Tienes un MP, Otto+.
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Enseguidita abro tu carta con aroma a jazmín, guapetón
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Ya viene.... YA VIENE. Se está cociendo... . Ardo en deseos de tener la resurrección de Elizabeth, momentazo musical decadente a lo carnaval del infierno que quedó fuera del programa original.
Mary Shelley's Frankenstein (1994) - Patrick Doyle
Orchestrated by Lawrence Ashmore, Gavin Greenaway, John Bell
1m0 To Think of a Story (Opening Titles)
1m1 Stormy Weather
1m1AR Did You Say Mutiny?
1m2A The Dogs Attack
1m2R They're Already Dead
1m3R2 What's Out There?
1m4 Victor and Mother
2m0R Save the Baby
2m1 There Is An Answer
2m2R2 Polka - Ballroom
3m0 Waltz
3m1R I Won't If You Won't
3m2R No One Need Ever Die
3m3R Ingolstadt
3m4A We All Know About That
3m4R This Will Be Perfect
3m5R Waldman
3m6R2 P.S. Elizabeth
4m0 Life is Life
4m1A Elizabeth's Letter
4m1R2 A Perilous Direction
4m2R2 An Abomination
4m3R We're Losing Her
4m4 This Shouldn't Happen
4m5 You're Evil
4m6R A Risk Worth Taking
5m3 If He Were Mine
5m4R That's the Combination
5m5 Victor Begins
5m6R Victor, It's Me
5m7R Even If You Die
5m7R2 Even If You Die
6m1 Creation
6m2A Walk the Walk
6m2R It's Alive!
6m3R What Have I Done?
6m4R Evil Stitched to Evil
6m5 Hunger
6m6 Kill Him!
6m7 The Escape
6m9R The Reunion
7m1 The Bible
7m3 The Journal
8m1 Friendless
8m2 Geneva
8m4 Frankenstein Found
8m5 Have You Seen Willy?
8m6 The Locket
8m7 Death of Justine
8m8/9m0 I'll Meet You There
9m1R Yes I Speak
10m1 God Forgive Me
10m2R Materials, Remember
10m3 Please Wait
10m4 Who Is This Man?
10m5 The Honeymoon
10m6 The Wedding Night
10m8/11m0 Death of Elizabeth
11m1 Rebirth of Elizabeth
11m2 Remember?
11m3 You Remember
11m4R2 Polka - Deranged Version
11m5R She's Beautiful
11m6 Death of Victor
12m1 He Was My Father
12m2 Home!
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
¿Y que compositor es especialista en hacer carnavales del infierno, musica desquiciada y decadente?. ¿Eh, Tripley?
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
007: "You must be joking"
_______________________
CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"
_______________________
EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"
Hay una anécdota muy graciosa acerca del Potter de Patrick Doyle. En cierto momento, parece ser que WB cuestionó a Mike Newell que Patrick Doyle tuviera la capacidad compositiva para aportar el suficiente musculo orquestal para musicalizar esta entrega, más bruta y oscura que las anteriores.
Es magnífico en dramas o peliculas de época. Pero... ¿puede mantener altos niveles de intensidad sin dejar de ser lírico y melódico?.
Mike Newell se les quedó mirando y respondió: ¿Ustedes no han visto Frankenstein, verdad? ¿O Dead Again?.
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Mira que yo critiqué en su estreno esa escena de la resurrección y caída de Elizabeth (que no aparece como tal en el original literario y es más bien una reelaboración de lo allí escrito). Ahora valoro mucho más ese arriesgada reelaboración y, en lo fílmico es una secuencia me parece apabullante.
Saludos
Última edición por Tripley; 06/07/2021 a las 00:29
Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
007: "You must be joking"
_______________________
CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"
_______________________
EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"
Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
007: "You must be joking"
_______________________
CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"
_______________________
EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Es cómo si Branagh estuviese febrilmente embriagado del espiritu romantico de la obra, y se desate y deje llevar. Más de lo habitual, quiero decir.
Última edición por Branagh/Doyle; 06/07/2021 a las 01:00 Razón: Errata
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Última edición por Tripley; 06/07/2021 a las 01:33
Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
007: "You must be joking"
_______________________
CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"
_______________________
EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"
Efectivamente, la película en esos aspectos es exagerada y sí, romántica en lo visual: esos prados alpinos donde caen rayos, el glaciar, las escenas árticas, un Ingolstadt de arquitectura casi destartalada de cuento de hadas (y ese laboratorio, directamente burtoniano).
Saludos
Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
007: "You must be joking"
_______________________
CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"
_______________________
EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"
Cierto, y la cámara a su bola. Recuerdo un momento, cuando Victor alquila el laboratorio, que la cámara se adelanta dejándolos atrás a el y la casera, y recorre la estancia en un breve plano secuencia +travelling circular mientras Doyle anuncia gravemente lo que estar por acontecer (Victor Begins)
Respecto a la licencia que se toman con Elizabeth, yo casi me atrevería a decir que mejora lo expuesto por la novela para el desenlace del personaje, novela que por otra parte me parece exquisita. Los soliloquios (bueno, casi...) de la criatura, y la reflexiones del propio Victor, revelan un talento literario inmenso.
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
Q: "I'm your new quartermaster"
007: "You must be joking"
_______________________
CLAUDIO: "Lady, as you are mine, I am yours"
_______________________
EISENSTEIN: "I'm a boxer for the freedom of the cinematic expression" -"I'm a scientific dilettante with encyclopedic interests"
Si, de hecho hay secuencias de varios minutos donde Branagh escala, no sin gran dificultad, glaciares helados, sube montañas, en suma, el hombre contra los elementos naturales, si.
"Did you know I knew how to play this? From which part of me did this knowledge reside? From this mind? From these hands? From this heart? And reading, and speaking! Not so much things learned as things remembered..."
Mi mujer, que tiene mucho más fresca la novela que yo, dice que la peli de Branagh sigue el libre en un 98% en lo que respecta a trama y acontecimientos, más allá de cambiar algún detalle como el desenlace del personaje de Elizabeth o el de Clerval y el hecho de que Branagh use el cerebro del profesor Waldman con la criatura -monumental e irreconocible John Cleese, por cierto- (¡a quién el propio De Niro mató en vida!) con la criatura, cosa que no es así en la novela.
Respecto al tono, dice que la secuencia clave está al principio, cuando Victor sale con su madre y Elizabeth a jugar a la campiña, y aprovecha para probar su pararrayos. Las manos de Elizabeth y Victor se tocan electrificadas mientras Doyle, en un momento maravilloso de orquestación que simula la electricidad (algo que la partitura hará en varias ocasiones) , insinúa el tema de amor y el de la creación entrelazados mientras Bonham Carter suelta aquello de I feel... alive!
Es bucoilico, es azucarado, es fabulistico, es exagerado, es un cuento... pero también es inquietante. Si no compras eso, el resto de la película no te entrará.
PD: Que bien esta De Niro en esta peli: Contenido, reflexivo, lleno de matices, profundamente herido.
Última edición por Branagh/Doyle; 06/07/2021 a las 13:22
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.
El mejor track del año
Y de paso, escuchen a Lamboley, joven promesa de la musica francesa, muy bueno, no solo por Lupin.
Dos partituras que fueron rechazadas y de las que no tenía constancia.
Dario Marianelli compuso el score original para A good year de Ridley Scott en 2006, pero su trabajo acabó siendo descartado.
"It was also a great pleasure to work on the new Ridley Scott film, "A Good Year" starring Russell Crowe, with a very touching score by Dario Marianelli" (Nick Ingman) .
Y a Stephen Warbeck le rechazaron su partitura para Killshot (2008) de John Madden, lo que puso fin a sus muchos años de colaboración con el director británico.
"There’s this misconception these days that a thematic score means a dated-sounding score. This, of course, is a cop out. There’s no reason to throw the baby out with the bathwater. The art of composing modern scores is the having the skill set to keep motifs alive while being relevant. But too many times, newer composers have no idea what fully developed themes are because they grew up on scores that are nothing more than ostinatos and “buahs.”
John Ottman.