Those are interesting questions, Guy.
I've mentioned one great score for at least a bad movie (maybe not terrible) - "Obsession," a really lame story but one of the most astoundingly beautiful scores of Herrmann. The score has all the drama, tragedy and emotion that the movie wanted but couldn't accomplish.
I think that the Blue Danube was oddly appropriate in "2001" but Alex North's rejected score was a thousand times better.
One example of a grotesquely bad score I remember is the one to "4-D Man" - yes, a rather obscure sci-fi film, but it was memorable because of its bad music - it had an extremely LOUD big band jazzy score that would suddenly intrude into the scenes of scientists in a lab, or a man being afflicted by pain because he had partly gone into the 4rth dimension. The effect was more than just taking you out of the film, it caused everyone in the room to laugh hilariously each time the cats started up their jam session.
I've mentioned one great score for at least a bad movie (maybe not terrible) - "Obsession," a really lame story but one of the most astoundingly beautiful scores of Herrmann. The score has all the drama, tragedy and emotion that the movie wanted but couldn't accomplish.
I think that the Blue Danube was oddly appropriate in "2001" but Alex North's rejected score was a thousand times better.
One example of a grotesquely bad score I remember is the one to "4-D Man" - yes, a rather obscure sci-fi film, but it was memorable because of its bad music - it had an extremely LOUD big band jazzy score that would suddenly intrude into the scenes of scientists in a lab, or a man being afflicted by pain because he had partly gone into the 4rth dimension. The effect was more than just taking you out of the film, it caused everyone in the room to laugh hilariously each time the cats started up their jam session.