El Payaso
Avenger
- Joined
- Jun 10, 2005
- Messages
- 15,262
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All right, let me put it to you this way. There are a couple of themes in screen history which have become synonymous with a particular hero -- John Barry and Monty Norman's theme for James Bond, Williams' theme for Indiana Jones, and Superman.
Period.
.....................So?
Christopher Reeve is not synonimous of Superman. To the world he IS Superman. And yet they have another actor for a different take on the character.
These themes have stood not just for years, but for decades and even generations.
Same as Reeve's performance.
I also didn't say that nobody else would get the job for "The Man of Steel" (Zack Snyder hinted he'll be bringing on a new composer). Rather, I stipulated that the score won't become as associated with the character as what John Williams wrote during the prime period of his career -- and that it will most likely be forgettable white noise, since that's pretty much what gets composed for big summer tent-pole movies these days.
You simply don't know if the new theme will be or won't be more or less associated with the character. Yoiu just assume so.
That said, it does not need to be more associated to the character than Williams' theme or the Fleischer caretoons' theme or whatever theme you could think of. It just need to fit the new approach. Period.
Maybe not completely extinct, but most of the great ones who actually knew how to write -- oh, I don't know -- a theme that anyone can remember (and which Superman dearly needs)?
Yeah, close to it.
Alan Silvestri is solid. So is Elliot Goldenthal. But neither is anywhere close to Williams' league.
So they better stop making more movies. Good composers were born in a limited number and they are simply next to complete extiction. Werll, maybe they can just take all of Williams' compositions and start re-using them for every movie they could ever make in the future. They all need Williams' league-good scores apparently.
As for Hans Zimmer, King of the Modern "Synthestra" Film Score -- he was asked about writing the music for "Man of Steel" after rumors surfaced that he'd been tapped for the job. He laughed it off and said that it wasn't going to happen. He had no interest in trying to write something that would match up to -- or outdo -- what Williams composed. He also added, with a chuckle, "Just so you know, I have no interest in rewriting Beethoven's 9th either."
Take that however you want.
Ok, I will. I seem to remember Zimmer was never actually approached.
Now he was either spitting sour grapes - "Yeah, they didn't offer me the job but hah, I didn't want it. It's impossible to do it and I pity the fool who accepts it" - or he was actually admiting he wasn't good enough. Many people thought so about him anyways. He said himself that people kept asking him for a more Elfman-esque bat-score. That must have annoyed him enough so not to try to score a character that has already a popular score.
Maybe we'll wake up tomorrow and the sky will be a pink with purple spots.
No. That won't happen. But I'll tel you what actually will: we'll have a new score for Superman.