Tag: Kings Row

  • Korngold’s Kings Row Star Wars Influence

    Korngold’s Kings Row Star Wars Influence

    This week on “Picture Perfect, with a new “Star Wars” right around the corner, we’ll hear an extensive suite from one of John Williams’ acknowledged influences, Erich Wolfgang Korngold’s “Kings Row” (1942). The settings of the two films couldn’t be more different – “Kings Row’s” struggle of decency against sinister impulses takes place in a small Midwestern town – but Korngold’s opulently orchestrated score brims with romance and heroism. Check out that opening fanfare!

    Although he was one of the great musical prodigies – celebrated in Vienna in his teens and 20s, especially for his operas – Korngold’s name was kept alive for decades after his death largely because of his work on a number of classic Warner Brothers films of the 1930s and ’40s. His music for the Errol Flynn swashbucklers has been particularly well-loved.

    He had already written music for “Captain Blood,” “The Prince and the Pauper,” “The Adventures of Robin Hood,” “The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex” and “The Sea Hawk” by the time he was offered work on “Kings Row.” Without knowing anything more about the project than the title, he commenced writing music for the main theme, on the assumption that the film was going to be another costume picture. In reality, it was a turn-of-the-century soap opera based in America’s heartland.

    Korngold’s approach couldn’t have been more fortuitous, since it led him to compose one of his grandest themes. It punctuates the action of the film like a cinematic “Ein Heldenleben” – which should come as little surprise, since Korngold actually knew Richard Strauss.

    “Kings Row” was based on the bestseller by Henry Bellamann. The book reveals a kind of dark underbelly to the civility of small town American life. The subject matter was ahead of its time, laying the groundwork for the novel “Peyton Place,” the film “Blue Velvet,” and television series such as “Twin Peaks” and “Desperate Housewives.” Yet at its core is the fundamental decency of its protagonist, Parris Mitchell, and his circle of friends. It is Mitchell’s ambition to become a doctor, and he heads to Vienna to study a new branch of science known as psychology.

    Mitchell was played in the film by Robert Cummings, his best friend Drake by Ronald Reagan, and Randy, a former tomboy from a family of railroad workers, by Ann Sheridan, who received top billing. The studio filled out the cast with a superb ensemble, including Claude Rains, Judith Anderson, Charles Coburn, Harry Davenport and even Maria Ouspenskaya, best known as Maleva the gypsy woman from “The Wolf Man.”

    It’s a grand piece of entertainment, if you can get into the spirit of it, depending on your tolerance for incest, sadism, involuntary amputation, wrongful commitment to an insane asylum and suicide. This is the film in which Reagan exclaims the immortal line, “Where’s the rest of me?”

    Thanks to the Hays Code, the screen adaptation was considerably toned down from – and more upbeat than – the novel. The emphasis is on Mitchell’s idealism in the face of a cruel, and at times horrifying, world. Along the way, there are several amusing (from our perspective) explanations of that mysterious new discipline, the study of the mind.

    I hope you’ll join me for an hour of music from “Kings Row,” by the King of Film Composers, Erich Wolfgang Korngold, this Friday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

  • 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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