventure films (as Errol Flynn’s regular composer), wrote a brash fanfare wholly in this vein, on an initial assumption made from the film’s title.

    “Peyton Place” (1957) is a natural successor, another sleepy town full of secrets and roiling with gossip. Again, Grace Metalious’ bestselling novel was cleaned up somewhat in its transfer to the screen. Still, the film and a subsequent TV series were spicy enough to stir controversy. Franz Waxman wrote the music, and the theme retains a toehold in the public consciousness.

    “Far from Heaven”(2002) brings the sensibility of a Douglas Sirk melodrama of the 1950s into the 21st century, with its exploration of social issues regarding race, class, gender roles and sexual orientation. Elmer Bernstein, who had been scoring films since the Sirk era, was a perfect choice for composer. He was nominated for an Academy Award for the 14th time, at the age of 80. “Far from Heaven” would be Bernstein’s final score.

    Director Tim Burton’s take on suburban conformity is much broader, with everyone following the same routine, their cookie-cutter houses painted in faded pastels. Fashion and décor are simultaneously tacky and anonymous. Into this setting wanders “Edward Scissorhands” (1990), a gentle Frankenstein’s monster, whose special gifts soon ingratiate him with the suspicious neighbors. But Edward’s acceptance is not to last, as in the film’s third act a mob mentality takes hold. Danny Elfman’s music suits Burton’s alternately moving and satirical fable.

    I hope you’ll join me for an hour of suburban and small town blues this week, on “Picture Perfect,” music for the movies – this Friday evening at 6 ET, with a repeat Saturday morning at 6; or that you’ll enjoy the show later as a webcast at http://www.wwfm.org.

    (And lest you think I am slamming small towns, next week’s theme will be “Gritty Cities.”)

    PHOTO: Well, yeah, if you don’t mind madness, murder, suicide and unnecessary amputation

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