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His score to jfk. Adore that one
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All of the above. Really to many to mention. I can't narrow it down to "most" memorable moment. I know, isn't that true?! sure is
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It's got to be when he came on as sub for prescot cables, in the 83 minute and scored. What a game. He was lucky; no VAR. I’m going to propose the ballroom scene from The Witches of Eastwick. Perfect melody, think it only appears once in the whole film, but could be wrong. Wasn't It replaced by nessun dorma?( the big sweeping strings part).
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Posted: |
Jan 26, 2023 - 7:08 AM
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By: |
ryanpaquet
(Member)
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No one gonna mention Lukas Kendall's memorable John Williams moment: Eventually, J.W. sat down and gracefully did sign a bunch of booklets. (I mean, we sold these for a bunch of money. Commerce!) During that time, the Mr. Chips gang chatted and we geeks (the handful of us young people who were also there, names redacted to protect the innocent) were in heaven, with our heroes! At one point, one of them tried to recall a movie title or year or something, and we “kids” were like human IMDB machines who immediately jumped in with the answer (like in Jeopardy! where they’re racing to hit the plunger). Williams dryly remarked, “Isn’t it remarkable how much these young people know all these things...?” To me it sounded a little bit like a dig. So I interrupted—and, you know, made eye contact. (I’m many things, but I’m not a chicken.) I said, “Aw, come on, when you were young, you must have been into something? Like baseball, or reading...?” I was genuinely interested in the answer. And he looked at me with such withering contempt, right back in the eyes, perfect deadpan delivery—except I’m pretty sure he meant it. And he said... “Girls.” JW mic drop.
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I don't know if it's *the* most memorable for me, but ... In "Jurassic Park" when they first encounter the dinosaurs and they're watching the brachiosaur rise up to eat off the tree, the theme swells and crescendos with a crash as the brachiosaur's feet hit the ground. That moment blew me away in the theater. It was the moment I first "got" film scoring. I was like, "Wait, the music is written specifically to match what's happening on screen? Whaaa?"
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