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Five Thoughts About FSM's Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan |
Posted By: Neil Shurley on April 18, 2010 - 10:00 PM |
We've all had some time to process this release and, even though it may have already been discussed to death on the message boards, I'm going to talk about it some more.
It's allegedly going to be followed up soon by a release of Star Trek III, but I can't comment on that since I am merely a humble blogger and have no official connection to the FSM corporate juggernaut.
Meanwhile, some thoughts about Star Trek II.
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If you have not purchased the FSM cd, you are an idiot. Yes, I’m talking to the Trek haters and Horner bashers, the “I don’t like ‘complete and chronological presentation’” crowd, the “I already own the original lp/cd” fossils, and, most especially, the cheapass “I’ll download it for free from the internet” weasels. This is a flawless package and presentation of a dynamite, landmark, career-making score. It’s a vital component in any self-described soundtrack lover’s collection and, at the very least, will help fund all the other revelatory but poor-selling (Eye of the Devil, anyone?) releases FSM lovingly offers us. So I’ll say it again. If you do not own it, you are an idiot. Period. (And, really, go ahead and buy Eye of the Devil while you’re at it. It’s really a remarkable score.)
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Time and familiarity have not diminished the power of Surprise Attack as one of the greatest action cues ever. The horns. The percussion. The pizzicato strings building to a barrage of brass. It flows so deftly from Kirk’s “damned peculiar” feelings about the situation to Khan’s seething anger and anticipation to the battle damage and, finally, the defeat of our heroes followed by the gloriously devilish reveal of Kirk’s attacker. It’s a standout sequence in the film and it is flawlessly scored.
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This weekend, I heard a lecturer refer to the French horn as the best instrument to approximate the sound of light. And immediately (and somewhat sadly) I thought of Horner’s Main Title sequence. The shimmering strings and Courage’s fanfare setting the scene for us, grounding us in the familiarity of space, the final frontier. And then the French horns. When I first saw the film, I laughed at the French horn sequence there because of its similarity to the opening of Battle Beyond the Stars. But today I think of the French horns as light bursting from the familiar strains of the Trek fanfare, giving us, musically, the idea that something new and wonderful is leaping from the vestiges of the Star Trek we know. And that’s exactly what the film delivered.
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And speaking of Horner’s tendency toward self-plagiarism, this passage from page 101 of writer/director Nicholas Meyer’s terrific book, A View From the Bridge, gave me quite a chuckle. “When I asked during a subsequent recording session if a certain passage he composed for the movie didn’t smack of Prokofiev’s Alexander Nevsky, he squeaked, ‘Whatdya want from me? I’m a kid; I haven’t outgrown my influences.’”
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I thought I’d grown tired of this score. I bought the LP as soon as I could find it after its release in 1982 and subsequently played it to death. But I never bothered to get it on CD. I had what I thought of as the best snippets on the “Astral Symphony” collection and left it at that. But when FSM released this new CD, I snapped it up mostly as just another Trek item to add to my collection. Yet amazingly to me, it has become the new go-to CD for months now. I simply can’t get enough of it. All the old, familiar bits sound brand new, and the new-to-CD bits sound revelatory. Yes, the anti-“complete and chronological” crowd can find a valid nitpick here, since there are a few places that feature too-similar passages programmed beside each other (Spock’s Theme and the opening of Kirk Takes Command being the most obvious example). But it doesn’t detract from the glories of the score and the teasures of the newly released material. This CD is a gem, even from the base standard of the soundtrack as souvenir of the movie experience. The performance sparkles, the packaging is superb and I, for one, wouldn’t trade it for anything. It’s not the most important work in the either the Star Trek or Horner canon. But it’s pretty darned close. And it is must-own listening. I defy you not to love it.
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Today in Film Score History: March 28 |
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Alf Clausen born (1941) |
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Arthur Bliss died (1975) |
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Carmen Dragon died (1984) |
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Gerald Fried records his score for The Baby (1972) |
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Jay Livingston born (1915) |
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Maury Laws died (2019) |
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Waldo de los Rios died (1977) |
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