MovieChat Forums > A Goofy Movie (1995) Discussion > Forget the songs, how about that score?

Forget the songs, how about that score?


I didn't know Carter Burwell is to the Coen Brothers as John Williams is to Steven Spielberg and Henry Mancini was to Blake Edwards. That this composer of BLOOD SIMPLE and NO COUNTRY FOR OLD MEN also did A GOOFY MOVIE shows a man of range. Actually, I'm no stranger to Live-action composers doing cartoons (Jerry Goldsmith, Christopher Franke, and James Horner), but that doesn't hamper the impressing here.

And that OOC-ness works for this film. Much of the score is pretty serious. There really isn't anything funny about it (then again, the best comedies don't need them: Elmer Bernstein's pieces for ANIMAL HOUSE and GHOSTBUSTERS). And yet this sincerity brings real heart to the proceedings. It's like the film itself. Many people who dismissed AGM as some feature-length-TV-movie or sold-out-butchery of one of its legendary characters were surprised to see a rather deep and realistic story about fathers & sons. With its happy-go-lucky star showing some new depths.

It's interesting to note that the 'Roxanne' theme and the 'Goofy & Max' theme have the same beginning, implying a conflict of choice in Max's identity (Being a Goof vs. His wish to become someone Roxanne would prefer) that is the main part of his characterization here.

Perhaps my favorite bit is the scene when Max is dangling Goofy over the waterfall. Its a brief scene of relief soon to be ruptured, but the music is played in some epic tone that belongs to different movie. And it works in defining the truth of this pair: For all the comedy in their relationship, Goofy and Max's relationship & love for each other is in essence a serious matter.

Any opinions?

reply

Very astute observation. I wish more people had enough knowledge of music to be able to analyze and appreciate well-written music when it's in a movie, and not just an orchestra banging away the whole time to sound "epic". I feel like music in movies is getting more and more marginalized; it's like people don't really pay attention to it like they did 20-30 years ago, i.e. Star Wars, Indiana Jones, Jurassic Park.

reply

I think that's because for the most part it isn't nearly as good as it was 20-30 years ago. Nowadays a film in vein of those movies you mentioned actually would have an orchestra banging away just to sound epic. Just compare the Star Wars prequel trilogy's music to the original's if you don't believe me.

reply

Unfortunately, it seems that not many people really do appreciate movie scores the same way they appreciate "normal" music. Unless the music is instantly memorable (cue Star Wars Theme) nobody really listens to it. Sometimes even not so great movies can have decent scores.

Even worse yet, since only movie music buffs really buy the soundtracks, they often go out of print not too long after the movie is out. And then, the existing copies get so ridiculously expensive its not worth buying (I've seen some go for nearly $200, yikes!). In those cases, file sharing is the only real way to go, but even then they can be hard to find in decent quality. The worst of all, they are never released.

Its a real shame that there are a lot of movies with good soundtracks but we have no way to listen to them "clean" without movie audio.

reply

Not necessarily. The Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings score are really memorable. Personally, I found Avatar's score very memorable as well. These are pretty recent movies. But, I agree that scores used to be more memorable, in general.

As another poster said, they just don't make scores as good or memorable as they used to.

reply

During the map changing scene it is very tense.

reply

Elmer Bernstein's pieces for ANIMAL HOUSE and GHOSTBUSTERS).Or his other big blockbuster comedy score: AIRPLANE!

reply

I had the soundtrack on tape as a kid and I listened to it frequently. :)

reply