I crave more discussion of Bernard Herrmann! Please respond with your own ideas.
other great scores - "Marnie." This is what Truffaut called Hitchcock's "flawed masterpiece." The film was affected by various problems (including Hitchcock trying to jump the leading lady), but Herrmann's score creates an intensely passionate effect in a story of overly Freudian psychosexual drama (about which Hitchcock said "I don't believe a word of it.") Particularly striking are the main theme for Marnie, which Herrmann pulled out all the romantic stops on, the hysterical "red" motif in shrieking woodwinds and violins for Marnie's phobia, and the horseback riding scene with its echoes of the fox hunt in the horns leading to a catastrophe as the horse falls.
"Mysterious Island" For another spectacular Harryhausen FX fest, Herrmann did some of his most grotesque orchestrations. Particularly vivid is the writing for woodwinds in 7/4 that accompanies the fight with the giant crab. Also, some extremely atmospheric impressions of nature in turmoil, as in the tremendous evocation of the balloon in the storm at the beginning. Christopher Palmer, a fine scholar of film music, stated that while Debussy was the supreme musical interpreter of nature in repose, Herrmann was the greatest of nature in turmoil. Something like his own life, apparently.
other great scores - "Marnie." This is what Truffaut called Hitchcock's "flawed masterpiece." The film was affected by various problems (including Hitchcock trying to jump the leading lady), but Herrmann's score creates an intensely passionate effect in a story of overly Freudian psychosexual drama (about which Hitchcock said "I don't believe a word of it.") Particularly striking are the main theme for Marnie, which Herrmann pulled out all the romantic stops on, the hysterical "red" motif in shrieking woodwinds and violins for Marnie's phobia, and the horseback riding scene with its echoes of the fox hunt in the horns leading to a catastrophe as the horse falls.
"Mysterious Island" For another spectacular Harryhausen FX fest, Herrmann did some of his most grotesque orchestrations. Particularly vivid is the writing for woodwinds in 7/4 that accompanies the fight with the giant crab. Also, some extremely atmospheric impressions of nature in turmoil, as in the tremendous evocation of the balloon in the storm at the beginning. Christopher Palmer, a fine scholar of film music, stated that while Debussy was the supreme musical interpreter of nature in repose, Herrmann was the greatest of nature in turmoil. Something like his own life, apparently.