Reno used to be really cool but people discovered it and now they're all moving here and it is being overrun. I think I'll move to Virginia City (just a few miles up the road) and become a colorful drunk. They have lots of those there.
But back on the original subject - one thing that struck me in this discussion of later Hitchcock was the quality or lack thereof of later scores without Herrmann - "Torn Curtain" is fluff without Herrmann. "Topaz" ? I have no concept of the music in it. Forgettable at best.
HOWEVER -
"Frenzy" - a very good score that had a grand opening title to match the ultimate "Largest to Smallest" visual motif of Hitchcock - the entire Thames down to a necktie on a corpse floating in it. Then a powerful, hard-driving theme to accompany the desperate search for the killer, etc. Some very good music in that.
Also, "Family Plot" which I like and don't care if other people think it's fluff -it's very good fluff - entertaining, clever and humorous with excellent performances - and if Hitchcock had been immortal would probably have been a light interlude between Frenzy and the next powerful film, "The Short Night." This had a score by John Williams, pre-Star Wars. It is interesting to contrast this to Herrmann. In general the music by Williams is insipid and has no strong emotion whatsoever, but it is very skillful and provides what was needed at each point of the film's structure. It does not provide however what Herrmann did - the art of film music. It is just technique. Very effective technique though.
But back on the original subject - one thing that struck me in this discussion of later Hitchcock was the quality or lack thereof of later scores without Herrmann - "Torn Curtain" is fluff without Herrmann. "Topaz" ? I have no concept of the music in it. Forgettable at best.
HOWEVER -
"Frenzy" - a very good score that had a grand opening title to match the ultimate "Largest to Smallest" visual motif of Hitchcock - the entire Thames down to a necktie on a corpse floating in it. Then a powerful, hard-driving theme to accompany the desperate search for the killer, etc. Some very good music in that.
Also, "Family Plot" which I like and don't care if other people think it's fluff -it's very good fluff - entertaining, clever and humorous with excellent performances - and if Hitchcock had been immortal would probably have been a light interlude between Frenzy and the next powerful film, "The Short Night." This had a score by John Williams, pre-Star Wars. It is interesting to contrast this to Herrmann. In general the music by Williams is insipid and has no strong emotion whatsoever, but it is very skillful and provides what was needed at each point of the film's structure. It does not provide however what Herrmann did - the art of film music. It is just technique. Very effective technique though.