I Wish I Knew How To Quit You

Trailers — By Jim Lochner on June 26, 2009 at 6:00 am

It’s Gay Pride this weekend here in New York City so it’s only appropriate that this week’s trailer selection goes to BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN (2005). Based on Annie Proulx’s 1997 short story (which first appeared in The New Yorker and later capped 1999 collection, Close Range: Wyoming Stories, which was shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize), the tentative love story of two cowboys (Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal) in the 1960s played against stereotypes and caused a sensation.

Producer and co-writer Diana Ossana and Pulitzer Prize-winner Larry McMurtry (Lonesome Dove) fleshed out the spare story, adding the wives (Michelle Williams and Ann Hathaway).  Director Ang Lee brings subtlety and sophistication to the story, eliciting top-notch performances all around.  Rodrigo Pietro’s stunning cinematography (with Canada substituting for Montana) and Gustavo Santaolalla’s guitar-driven, Oscar-winning score add to the poignancy of the love story.

Santaolalla’s music makes a distinct impression, due to his duties as music producer, writer and instrumentalist.  In addition to composing the score, he co-wrote songs performed by Mary McBride, Jackie Green, Teddy Thompson, and Emmylou Harris.

Santaolalla began working on the score after reading the script and the short story.  ”Ninety-nine percent of the music…I wrote before the movie was shot.”  He sent Lee some of his ideas after their original conversation.  ”He thought I was sending him stuff I had previously composed, and so he told [BROKEBACK producer] James Schamus, ‘What a pity we can’t use this, it would be perfect for our movie.’  And then James said, ‘But Gustavo did write this for us.’”

“(Lee and I) both had the idea for acoustic guitar and strings,” Santaolalla said. “I thought it would be great to have one more element.”  That element was the pedal steel guitar.  On the soundtrack, the instrument is played by Bob Bernstein, former Senior Vice President of Corporate Communications at Universal Music Group, whose earlier gig as an in-demand country music sideman served him well on the score.

An unfortunate standard practice for today’s films, the BROKEBACK trailer features a mixture of music. Santaolalla’s guitar music can be heard in the beginning section, while the final segment closes with Thomas Newman’s majestic theme for THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION.

From its initial successes at the Venice, Telluride, and Toronto film festivals, BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN rode a wave of critical and surprising audience attention.  The fact that it won more critic awards for Best Picture than any other film of 2005 makes its Oscar loss to the execrable CRASH that much more perplexing and frustrating.

There’s no doubt that Santaolalla’s brief score rode in on the BROKEBACK stampede.  His win has caused much karping on film score message boards, second only to another win the following year for BABEL.  Whether or not Santaolalla deserved his Oscar is up for debate.  Whether or not the music poignantly captured the characters’ loneliness, wide open spaces, and “a love that will never grow old” is not.

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    6 Comments

  • Jorn says:

    Whether Santaolalla deserved the Oscar or not… the music is beautiful. I have the academy promo with more music and although it can be argued to be more of the same, I can’t get enough.

    • Jim Lochner says:

      I agree. It’s not a score I ever put on just to listen to, but it IS haunting and perfect for the film.

  • Steve Garland says:

    The film itself aside (critical mass had reached fever pitch by the time I saw it — never a good sign in terms of raised expectations), I now believe Santaolalla’s contribution to be more meritorious than I’d originally thought. If you’d asked me then, I might have proclaimed (and did — rather vociferously) that a fistful of melancholy twanging does not a score make, but as far as iconography goes, “The Wings” has certainly made its mark in popular culture, and rightly so. Its simplicity speaks volumes more than any sweeping orchestral accompaniment might have attempted in its place. I just wish the entire score would be released apart from the “Consideration” discs mailed to the AMPAS Music Branch. I’d sweep that up in a hot minute.

    • Jim Lochner says:

      I don’t know why they didn’t release the score when they re-released the 2-disc DVD. The “consideration” disc is bizarre. The tracks are in alphabetical order, furthering the argument that one track is much the same as the next. And yet I think the score works beautifully in the film. If it’s ever released, I’ll sweep it up in a hot minute as well. I hate holes in my Oscar collection.

  • Steve Garland says:

    Holes in Oscar collection = FAIL!

    WIll anyone EVER release “Shanks”?

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