soundtrack

Showing 8 posts tagged soundtrack

Cast & Commentary: “Django Unchained”

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2012: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kerry Washington, Jamie Foxx, and Christoph Waltz for Django Unchained

My Take: I loved Django Unchained when I attended a special advance screening a few weeks ago. I called it a “smart, sly, witty, touching, and informative look at a slave-revenge narrative that it didn’t water down the portrayal of slavery or its impact on those it affected but does find humor in unexpected places” on social media after I walked out of the theater. From it’s modern use of the western genre to the great cameos from Franco Nero, Jonah Hill, and QT himself to the seemingly simple story of a man doing everything in his power to reclaim the live of his life, Django Unchained stays true to the Tarantino repertoire of films including his special attention given to the accompanying music (there isn’t a moment that you don’t know you’re watching a Tarantino movie) but this one takes the viewer on a journey to a different Tarantino-esque world. This is a world where a free Black man can be bounty hunter in the pre-Civil War and take revenge on the system that made him a prisoner and victim for most of his life. Some choose to harp on the fact that this is historically inaccurate; I choose to revel in the tiny bit of justice afforded to Django that was not to others in his position in history. I think people are looking at this as a slavery movie which it isn’t: it is a movie that uses slavery as a backdrop to a man’s revenge on people who took away his dignity and a system that disregards those he has a kinship with. It is a movie that offers some sly winks and clever peaks (I wholeheartedly disagree with critics who claim that the movie isn’t “clever enough”) into the fine line that differentiates slavery from the economics and morality of using someone for your own needs and your own means to an end, how those that claimed superiority maybe have been inferior in intellect, and how the enemy, in many cases, wore the face of oppressed. The only misstep in this movie for me was the last 15 minutes or so which bordered being contrived just in order to leave the audience with some satisfaction at the end.  Leonardo DiCaprio was the standout performance for this for his portrayal of a man the could easily be the face of this brutal institution in how he rationalizes it and takes enjoyment in it; he deserves the Oscar. My Grade: A-

Can’t get enough of reading about Django Unchained? Here are some posts from around the web featuring commentary on the film and its cast:

The entire movie soundtrack.

Frank Ocean’s unused soundtrack song, ‘Wise Man’.

John Legend discusses his music contribution

QT’s soundtrack commentary.

The cast on working with Tarantino.

12 minutes of shooting footage.

QT talks Django on Howard Stern.

Django and its connections to past films.

One can’t help but associate independent film and music with Quentin Tarentino. He takes great pains to choose just the right music to set the tone for specific scenes, plot points, and character development. You know if a song is included in a Tarentino movie, it’s a great one. This one is one of my favorites from the very stylized, very cult-classic film (as only Tarentino can do it) Kill Bill, Vol 1. As the film opens, we see The Bride laid on her back, bloodied, and in a wedding dress all filmed in black & whilte.It was this song playing after the gun shot during the rolling of the credits that gave us a wealth of information about what we were in store for as the film progresses.  And that, folks, is how you start a movie and captivate an audience.  Great song from the daughter of Frank Sinatra that really played on Tarentino’s homage to westerns. 

Talk Show Host - Radiohead
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Talk Show Host

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Radiohead

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Romeo+Juliet Soundtrack

I wasn’t planning on ever circling back to revisit the soundtrack of a film but I think the one for Romeo + Juliet is just too good not to. Besides the beautiful song by Des’ree, there is another one that highlights a scene that has always stuck out for me - Romeo has just had his heart broken by Rosaline and has gone missing. As his mother and father goes out searching for him, they find him wandering by the beach, smoking and writing in his journal. He looks up and sees them. To me it was a subtle yet beautifully shot moment in the film. The music is slow and seductive yet the lyrics are full of self-loathing and confrontation. I love it. 

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I'm Kissing You - Des'ree
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I'm Kissing You

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Des'ree

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Romeo+Juliet Soundtrack

I’m taking it back to the 90’s with this one, a definite indie success for two of my favorite actors - Leonardo DiCaprio and Claire Danes. Romeo + Juliet definitely was a unique modern take on the Shakespearean tragedy that captured much of the poetic innocence of the source material. When you think of that movie, you of course think of this song that captured the passion and wonder of when they first meet. 

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Falling Slowly - Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova
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Falling Slowly

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Glen Hansard & Marketa Irglova

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Once Soundtrack

This little song dominated 2007, serving as the backbone of the foreign indie film Once and winning the Oscar for Best Original Song that year. It is such a sweet song.

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The Blower's Daughter - Damien Rice
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The Blower's Daughter

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Damien Rice

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Closer Soundtrck

Who can forget that great scene with Natalie Portman walking towards Jude Law in the crowded streets of London in the movie Closer with Damien Rice’s hauntingly beautiful song “The Blower’s Daughter” playing over it. The lyrics matched alot of the themes in this play-turned-film, an example of a great match between imagery, story, and song.