Elevator Man
Sidekick
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2010
- Messages
- 3,726
- Reaction score
- 6
- Points
- 31
Happy 64th Birthday to Danny Elfman!

Nice post. I guess it is time to watch this again. Loved it when it first came out. My friend bought most of the merchandise, a wall full. Big Beatty fan. I had a mixed cassette tape with many of the tracks on it with some John Barry and Williams track as well. I wore that tape thin in the early 90's.![]()
Warren Beatty’s Dick Tracy was a movie I watched countless times as a kid.
Universal Monsters Universe said:Danny Elfman, one of the most iconic of composers, has created the opening theme for Universals Dark Universe which debuts with The Mummy. Elfman is no stranger when it comes to creating iconic compositions, just look at Batman, Spider-Man, Hulk, and even 2010s The Wolfman. Looking to inspire and entertain a new generation of fans with their classic monsters, Donna Langley, Chairman of Universal Pictures said the following:
As we launch Dark Universe with Dannys provocative theme before The Mummy and collaborate with a brilliant filmmaker like Bill [Condon] to weave the story of a very modern woman [Bride of Frankenstein] in a very classic tale, we feel confident were off to a tremendous start.
From his first score on Tim Burtons Pee-wees Big Adventure and his iconic theme for The Simpsonsnot to mention his collaborations with filmmakers including Ang Lee, David O. Russell, Sam Raimi, Rob Marshall, Guillermo del Toro, Joss Whedon and Peter Jacksonfour-time Academy Award® nominee Danny Elfmans inimitable compositions have vaulted him into one of the most versatile and accomplished composers in history.
I grew up on monsters. Monsters were my life, and these iconic Universal monsters were almost like my family. I simply wouldnt be the same without them. When I got the opportunity to compose a theme for the Dark Universe logo, of course I jumped at it. What could be more fun than connecting to this world that has always been so deeply imbedded in my psyche? I tried to find something that was new but still had some connections with the pastthe originsat least in a subtle way. Something that was looking forward to a creative, fertile, imaginative future that Dark Universe will enter, and at the same time saluting the heritage of the tragic heroes (or anti-heroes) of my childhood. To the Monsters!!!! Danny Elfman
To the monsters, indeed! Its very exciting to have another talented individual as a part of the Dark Universe and Danny Elfman will almost certainly ensure that our first proper introduction into the world of gods and monsters is as unforgettable as a Universal Monster film should be!
The Hollywood Reporter said:Danny Elfman is known for working on larger-than-life characters like Batman and Spider-Man, but now he's going much, much smaller.
With the help of indi.com, Elfman has launched a short film competition in conjunction with the 2017 LA Film Festival. All six movements from Elfman's 2008 "Rabbit and Rogue" ballet are available for filmmakers to use in their short films with no licensing fees or red tape.
Elfman is giving away his Rabbit and Rogue intellectual property, so it's a little ironic that he must license his own music from the studios whenever he performs live.
"The majority of the big studio stuff, my collaborations with Tim [Burton], its all owned by them. I would say that I own the rights to maybe five percent of what I've written," says Elfman, who has been spending more time working on low budget films, for which he collects just a $1 fee.
"Every year, I try to do at least one $1 film. On those films, I do own the publishing. Obviously, if theyre only paying me a dollar I gotta get something," he says with a laugh.
For this contest, Elfman has enlisted a number of filmmaking friends to judge, including Paul Haggis, McG, Sam Taylor-Johnson, Gus Van Sant and Suzanne Todd. The contests winners will be announced on Thursday, with the winning filmmakers getting to meet with the judges and see their short films screened at the LA Film Festival.
Director McG, who worked with Elfman on 2009's Terminator: Salvation, says he's a lifelong fan.
"Believe me, I'd love to work with Danny on everything I do. We gingers have to stick together, we're in short supply," McG says. "Its just really difficult to catch him in-between projects, he stays so busy."
The demand for Elfman was not always so high. Before he was established, Elfman and several of his musician friends would spend long days performing on the street for tips. When asked to compare a good day on the street with a not-so-great day, Elfman is blunt.
"When youre a street musician, its real simple. A good day on the street means you come home with a full hat and you eat," says Elfman. "A bad day is when you come home and youre splitting up loose change between eight people, and youre not gonna eat."
Despite a lifetime of performing, Elfman never acclimated to the spotlight. Last year at a sold out concert in London, he sang Jack Skeleton's songs from A Nightmare Before Christmas. As he recalls, it was quite the challenge.
"I was dealing with a huge bout of stage fright I hadn't sung live for almost 18 years. I just found myself froze backstage. I couldn't move my feet and I was due on stage," says Elfman. "Helena Bonham Carter helped give me a little shove, by reminding me to say, Fk it. And it was a good thing, because it was amazing night. It was actually one of the most amazing nights I've ever had."
The Rabbit and Rogue contest was produced by Richard Kraft and Laura Engel. You can view the submitted films and learn more information about Elfman's competition by visiting its website.
Film Music Reporter said:Danny Elfman has taken over scoring duties on the upcoming superhero movie Justice League. Junkie XL aka Tom Holkenborg who co-scored Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice for the DC movie universe was originally scoring the film before director Zack Snyder left the project. Joss Whedon is overseeing additional photography is beginning this week in London. Elfman has previously collaborated with Whedon on Avengers: Age of Ultron. Justice League starring Ben Affleck, Henry Cavill, Gal Gadot, Ezra Miller, Ray Fisher and Jason Momoa will be released in theaters nationwide on November 17 by Warner Bros. Pictures. (The Hollywood Reporter)
Film Music Reporter said:Danny Elfman will be returning as the composer for the upcoming sequel Fifty Shades Freed. The film is directed by James Foley (Glengarry Glenn Ross, Confidence) who also helmed this years Fifty Shades Darker and stars Dakota Johnson, Jamie Dornan, Arielle Kebbel, Kim Basinger, Brant Daugherty and Luke Grimes. The movie continues the story from 2015s Fifty Shades of Grey and this years Fifty Shades Darker, which Elfman also scored. Niall Leonard has written the screenplay for the final installment in the trilogy based on E.L. James bestselling novel. Michael De Luca & Dana Brunetti (The Social Network, Captain Phillips, 21) are producing the project with James. Fifty Shades Darker is set to be released on February 9, 2018 by Universal Pictures.
Elfmans upcoming projects also include Justice League. He also scored the period drama Tulip Fever, which is scheduled to be released in U.S. theaters this August.
Film Music Reporter said:Danny Elfman is reteaming with director Gus Van Sant on the upcoming biographical drama Dont Worry, He Wont Get Far on Foot. The film is written and directed by Van Sant and stars Joaquin Phoenix, Rooney Mara, Jonah Hill and Jack Black. The movie tells the story of quadriplegic cartoonist John Callahan who became paralyzed following a car accident at the age of 21 and turned to art as a form of therapy, drawing by clutching a pen between his two hands. Charles-Marie Anthonioz (Spring Breakers), Mourad Belkeddar and Nicolas Lhermitte are producing the project for Iconoclast, alongside Steve Golin (Spotlight, The Revenant, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) for Anonymous Content. Elfman and Van Sant have previously worked together on such movies as Good Will Hunting, To Die For, Psycho, Milk, Promised Land, Restless, as well as ABCs recent mini-series When We Rise. Dont Worry, He Wont Get Far on Foot is currently in post-production. No word yet on a premiere date.
As ever, a terrific review Elevator_Man.
One thing I wanted to discuss was what you called 'Christian's turmoil theme' from the first score - the one that sounds like V for Vendetta. I've always interpreted this as an inverted version of Ana's theme used whenever she is struggling to 'get through' to him. What you referred to as 'Elena's Theme' is actually this theme - and as these are both Ana-heavy scenes I think it supports the notion of it being her theme. Elena is trying to break the two up so it makes sense to use it in this context.
Christian has his three note motif which is more extensively used in Darker. It gets a dramatic take at the end of Dossiers if you want to hear it - it was generally played with forceful strings in the first to reflect his dominance but in this score it's played more sensitively to reflect his character change. It also generally plays after the new 'Love theme' to suggest that their relationship finally completes him.
I've been singing the praises of these two scores a lot, actually. I think Elfman's work here is so intelligent - the way everything culminated in 'Counting to Six' from the first score is just stunning to me. There are always a million different things going on - like how the main theme doesn't complete itself in 'Nightmare' as the two have broken up, how the love theme is introduced so unconvincingly in 'Bathroom Encounter' to represent how Ana is rethinking their relationship or how both Christian and Ana's themes play at the same time in 'Christian' to highlight how they are separate from one another despite standing opposite.
I hope Elfman gets more to do in Freed than he did in Darker (I thought his score had a big impact on the narrative in the first). For me it will easily surpass the MIB trilogy of scores.
In many ways these scores exemplify why I love Elfman so much. They're really not deserving of anything more than a throwaway effort but Elfman treats them with so much thought and intelligence - terrific stuff.
Waxwork Records said:Coming next Tuesday, 9/26! DARKMAN Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Danny Elfman on 180 gram "Fire" colored vinyl. Heavyweight packaging, art print, all new artwotk by Francesco Francavilla, and more!
![]()
Waxwork Records said:Coming TOMORROW, 9/26. DARKMAN Original Motion Picture Soundtrack by Danny Elfman. Pressed to 180 gram "Fire" colored vinyl, features deluxe packaging, includes 12"x12" art print, re-mastered audio, and all new artwork by Francesco Francavilla!
![]()
Waxwork Records said:DARKMAN
$27.00
Waxwork Records is proud to present the deluxe vinyl re-issue of DARKMAN Original Motion Picture Score. Directed by Sam Raimi (Evil Dead, Evil Dead 2, Army Of Darkness) and starring Liam Neeson, DARKMAN is a 1990 dark superhero film that pays homage to classic Universal horror films from the 1930s and 40s. The film follows a scientist that is attacked, burned alive, and left for dead by ruthless mobsters, who then returns to seek revenge on the men that made him what he is.
Unable to acquire the rights to Batman or The Shadow, Director Sam Raimi decided to create his own, original character, drawing inspiration from The Phantom Of The Opera and other classic horror monsters. A hideous and disfigured non-superpowered man that fights crime, but he is also an unfortunate victim to a tragic love story as a creature that desires, but ultimately cannot have his love interest.
The score by composer Danny Elfman mixes classic orchestral compositions and unsettling carnival music.
Waxwork Records has re-mastered the full DARKMAN score for vinyl, and packaging details include 180 gram Fire vinyl (Fluorescent Orange and Red Swirl vinyl), housed in an old-style tip-on gatefold jacket with satin coating, all new artwork by award winning and acclaimed illustrator Francesco Francavilla, and a 12x12 art print.
180 Gram Fire" Vinyl (Fluorescent Orange with Red Swirl)
Remastered for Vinyl From Original Master Tapes
All New Art by Francesco Francavilla
12x12 Art Print on Uncoated Stock
Track List
Side A
1. Main Title
2. Woe, The Darkman, Woe
3. Rebuilding / Failure
4. Love Theme
5. Julie Transforms
6. Rage / Peppy Science
7. Creating Pauley
8. Double Durante
Side B
9. The Plot Unfolds (Dancing Freak)
10. Carnival From Hell
11. Julie Discovers Darkman
12. High Steel
13. Finale / End Credits
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
Billboard said:On Friday (Sept. 27), Oscar-nominated composer Danny Elfman will receive the Max Steiner Film Music Achievement Award at the 10th annual Hollywood in Vienna festival.
The honor, which is named after the Viennese composer of such films as King Kong, Casablanca and Gone With the Wind, will be presented during an evening of Elfmans music, performed by the ORF Radio Symphony Orchestra Vienna and conducted by Maestro John Mauceri. Past awardees include Alexandre Desplat, James Newton Howard, Randy Newman, Lalo Schifrin and John Barry.
Hollywood in Viennas 10th anniversary comes at a time when the recording of film music is undergoing a resurgence in Vienna via Synchron Stage, an old scoring stage that was given a $12 million facelift and re-opened last year after years of dormancy. Home to one of the biggest scoring stages in Europe (it can hold a 130-piece orchestra), among the composers who have utilized its services recently are Hans Zimmer, Harry Gregson-Williams and Rupert Gregson-Williams.
The Vienna concert kicks off a big weekend for Elfman, whose first violin concerto, written for violinist Sandy Cameron, will be performed in Hamburg at the Elbphiharmonie on Sept. 30. Then Nov. 6-7, Tim Burtons The Nightmare Before Christmas Live In Concert, with music by Elfman, will make its debut in New York at the Barclays Center. As he has in other cities, Elfman will recreate the role of Jack Skellington.
Billboard talked to Burton's longtime collaborator about receiving the Steiner award, his return to the DC Comics universe with Justice League, which opens Nov. 17, and other projects.
Youre receiving the Max Steiner Award Friday. What effect did his work have on your composing?
Hes the godfather of film composition. There had been groups and orchestras that played with silent movies, but it was all accompaniment. [He was] the first person to create a narrative synchronized score that ran with a movie, with [1933s] King Kong. That was a groundbreaking moment because no one had thought of that telling the story synchronized to the picture with music. That set the tradition of music story telling along with the film.
[With] King Kong, he establishes these motifs. He did things I find myself doing today with rhythmic figures, of how Kong moved and comes alive, and the pace and the pulse quickening as it does. Thats what scoring is all about.
Youve just been in London recording the score for Justice League. Its been 28 years since you scored Batman. What was it like going back into the DC universe?
It was great. It was like I never left because Im using the same thematic material that I used back then. It never actually went away [Laughs.] It just was great fun.
There are a few little fan moments. I instated a moment of the Wonder Woman theme that Hans Zimmer did for Batman Vs. Superman, but I also had two minutes where I had the pleasure of saying, Lets do John Williams Superman. and that for me was heaven, because now I have a melody to twist, and Im using it in an actually very dark way, in a dark moment. Its the kind of thing that some fans will notice. Some wont. Its a moment where were really not sure whose side hes on.
The people at DC are starting to understand weve got these iconic bits from our past and thats part of us, thats part of our heritage -- we shouldnt run away from that. Contemporary thinking is, every time they reboot something, you have to start completely from scratch -- which, of course, audiences will tell us again and again, is ********. Because the single-most surviving and loved theme in the world is Star Wars, which they had the good sense to not dump for the reboots. And every time it comes back, the audience goes crazy.
Did you write new themes for such characters as Flash and Aquaman?
I created very simple motifs. There are so many themes, you cant just do a big theme for everything. So i created a motif for Flash, for Aquaman and Cyborg -- but theyre very simple things, and [DC] understood. I said, "These things may never be used again, but Im giving you all the components, should you wish to have things to build on." So they either will or they wont, but thats how I approach a project like this. You have to take the attitude that this is the beginning of a mythology and it all matters, it all comes to fruition, and with any luck they will.
I loved the people I worked with, they were wonderful. The DC guys were great. I kept talking about the DNA of John Williams in this other theme -- using the DNA of Batman in these other variations, which were not the Batman theme -- but it all derives from that... Musical themes are like genes, you carry the DNA along and it creates these subtle connections which are perceived on an unconscious level. Its funny because Im terrible at puzzles, but I love musical puzzles. Its a different part of my brain.
Did you record at Abbey Road?
Abbey Road and Air. On my god, we had nine days of 12-hour recording sessions using both studios. It was crazy. Its funny, Ive only worked with [director] Joss [Whedon] twice, but theyre both been insane situations. I was joking with him at the end, "It would be great to do something normal where we actually have a regular schedule instead of these hyper-reduced schedules." On the other hand, i like challenges and I love Joss, so it was all good.
Why do you love working with him?
It was the same as when I worked with him on Ultron. He appreciates melodies and pieces. Hes like, Oh, youve given it identity here! There was a moment where the Batmobile shoots out of a thing and he goes, Go bat**** crazy here! Batman the **** out of it! When Im using the Batman theme, Im using the melodic sense of it, Im wasnt doing full-on Batman, and theres a moment when he says, No, right here, Full on!
Are his musical instincts right?
I think theyre great and he loves doing little things like that that are pure fan excitement: Do John Williams here, Batman the **** out of this moment. He knows how fans think. Give them these little things and let them enjoy it.
You also just finished Dont Worry, He Wont Get Far On Foot, with Gus Van Sant. Youve worked with him consistently since Good Will Hunting. I cant imagine two more disparate films than your latest with him and Justice League.
It does not contrast more than Dont Worry, He Wont Get Far on Foot, a true story about a quadriplegic cartoonist in Portland, and Justice League. Insane contrast, which I love.
It was just the pleasure of Gus being really experimental and wanting to do all kinds of crazy things. He was picking up stuff of mine -- theres this little lullaby I wrote for my son when he was born called Olivers Lullaby, and he said, were going to use that here and here. He was just combining crazy stuff. He was having crazy fun mixing up bits and pieces. Especially when hes on a little film like this, Gus likes to be real off-the-center adventurous, do things that are crazy or sentimental, or the opposite of what it seems it would be at the moment ,and you go with it and just have fun.