Scoundrel wrote:Besides THE PENALTY and SHERLOCK JR., cast my vote for TCM's score for THE CAMERAMAN.
It's awful.
Also the Club Foot Orchestra score for JUPITER'S THUNDERBOLTS on the Flicker Alley Melies set.
It has a "look at us, aren't we clever" attitude that really spoils the film.
Hey! Don't blame Club Foot for travesties they didn't perpetrate! That was me doing the JUPITER'S THUNDERBALLS (on that set, you do need to check the program notes to see who did music, so the mistake is understandable).
Several of the key comedic points in that film were not clear to me on first viewing (for instance, Jupiter dropping the thunderbolts because they were still hot from the forge I only figured out on the third time through), and I doubted many viewers would watch it three times in a row just to catch jokes they'd missed. And if you miss that, you also miss why he uses a pot-holder to pick up his lightning bolt later, which is also funny.
Since the original screenings would have been accompanied by Melies' narration, he was relying on the jokes being pointed out. I didn't want to do narration, so I thought, what if when he picks up the hot thunderbolt, I say "Ouch!" I wouldn't have done that in a more serious film, of course, but this is so obviously a farce that I tried it, and thought it clearly pointed out that the thunderbolts were hot.
One step down the slippery slope and I thought "what the hell" and skiied to the bottom, doing the whole film with vocalizations. The muse's voices were provided by several kids I know, waylaid on their way home from school, Calliope's lyre was interpreted by my son on guitar, the double-reed instrument by my daughter with a Harmon mute in her cornet, etc. I had fun with it. Sorry you didn't like it. The rest of our scores on that set are more traditional, so consider it an experimental three-minute respite from a series of respectful scores.
I'm actually proud of JUPITER. Look at me. Aren't I clever?