Hitchcock-Herrmann

Bernard Herrmann, génie de la musique de film (Vincent Haegele) | UnderScores

Alfred Hitchcock and Bernard Herrmann

From 1955-1965, film director Alfred Hitchcock and music composer Bernard Herrmann worked together on eight films including “The Trouble with Harry” (1955), “The Man who Knew Too Much” (1956), “The Wrong Man” (1956) “Vertigo” (1958) “North by Northwest” (1959) “Psycho” (1960) “The Birds” (1963) “Marnie” (1964) and the final unused score for “Torn Curtain” (1966.)

Their artistic peak would be “Vertigo”, “North by Northwest” and the mother of all slasher flicks “Psycho”.

Vertigomovie restoration.jpg “Vertigo” (1958), shelved for two decades, then beautifully restored in 1996 may have been their mostly deeply personal film.  A tragic love story when a man falls for a woman who never existed and attempts to remake her with a lookalike.  The music, especially “Scene d’amour” is that long throbbing orgasm of musical release where the man meets his long lost love.  (Or does he?)

Northbynorthwest1.jpg “North by Northwest” (1959) starring Cary Grant at his most suavest, is the man accused for a murder he didn’t commit – a favorite topic of the director.  Contains the famous run across Mt. Rushmore and the train-thru-the-tunnel ending.  “North by Northwest’s” prelude over Saul Bass’ opening titles sum up the exciting sequences yet to follow.  Critics call this the precursor to the James Bond film series.

The poster features a large image of a young woman in white underwear. The names of the main actors are featured down the right side of the poster. Smaller images of Anthony Perkins and John Gavin are above the words, written in large print, "Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho". “Psycho” (1960.)  Herrmann’s most imitated score.  Can you imagine the shower scene without it?  Hitchcock’s dark, subversive look (combined with Joseph Stephano’s brilliant script) of a mother-son duo living in a Gothic mansion overlooking the Bates Motel.  (Or was it?)

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What ended the remarkable partnership of Hitchcock-Herrmann?

In the mid-1960’s, there was profit to be made by soundtracks and love themes, most notably Henry Mancini (‘Moon River” from “Breakfast at Tiffany’s) and Mauri Jarre (Lara’s Theme from Dr. Zhivago.)  Universal Studios wanted to dump Bernard Herrmann from their next collaboration because of the reaction to “Marnie”.  “Marnie” was poorly received and Herrmann’s music was called “old-fashioned”.  (The movie has since been regarded as the last classic Hitchcockian work.)

Alfred Hitchcock refused to fire Herrmann, but asked him to compose a score more commercially viable.  Herrmann agreed.

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After completion of the filming of “Torn Curtain”, Herrmann began to dub his orchestral arrangements over the film.  Hitchcock came to listen and immediately knew it was not what he wanted.  Herrmann couldn’t change his style and was fired.

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Bernard Herrmann’s score for “Torn Curtain” was intense, dramatic and better than the one that would replace it. Alas, it was not “commercial”. (Either was the one they ultimately used.)

John Addison was hired to replace him.  The new love song was never used.  “Torn Curtain” Hitchcock’s 50th film flopped, judged to be too flat and boring.

Although Hitchcock-Herrmann would go on with separate careers, Hitchcock’s soundtracks lost their former glory.

Text © 2022 – EricReports

Last Movie Roles – Part 2

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Bruce Lee – Game of Death

Bruce Lee was midway into production with “Game of Death”, when he was called away to star in “Enter the Dragon” (1973.)  After completing “Dragon”, he intended to finish “Death”.  Instead, he was found dead with actress Betty Ting Pei from the drug Equagesic (containing meprobamate.)  This caused cerebral edema (brain swelling.)  Fans insist Lee was killed by rival martial arts leaders for teaching his style of fighting to non-Asians.  “Game of Death” was completed in 1978, using a lookalike actor.

Brandon Lee – The Crow

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Son of Bruce Lee, Brandon was following in his father’s footsteps.  He had already had success with “Rapid Fire” (1992.)  “The Crow”, a dark, goth, revenge drama would make him a star.  Fate would step in, however, when a .44 Magnum revolver was loaded with real bullets instead of blanks during filming.  Brandon Lee was fatally shot on March 31, 1993.  “The Crow” was finished with doubles and digitally-altered images.  [Note:  In “Game of Death”, Lee’s character is shot while filming a scene for a movie.]

John Wayne – The Shootist

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Western star John Wayne stars as J.B. Books – a gunfighter/former Marshall, who has only weeks to live.  A sad and poignant end to a distinguished career.  Wayne died three years later from cancer – probably contracted from radioactive soil near St. George, Utah, while filming “The Conqueror” (1956.)

Richard Burton – 1984

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Richard Burton with co-star John Hurt

Richard Burton’s best film in years as “O’Brien”, the man who held your worst fears in Room 101.  [Based on George Orwell’s classic novel.]  Amazingly, he was nominated seven times for an Academy Award, yet never won.  Cause of death:  cerebral hemorrhage on August 5, 1984.

Montgomery Clift – The Defector

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Montgomery Clift starred in this low-budget, cold-war drama only to prove to Warner Brothers he could still function well enough to perform with Elizabeth Taylor in “Reflections in a Golden Eye” (1967.)  Unfortunately, he died soon after filming from a heart attack.  (Clift had been having health problems for ten years following a near fatal car accident.)  Marlon Brando replaced him in “Reflections in a Golden Eye”.

Edward G. Robinson – Soylent Green

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Edward G. Robinson (deaf and terminally ill) knew he was dying from cancer and used it to great effect in his grand finale with star Charlton Heston.  Robinson would win an Honorary Oscar, posthumously, that same year.  (1973.)

Alfred Hitchcock – Family Plot

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Director Alfred Hitchcock became world famous for his suspense thrillers:  “Psycho”, “Vertigo”, “Frenzy”, “The Birds”, “North by Northwest,” and “The Man Who Knew Too Much”.  Likewise, his celebrity grew through his film cameos.  Additionally, he introduced every episode of “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” (1955-1965.)  His last cameo was as a silhouette.  Hitchcock died in 1980 from kidney failure.

Heath Ledger – The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus

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Director-writer Terry Gilliam’s over-the-top ode to the Illuminati:  complete with the death of its star, Heath Ledger.  On January 22, 2008, Ledger was found not breathing in his apartment.  First to be contacted was his girlfriend, Mary-Kate Olsen, and then later 9-1-1.  Eventual cause of death was discovered to be a lethal combination of drugs.  Ledger’s doctors were cleared of wrongdoing.  Olsen refused to speak with police unless granted immunity.  Ledger was replaced with three different actors:  Johnny Depp, Jude Law and Colin Farrell.

Kim Novak – Liebestraum

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Actress Kim Novak is still very much alive, but she has vowed that “Liebestraum” will be her swansong, stating that her best scene was cut.  The movie is a “Twin Peaks”-like mystery without the mastery of David Lynch.  (Mike Figgis directed.)  Maybe, that’s why it wasn’t a hit.  Still, Miss Novak is always worth watching and she’s excellent in it.

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Brittany Murphy – Deadline

Image result for images, brittany murphy in deadline  The pictures say it all, don’t they?  On December 20, 2009, Brittany Murphy was found collapsed in her shower.  She had been suffering from ill health recently and the cause of death was attributed to “pneumonia, anemia, and multiple drugs.”  Strangely enough, her husband Simon Monjack died on May 23, 2010 from pneumonia and anemia.  Police blamed “mold”, then later recanted.  Murphy’s father paid for his own analysis and said she’d been poisoned.

Article Text © 2017 – ERN.  All Rights Reserved.

Hollywood Fails: Unreleased or Unfinished Films You Will Never See

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tumblr_m3yqqpQQPy1rve0ppo1_500 THE DAY THE CLOWN CRIED – (1971-1974)  Jerry Lewis debacle, some of it funded with his own money, based on the true story of a Jewish Holocaust clown allowed to live if he lures children to their deaths in the Nazi gas chambers.  Never completed.  Lewis has disowned it.  The master negative is still being held in a Swedish vault.

9781250007087  THE OTHER SIDE OF THE WIND – (1970’s)  Nearly completed by master director Orson Welles, until Iranian funding was withdrawn.  (Iran fell to the Ayatollah in 1979.)  Costar and biographer Peter Bogdanovich offered to complete it, but was blocked by Welles’ heir.  Previewed during the 1975 AFI awards.

7394020_3 SOMETHING’S GOT TO GIVE – (1962)  Troubled production plagued by the unraveling mental and physical health of its star, Marilyn Monroe.  Studio fired MM midway, then tried to replace her with Lee Remick.  Costar Dean Martin refused to go on.  MM rehired on August 1; died on August 5 from a drug overdose.  Directed by George Cukor.

default_ce_kubrick_napoleon_poster_0911061347_id_308650 NAPOLEON – (1969-70)  Famed director Stanley Kubrick spent a year in pre-production for this epic…until it was cancelled by MGM.  The fading studio had decided to cut back on big-budget films and rebuild itself as a Vegas casino-resort.

thEYZI6TWM  ARYAN PAPERS – (early 1990’s)  Another Kubrick cancellation.  Steven Spielberg’s “Schindler’s List” happened to come out during this same time period.  It was felt that too many Holocaust films could not succeed financially.  Based on the novel “Wartime Lies” by Louis Begley.

thUJ7IUHI3  ALFRED HITCHCOCK’S KALEIDISCOPE – (1967)  Director Alfred Hitchcock, intrigued by the French New Wave and Antionini’s “Blow-Up” (1966), began work on this avant-guarde, cinema-verite movie until Universal replaced it with the cold-war spy drama “Topaz” (1969.)

Dark-Blood_River-Phoenix  DARK BLOOD – (1993/2012)  Briefly released in an unfinished form in 2012.  Production stopped when star River Phoenix died from a drug overdose in 1993.  Phoenix plays a desert survivalist.

8d747f271efccaba23a53fb8fe333074 THE RAVAGERS – (1970)  Fifth of the Matt Helm film series was cancelled due to the waning popularity of spy films and the murder of its costar Sharon Tate (who was scheduled to reprise her role as Freya Carlson from “The Wrecking Crew.”)

 thLORGMAP1 ROMANCE OF THE PINK PANTHER – (1981)  Meant to be the sixth Peter Sellers-Inspector Clouseau comedy.  Partially written by Sellers himself.  Never filmed; Sellers died on July 24, 1980.  The “Pink Panther” film series continued on with different actors including Ted Wass, Roberto Benini and Steve Martin.  (Dudley Moore wisely turned it down.)

Text © 2016 – EricReports