Pinball1970
Valued Senior Member
Very Beautiful.One of my all time favs...
Bernstein also did “The Great Escape.”
Very Beautiful.One of my all time favs...
I think they used more than one bike- some info hereThey have the motorcycle used in that movie at the Museum of Transport here in St. Louis, Missouri. Other cool things as well. Gooney bird on the way in to the parking lot.
I was brought up on hard sci-fi, in which authors take the trouble to make the technology hang together in a rational manner and take some pleasure in explaining it. I also don't buy the notion that an alien visitation would be hushed up by the authorities - it would never work, because the scientists involved in the discovery would never agree. So I thought the approach of "Let's bedazzle the audience with mystery and special effects and to hell with the plot" was patronising and hogwash.I watched it recently and enjoyed it. I was little when I saw it and I found the first part very confusing. Richard Dreyfus was exceptional in the film, falling apart in front of his family.
The film is about alien visitation so the science is pretty much out of the window (it is fiction after all)
One thing I do remember is the mother ship returning the flight 19 pilots and one of the techs said.
"Einstein was right, they haven't aged at all."
I remember thinking, "What the hell does that mean!?"
We did not cover time dilation in "o" level physics!
I am not a huge sci fi fan and I did not regard it as particularly sci fi.So I thought the approach of "Let's bedazzle the audience with mystery and special effects and to hell with the plot" was patronising and hogwash.
I like Dire Straits so I may like this.Mark Knopfler’s Local Hero score is fantastic:
Anyone who has spent time in the Scottish Highlands will find it brings memories flooding back. He gets it exactly.
You have all the big hitters although I would put John Carpenter in there. Simple themes but so effective.Someone offered up Ennio Morricone - quite a substantial body of work that's good - his Westerns scores especially - but these two non-Western maybe lesser-well-known ones get me every time:
On Earth as it is in Heaven, from The Mission
Chi Mai, the version from The Life & Times of David Lloyd George
(ignore the images: someone has used stills from "The Day of the Jackal", it seems, but it's the only version I could find that had the version of the score that I remember most fondly)
Hans Zimmer - what's not to love, especially The Battle from Gladiator
And this is before wandering down the John Williams or Jerry Goldsmith rabbit holes.
As for John Barry... I do find that most of his scores sound, in some way, too similar, but this one always makes me smile, although I think that's just a guilty-pleasure from the nostalgia that is... The Black Hole
(but even with this it too easily wanders in my head to the themes he's used in his Bond scores. Ah, well.)
And then, unrelated to what has previously been suggested, there's this - obviously not written for the film, but, heck, it was perfect.
Platoon - Barber's Adagio for Strings
Yeah, they would have spares on hand. When I was stationed in SoCal I got in the way at a few shoots on location.I think they used more than one bike- some info here
Heinlein, Clark, Niven, Pournelle, what has happened to scifi since then. Joh Scalzi, of course, but otherwise...I was brought up on hard sci-fi, in which authors take the trouble to make the technology hang together in a rational manner and take some pleasure in explaining it. I also don't buy the notion that an alien visitation would be hushed up by the authorities - it would never work, because the scientists involved in the discovery would never agree. So I thought the approach of "Let's bedazzle the audience with mystery and special effects and to hell with the plot" was patronising and hogwash.
He's one I would happily exclude. His scores fit the films they're in, but I'd hardly call them sublime. They don't, for me at least, particularly elevate the films. They don't detract, and they do fit the aesthetic, but I'm not sure I could pick any out and say which film it's from. I'd almost put his scores down as just being entirely incidental music... even the main themes.You have all the big hitters although I would put John Carpenter in there. Simple themes but so effective.
I also disliked Star Wars and liked at least some of the first series of Star Trek (apart from the annoying soft focus treatment of women who one was supposed to find glamorous. They were all far too American to appeal to a Brit's sense of female attractiveness.) The Doomsday Machine was the best episode.I am not a huge sci fi fan and I did not regard it as particularly sci fi.
I suppose if the movie is rubbish the music does not matter.
I hated Star Wars, just thought it was boring.
Love star Trek.
Perhaps you could start a thread?
I'm not knowledgeable enough and you seem quite passionate about it!
He's one I would happily exclude. His scores fit the films they're in, but I'd hardly call them sublime. They don't, for me at least, particularly elevate the films. They don't detract, and they do fit the aesthetic, but I'm not sure I could pick any out and say which film it's from. I'd almost put his scores down as just being entirely incidental music... even the main themes.![]()
Fair enough. JC thought "the Fog" was his best. I may run that by you as a last gasp.^ I appreciate the effort but... just... no. Not for me. I just don't think it's that good.![]()
Oh, that's her? A few clips on you tube from the fog with her.Run Adrienne Barbeau past me, please.
You may have missed her wet t-shirt movie, "Swamp Thing." If so, lucky you.Oh, that's her? A few clips on you tube from the fog with her.