Film Score Monthly
FSM HOME MESSAGE BOARD FSM CDs FSM ONLINE RESOURCES FUN STUFF ABOUT US  SEARCH FSM   
Search Terms: 
Search Within:   search tips 
You must log in or register to post.
  Go to page:    
 
 Posted:   Jul 7, 2012 - 9:25 PM   
 By:   zooba   (Member)

Just watched this on a $3:00 DVD from Big Lots.

Like the jazzy Kenyon Hopkins score.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnEXQF92cho&feature=related

Enjoyed seeing young actors from the ACTORS STUDIO of that time early in their careers.

Gazzara is thoroughly nasty as a Military Academy bully douche bag.

Also nice performances by Pat Hingle, James Olson, Peter Mark Richman, Arthur Storch and a dashing George Peppard.

Interesting story with a lot of Homo Erotic undertones.

What are your thoughts on film and score?


To me if Gazzara as Jocko De Paris was more of a racial bigot, the ending would have made more sense. They may have dropped the ball there. Then he may have truly been on a train ride to hell.

The DVD features an interview with Gazzara where he tells how the producer Sam Spiegel wanted to and almost fired the director for asking him the leave the set one day while they were shooting. He said he wound up not firing him, but would not promote the film in the least when it was released.

Also what was up with Gazzara's 2 Seat Tandem Mini-Space Car? Was that on loan from the Sci-Fi movie filming one stage over?

It looked pretty close to this:



 
 Posted:   Jul 8, 2012 - 12:49 AM   
 By:   ToneRow   (Member)

What are your thoughts on film and score?


Of all the LP soundtracks by Kenyon Hopkins, THE STRANGE ONE is my favorite.

I named THE STRANGE ONE as the "best" score by Hopkins in this current thread asking for the best on any 20 composers:

http://www.filmscoremonthly.com/board/posts.cfm?threadID=90141&forumID=1&archive=0

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 8, 2012 - 1:28 AM   
 By:   Bob DiMucci   (Member)

The film is based on the play End as a Man by Calder Willingham, which opened in New York on 15 September 1953, and the novel of the same name. There are some significant differences between the film and its source material. In the play and novel, it is established that Jocko de Paris is the son of a powerful man whose enmity is feared by school authorities. In both the play and the novel, the school authorities are responsible for ridding their institution of Jocko. In addition, the character of "Rosebud" does not appear in the play or the novel.

According to the Daily Variety review, the Production Code mandated that three minutes of footage dealing with homosexuality be deleted on the grounds that it "violated the rules banning sex perversion or any inference of it." The files in the MPAA/PCA Collection contain no reference to those cuts, however. Although there is no overt reference to homosexuality, there is an undercurrent of homosexuality, which was also present in the play and novel, that runs throughout the film.


Location shooting was done at Rollins College in Orlando, FL and at The Citadel in South Carolina and interiors were filmed at the Shamrock Studios in Winter Park, FL. Ben Gazzara, Arthur Storch, Pat Hingle and Paul E. Richards all reprised their Broadway roles for the film. THE STRANGE ONE marked the film debuts of Hingle, Gazzara, George Peppard, Geoffrey Horne, and Julie Wilson, and the motion picture directorial debut of Jack Garfein, who directed the play on Broadway.

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 8, 2012 - 8:15 AM   
 By:   OnyaBirri   (Member)

I don't have this one, and I've not seen the film. I love Kenyon Hopkins. He has been ignored by the boutique labels.

 
 Posted:   Jul 8, 2012 - 3:45 PM   
 By:   ToneRow   (Member)

I don't have this one, and I've not seen the film. I love Kenyon Hopkins. He has been ignored by the boutique labels.

How can OnyaBirri live on planet Earth without a soundtrack album for THE STRANGE ONE?

See what you're missing out on?

The blame shouldn't be placed entirely on the soundtrack producers.
Even if THE STRANGE ONE did get re-issued onto CD, most members here wouldn't leave their comic book conventions to buy it...

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 8, 2012 - 3:46 PM   
 By:   OnyaBirri   (Member)


Even if THE STRANGE ONE did get re-issued onto CD, most members here wouldn't leave their comic book conventions to buy it...


HA!

I know, I know. I can't own everything. I've simply never stumbled across a copy for a decent price. Still, I hope to get one someday soon.

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 8, 2012 - 4:04 PM   
 By:   McMillan & Husband   (Member)

Even if THE STRANGE ONE did get re-issued onto CD, most members here wouldn't leave their comic book conventions to buy it...

Wow....you're so much better then us, aren't you?

Pretentious prick.

Think of it this way: if everyone else started listening to the types of film scores you do, then you wouldn't be able to keep coming on here acting like you're superior due to the fact that you appreciate this stuff and hardly anyone else does. Pompous ass.

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 8, 2012 - 5:02 PM   
 By:   OnyaBirri   (Member)

Even if THE STRANGE ONE did get re-issued onto CD, most members here wouldn't leave their comic book conventions to buy it...

Wow....you're so much better then us, aren't you?

Pretentious prick.

Think of it this way: if everyone else started listening to the types of film scores you do, then you wouldn't be able to keep coming on here acting like you're superior due to the fact that you appreciate this stuff and hardly anyone else does. Pompous ass.


Tonerow's contributions are among the most meaningful here. If you can't take a joke, that's your problem. Maybe the joke hit a little too close to home. wink

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 8, 2012 - 5:57 PM   
 By:   fleming   (Member)

"The Strange One" is a good one by Hopkins. My favorite among his jazz-oriented scores is "The Yellow Canary", featuring great jazz soloists like Phil Woods on alto sax and a pre-Hollywood Lalo Schifrin on piano.

 
 
 Posted:   Jul 13, 2012 - 1:37 PM   
 By:   zooba   (Member)

The scenes where the Gay Character "Cockroach" interacts with Gazzara.

Watch Gazzara's sword movements with Cockroach. Very Homoerotic.

Starting at 1:10:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3RM8YWP85qU

And at 4:18 I don't think the director could have been any more blatant with how that shot looks.
Wow, just noticed that. Amazing.

 
 Posted:   Jul 13, 2012 - 3:34 PM   
 By:   DavidinBerkeley   (Member)

An odd film and score, but intriguing both.

I thought I would "get" the score better after watching the movie, but it might take a few more viewings.

 
 Posted:   Jul 13, 2012 - 3:35 PM   
 By:   DavidinBerkeley   (Member)

Somebody commented somewhere that Gazzara's character looked a bit like Bette Davis with the cigarette holder he used.

 
You must log in or register to post.
  Go to page:    
© 2013 Film Score Monthly. All Rights Reserved.