@mathis said:
To quote Orson Welles: "What are the three most important things in a film? The script, the script and the script."
It´s the story, stupid.
That´s why the music of Mr. Glass worked in "The hours".
Uh. Mathis. That's interesting, but I REALLY disagree with you. I even teach this to other film composers.
Here's a way of looking at it:
1) Is a composer who writes incredibly fresh melodies and lines but orchestrates in alrady existing ways, really a COMPOSER?
2) Is a songwriter who writes great lyrics to the same old progression with strummed acoustic guitar, really a great SONGWRITER?
3) Is a movie with a great story but horrid execution really a great MOVIE?
Answers:
1) John Williams. NO.
2) Bob Dylan. NO.
3) The Phantom Menace. NOT BY A LOOOOOONG SHOT.
If a song with ONLY great lyrics is not really a great song, than what is it? It's a poem. Good songs also have great music.
A movie with ONLY a great story was best left as a book.
Are movies with great stories great movies?
Are books with great stories gaurunteed to be a good movie?
Great screenplays emprically all that's necessary for a movie to be great?
I for one have never recieved a script. They try to give them to me. Goodness they try. I always say:
"I've never written a score to a book. And I'm not sure how I'd get an orchestra into the living room of a reader. PLEASE, send me the movie when it is ready and then I will begin writing the score."
The story has got nothing to do with a great film. Nada. It's all about the filmmaking. Stories are best left in books. In fact teh most poorly executed movies are usually those trying to just tell a story. Movies can and do more than that. I know of many films that succeed and have NO story at all. Some of them even with no score.
But I understand this was ORSON WELLES who said this. I disagree with him. But I know what he is trying to say. But it's not like he didn't know how to use a camera as well.
EEE