Sci Fi Music
Sci Fi Music
Sci Fi Music
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
May 2009
APPROVED:
Science Fiction Films of the New Hollywood Era, 1966-1976. Doctor of Philosophy
(Musicology), May 2009, 221 pp., 13 musical illustrations, references, 138 titles.
From 1966 to1976, science fiction films tended to depict civilizations of the
future that had become intrinsically antagonistic to their inhabitants as a result of some
internal or external cataclysm. This dystopian turn in science fiction films, following a
similar move in science fiction literature, reflected concerns about social and ecological
changes occurring during the late 1960s and early 1970s and their future implications.
century concert works that abandon the common practice. In contrast, music associated
with the protagonists is generally more accessible, often using common practice
These films appeared during a period referred to as the “New Hollywood,” which
notably the French New Wave. New Hollywood filmmakers treated their films as
cinematic “statements” reflecting the filmmaker’s artistic vision. Often, this encouraged
an idiosyncratic use of music to enhance the perceived artistic nature of their films.
This study examines the scores of ten science fiction films produced between
1966 and 1976: Fahrenheit 451, Planet of the Apes, 2001: A Space Odyssey, THX-1138,
A Clockwork Orange, Silent Running, Soylent Green, Zardoz, Rollerball, and Logan’s
Run. Each is set in a dystopian environment of the future and each reflects the New
human progress at odds with the critical notions informing similar music for the concert
occurring during the 1950s and 1960s that social activists, science fiction writers, and
perceptions of these musical sounds to reinforce pessimistic visions of the future, thereby
imbuing these sounds with new meanings for listeners of the contemporaneous present.
Copyright 2009
by
ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Page
Chapters
BIBLIOGRAPHY............................................................................................................212
iii
LIST OF MUSICAL EXAMPLES
Page
4.3 (a) Zardoz, Main Title (Paraphrased from Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony).....139
iv
CHAPTER 1
Science fiction films have always relied on visual effects to tell their stories.
Even before the success of Star Wars in 1977, outstanding visual effects were a critical
factor in the experience of these films. Often, the better science fiction films also
included distinct and memorable musical scores. The experiences of such films as The
Day the Earth Stood Still, Forbidden Planet, 2001: A Space Odyssey, Star Wars, and
Blade Runner are shaped to a large extent by the distinctive music used to accompany
each film.
Like the science fiction literature that inspires them, most science fiction films
feature imaginary technology that has some basis, however tenuous, in real world
science. By extrapolating from that science, literary authors and filmmakers can invent
entirely new worlds or suppose new conditions within our own while still maintaining
some measure of plausibility.1 Such stories are often set in the future, adding to their
plausibility by implying that the imagined technology is the result of scientific progress
that has not yet taken place in the real world. In addition to providing entertainment and
perhaps insight into the science at the heart of the story, such speculative futures can also
1
See Robert Heinlein, “Science Fiction: Its Nature, Faults, and Virtues,” and Isaac Asimov, “Social
Science Fiction,” both repr in Turning Points: Essays on the Art of Science Fiction, ed. Damon Knight
(New York: Harper and Row, 1977), 3-61.
1
From 1966 to1976, a number of science fiction films took this socially critical
role more seriously than before or after those years. Rather than focusing on Cold War
anxieties like the films of the 1950s, or providing visual escapism like many of the films
after Star Wars, science fiction films straddling the decades of the 1960s and 1970s
explored ways in which society itself could become an obstacle. They tended to depict
civilizations and environments of the future that had become intrinsically antagonistic to
dystopian turn in science fiction films, following a similar move in science fiction
literature, reflected concerns about social and ecological changes occurring during the
American cinema from the late 1960s through the middle 1970s. They were influenced
These European developments were themselves a response to the dominant pattern and
methods of filmmaking established in Hollywood during the 1930s and 1940s, which
2
Some scholars use the terms “New Hollywood” and “Hollywood Renaissance” to denote a period of
“auteur” cinema in America during the late 1960s and 1970s, although New Hollywood denotes this period
more frequently. See David Cook, Lost Illusions: American Cinema in the Shadow of Watergate and
Vietnam, 1970-1979, vol. 9 of History of the American Cinema, ed. Charles Harpole. (New York:
Scribner’s, 2000), 6-7; Murray Smith, “Theses on the Philosophy of Hollywood History,” in Contemporary
Hollywood Cinema, ed. Steve Neale and Murray Smith (New York: Routledge, 1998), 10-14; Peter
Biskind, Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex-Drugs-and Rock’n’Roll Generation Saved Hollywood
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998), 15-22.
3
Cook, Lost Illusions, 160-161.
4
Classical Hollywood practice refers to the methods and techniques established during the Hollywood
studio system of the 1930s and 1940s. It’s standardization was largely the result of the “industrialization”
2
The new generation of American filmmakers self-consciously adopted some
techniques of European cinema. Perhaps most important, they followed the example of
the New Wave in treating their films as cinematic “statements” that reflected the artistic
vision of the filmmaker or “author” of the film.5 Finally, these directors shared with their
European predecessors an interest in social commentary, something for which they found
Like many other aspects of these films, the musical scores could be highly
idiosyncratic. Often, an idiosyncratic approach was a direct result of the director’s close
involvement with the music to enhance the perceived expressive and even artistic nature
of the film. Furthermore, the music frequently played a role in each film’s depiction of
This study examines the scores of ten science fiction films produced between
1966 and 1976: Fahrenheit 451 (1966), d. Francois Truffaut; Planet of the Apes (1968),
of film production, enabling studios to produce a large number of films in an “assembly-line” fashion, with
the various departments of each studio functioning as stations on the lin. Perhaps its most important
characteristic is that it encourages identification with the film by directing spectator attention to the story
and effacing as much as possible any traces of the actual technical discourse of presenting the film. See
David Bordwell, Janet Staiger, Kristin Thompson, The Classical Hollywood Cinema: Film Style and Mode
of Production to 1966 (New York: Columbia, 1985), 1-84. See also Claudia Gorbman, Unheard Melodies:
Narrative Film Music (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987), 72.
5
Francois Truffaut, “A Certain Tendency of the French Cinema,” reprinted in Movies and Methods, ed.
Bill Nichols (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1976); See also Andrew Sarris, “Notes on the
Auteur Theory in 1962,” and Peter Wollen, “The Auteur Theory, from Signs and Meaning in Cinema,” in
Film Theory and Criticism, 6th ed., ed. Leo Braudy and Marshal Cohen (New York: Oxford, 2004), 561-
565, 566-580.
6
Cook, Lost Illustions, xv-xvii, 67-69. See also Michael Ryan and Douglas Kellner, Camera Politica: The
Politics and Ideology of Contemporary Hollywood (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988), 17-37.
3
Zardoz (1974), d. John Boorman; Rollerball (1975), d. Norman Jewison; and Logan’s
Run (1976), d. Michael Anderson. Each of these films is set in a dystopian environment
of the near or distant future. Moreover, most of these films reflect the influence of the
The music for these films ranges from original scores composed according to
established procedures that had governed most Hollywood film music to mixtures of
original and pre-existing musical selections used in novel ways and sometimes
reminiscent of musical approaches in films of the French New Wave. Despite this
variety, the music in each film is marked by two or more distinct styles, each of which is
that sounds like examples of “modernist music”; that is, by music reminiscent of
twentieth-century concert works that abandon the common practice. The accompanying
music may feature non-functional harmony, atonality, a focus on timbre over pitch,
twentieth century that are often considered to render such music difficult or inaccessible
more favorable conditions is generally more accessible and familiar, often using common
7
M. Keith Booker, Alternate Americas: Science Fiction Film and American Culture (Westport, CT:
Praeger, 2007), 12-13.
8
Arved Ashby discusses some different perspectives of what constitutes “modernist music” in Arved
Ashby, Introduction to The Pleasure of Modernist Music, ed. Arved Ashby (Rochester, NY: University of
Rochester Press, 2004), 8-11. Aaron Copland enumerates some of these characteristics in his chapter on
contemporary music in Aaron Copland, What to Listen for in Music (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1957), 242-
251.
4
These associations generally hold true for all music in the films, whether the
selections were originally composed or borrowed from the standard repertory. A few
films include music derived from popular styles such as rock and jazz but with distorted
harmony or unusual timbres that align it with the film’s dystopian conditions. In all
These stylistic oppositions are important because they are the principal means
through which the music informs the social critique of the film as a whole. The
effectiveness of the score depends on the audience recognizing the distinctions in the
music. The audience must thus associate the modernist sounds with the film’s dystopian
allowing these to affect their response to the visuals at the same time that their response
to the visuals further affects their response to the music.9 The consequence of the
consistent association between modernist sounds and images of diverse dystopian futures
is not just an inadvertent critique of modernist music but also a critique of the notions of
To date, little research or criticism has been carried out on the film scores under
study with the exception of those for Stanley Kubrick’s films 2001: A Space Odyssey and
A Clockwork Orange.10 Despite the amount of research and commentary on the music of
9
Kathryn Kalinak, Settling the Score: Music and the Classical Hollywood Film (Madison: University of
Wisconsin Press, 1992), 29-30.
10
A select overview of the literature on the music of these films includes David Patterson, “Music,
Structure, and Metaphor in Stanley, Kubrick’s 2001,” American Music, 22 3 (Autumn 2004), 444-474;
Katherine McQuiston, “Recognizing Music in the Films of Stanley Kubrick,” (PhD diss., Columbia
University, 2005); Peter Rabinowitz, “A Bird of Like Rarest Spun Heavenmetal: Music in A Clockwork
5
these two films, none of these studies attempts to situate the music within the broader
context of dystopian science fiction cinema of the period. Besides these two scores, a
few others have been acknowledged as unique or outstanding, most notably Jerry
Goldsmith’s score for Planet of the Apes, recognized for its unusual percussion and
avant-garde sound. 11 But again, there has been no critical study of this score specifically
attention apart from the notes accompanying CD releases of the original soundtrack
This state of research reflects what had been until quite recently a comparative
lack of general attention to scores for science fiction films. The essay collection Off the
Planet, edited by Philip Hayward, is one of the only collections of scholarly essays
devoted to scores for science fiction films.12 Individual studies can be found in separate
essay on the music for the Star Wars films in the collection Music and Cinema, but these
are isolated examples within an otherwise growing body of research into film music.13
Despite recognition by film scholars and critics of the dystopian theme shared by the
Orange,” in Stanley Kubrick’s” A Clockwork Orange”, ed. Stuart McDougal (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2003), 109-130; James Wierzbicki, “Banality Triumphant: Iconographic Use of
Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony in Recent Films,” Beethoven Forum 10 2 (Fall 2003), 113-138.
11
Royal S. Brown, Overtones and Undertones: Reading Film Music (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1994), 179; Paul Monaco, The Sixties: 1969-1969, vol. 8 of History of the American Cinema, ed.
Charles Harpole. (New York: Scribner’s, 2001), 117.
12
Off the Planet: Music, Sound, and Science Fiction Cinema, ed. Philip Hayward (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 2004).
13
See James Buhler, “Star Wars, Music, and Myth,” in Music and Cinema, ed. James Buhler, Caryl Flinn,
and David Neumeyer (Hanover, NH: Wesleyan University Press, 2000), 33-57.
6
films under study, furthermore, no one has seriously examined the role that music plays
in them.14
such as Kathryn Kalinak’s Settling the Score and Royal Brown’s Overtones and
Undertones. These studies, however, do not always address how the music works within
the specific genre of the science fiction film. Like many other discussions of music from
the Star Wars films, Kalinak’s chapter on John Williams’s score for The Empire Strikes
Back focuses primarily on the ways in which this music revives the scoring practice of
Studies of science fiction film, such as Vivian Sobchak’s Screening Space, may
2001, Planet of the Apes, Star Wars, and older classics such as The Day the Earth Stood
Still and Forbidden Planet. These discussions are useful in that they note interesting
features of the music, but they do not provide in-depth discussions of relationships
between that music and the picture, nor do they attempt to draw meaningful musical
Regarding musical style in science fiction films, Sobchack observed that the most
distinctive attribute of music for science fiction films was its lack of distinction:
14
See M. Keith Booker, Alternate Americas: Science Fiction Film in American Culture (Westport, CT:
Praeger, 2007); M. Keith Booker, Dystopian Literature: A Guide to Research (Westport, CT: Greenwood,
1994); Joan F. Dean, “Between 2001 and Star Wars,” Journal of Popular Television and Film 7 1 (1978),
32-41; See also Cook, Lost Illusions, 239-245; Ryan and Kellner, Camera Politica, 254-258.
15
Kalinak, Settling the Score, 184-202.
7
[W]hat is notable about most SF film music is its lack of notability, its
absence of unique characteristics which separate it from music in other
films. . . . At least music in Westerns evokes the Western and derives
from folk music and square dance music; and both jazz and the blues seem
to maintain fairly close ties with the gangster film, often arising out of a
documented temporal and spatial context. Even the horror film brings to
some minds the sounds of an organ playing a Bach toccata and fugue. The
SF film has had no such musical identity.16
Such an observation should not be particularly surprising since science fiction as a genre
encompasses a broader range of films and stories than the more restrictive genres of the
Western and the gangster film. Science fiction is so broad that it arguably makes more
period. Even so, those sub-genres exhibit a wide range of musical styles. The examples
under study, all of which stem from a sub-genre that I shall call “dystopian films of the
New Hollywood,” feature multiple musical styles within each film. What does unify this
group is the common approach to style; all of these films use modernist musical sounds
Because both dystopian fiction and science fiction make frequent use of
imaginary and fantastic settings, they are not always easily distinguished and indeed
often overlap. Andrew Ross, writing in Strange Weather: Culture, Science, and
16
Vivian Sobchack, Screening Space: The American Science Fiction Film (New Brunswick: Rutgers
Univeristy Press, 1987), 208.
8
deficiencies of the present.”17 M. Keith Booker stresses the role of dystopian fiction as a
mode of social criticism, noting that although the setting for most dystopian fictions is
often quite remote in time or space from the author’s own, the real-world referents behind
the dystopia are usually clearly discernable.18 Like science fiction, dystopian fiction
provide a fresh perspective on “problematic social and political practices that might
otherwise be taken for granted or considered natural or inevitable.”19 While not all
dystopian fiction is science fiction, dystopian themes are often found in science fiction
Science fiction literature had already been moving toward a position of greater
social relevance since the late 1930s. Although it had been confined to pulp magazines
such as Amazing Stories and Astounding Stories until World War II, science fiction began
appearing in more mainstream publications such as Collier’s and the Saturday Evening
Post after the dropping of the first atomic bombs.21 Ray Bradbury was one of the early
authors who made the transition from pulps to mainstream publications. His short
stories, set on a remarkably Earth-like Mars, had appeared regularly in the Saturday
17
Andrew Ross, Strange Weather: Culture, Science, and Technology in the Age of Limit
(New York: Verso, 1991),143.
18
M. Keith Booker, The Dystopian Impulse in Modern Literature (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1994),
18.
19
Ibid.
20
Ibid.
21
Paul Boyer, By the Bomb’s Early Light: American Thought and Culture at the Dawn of the Atomic Age
(New York: Pantheon, 19085), 257.
9
Evening Post.22 Although considered by some not to be “true” science fiction because
they lacked scientific realism, Bradbury’s stories used imaginary environments for the
fables and moral lessons that he imparted. At the same time they incorporated familiar
science fiction trappings such as rockets and space travel.23 Bradbury himself considered
his novel Fahrenheit 451 to be his only true work of science fiction.24
their stories as much as possible in hard science. Campbell also expressed a deep interest
in stories that focused more on characters and the impact of technology on their lives than
most important writers, including Robert Heinlein and Isaac Asimov, both of whom went
on to produce seminal works in the genre.26 Campbell is often credited with spurring
science fiction to a new level of seriousness; indeed, his tenure as editor of Astounding
between 1938 and 1968 has been called the “Golden Age” of science fiction.27
22
Jerry Weist, Ray Bradbury: An Illustrated Life (New York: HarperCollins, 2002), 40-48.
23
Isaac Asimov, “Social Science Fiction,” Modern Science Fiction: Its Meaning and Its Future, ed.
Reginald Bretnor (New York: Coward-McCann, 1953), reprinted in Turning Points: Essays on the Art of
Science Fiction, ed. Damon Knight (New York: Harper and Row, 1977), 43.
24
Ray Bradbury, commentary in “The Novel: A Discussion with Author Ray Bradbury” documentary on
Fahrenheit 451, dir. Francois Truffaut, Universal 21240, DVD.
25
Asimov, “Social Science Fiction,” 40-42; Brian Aldiss, Billion Year Spree: The True History of Science
Fiction (New York: Doubleday, 1973), 215-243; See also, Alex Ross, Strange Weather, 103, 106, 109.
26
Asimov’s Foundation stories were set in a galaxy-spanning empire undergoing a decline that used the
techniques of “psychohistory” – using statistics to predict the actions of large populations – to manipulate
events in order to shorten the impending “dark age.” Asimov’s “Robot,” stories, while set in many
different locales and times, introduced his “Three Laws of Robotics” that largely reimagined robots as tools
and even companions rather than menaces. Heinlein’s novel Starship Troopers uses a story of interstellar
war fought by the Mobile Infantry in specially armored spacesuits to explore questions about the
relationships between civil and military service. Stranger in a Strange Land, is Heinlein’s story about a
human brought back to earth after being raised by Martians and his subsequent examination and experience
of human culture that prompts him to found a utopian religion.
27
Aldiss, Billion Year Spree, 228-229.
10
Writing about the particular value of science fiction for providing alternative
perspectives on social issues, Heinlein used the term “speculative fiction,” which he
element in science fiction, stressed change as a constant factor in the role of technology’s
impact on society:
The 1960s brought to the surface questions about the nature of the social fabric
that had an influence on science fiction literature. Constant awareness of the possibility
fiction and its vision of technological progress with more sobering ones that reflected a
28
Robert A. Heinlein, “Science Fiction: Its Nature, Faults, and Virtues,” in The Science Fiction Novel
(Chicago: Advent, 1959), reprinted in Turning Points: Essays on the Art of Science Fiction, ed. Damon
Knight (New York: Harper and Row, 1977), 10, 26.
29
Asimov, “Social Science Fiction,” 37, 61.
11
distinct distrust of centralized decision-making.30 At the same time, growing ecological
concerns at times supplanted the potential future course of instant annihilation with one
A new group of writers, who called themselves the “New Wave” after the French
cinematic movement, aimed for a more consciously literary style of science fiction.
Writers such as Harlan Ellison, Frank Herbert, Philip José Farmer, and Ursula K. LeGuin
wrote stories in which their created environments allowed them to explore basic
questions of human existence, human potential, and the role of mankind in any universe.
more for how it is used than for its actual features. These writers pondered whether
humanity had the capacity to improve its world with or without technology.
The writer Brian Aldiss remarked on how the social changes of the decade
fiction:
Science fiction films had already shown the potential for realizing speculative
futures as far back as 1928, with Fritz Lang’s vision of a socially stratified city of the
future in Metropolis and later, in 1936, with William Cameron Menzies’s Things to
12
from a prolonged and devastating world war to pursue a destiny marked by technological
advancement and expansion. Science fiction films had been rare before World War II,
however, and although they proliferated more than any other film genre during the years
thereafter, most were comparatively small, low budget efforts that often overlapped with
horror films.33
Science fiction films of all budget levels tended to focus on four themes during
the 1950s: space travel, extraterrestrial invasion, mutants and metamorphosis, and near
annihilation or the potential end of the Earth.34 These films are commonly interpreted as
statements of American resilience that reflect Cold War anxieties. 35 Typically, the plots
of these films involved some combination of scientists, military and government officials
battling technologically superior aliens, whose advanced technology and strict social
Threat of dehumanization was another common theme in many of these films, one
that persisted into the films of the 1960s. Such films as Invasion of the Body Snatchers
and Invaders from Mars featured ordinary persons who were co-opted or possessed by
alien entities and transformed into emotionless, will-less facsimiles of their former selves.
These films are typically read as expressing anxiety about communist infiltration,
33
Victoria O’Donnell, “Science Fiction Films and Cold War Anxiety,” in Peter Lev, Transforming the
Screen, 1950-1959, vol. 7 of History of the American Cinema, ed. Charles Harpole (New York: Scribner’s,
2003), 170; Vivian Sobchack, Screening Space, 26-43.
34
O’Donnell, “Science Fiction Films and Cold War Anxiety,” 169, 170-171.
35
Ibid., 169.
36
Ibid., 170.
13
consumer society.37 In any case, these films depicted the prospect of depersonalization as
The ultimate horror in science fiction is neither death nor destruction but
dehumanization, a state in which emotional life is suspended, in which the
individual is deprived of individual feelings, free will, and moral
judgment. . . this type of fiction hits the most exposed nerve of
contemporary society: collective anxiety about the loss of individual
identity, subliminal mindbending, or downright scientific/political
brainwashing.38
science fiction more seriously as a medium for social commentary and artistic
expression.39 All of the films addressed in this study stem from this period, and a new
comparison with preceding science fiction films characterizes all of them.40 The
filmmakers were following the example of contemporary science fiction writers, and
indeed many of these films were based on science fiction literature from this period.
Noting their uniformly pessimistic visions, Vivian Sobchack described these films as
“overtly despairing in their evocation of a future with no future.”41 Joan Dean was more
specific in her summary of the concerns addressed in the films of this period:
Just as the science fiction films of the fifties reflected the crises of that
time – McCarthyism and the red scare, in Invasion of the Body Snatchers
(1956), for instance – so too the science fiction films of the early seventies
mirror a developing neo-isolationism (perhaps a result of a costly
37
Sobchack, 120-124.
38
Carlos Clarens, An Illustrated History of the Horror Film, (New York: Capricorn, 1967), quoted in
Sobchack, Screening Space, 123.
39
Booker, Alternate Americas, 12.
40
Ibid., 12-13.
41
Sobchack, Screening Space, 226.
14
involvement in Southeast Asia); a diminishing fear of nuclear apocalypse
(partially a result of the thaw in the Cold War); and a growing concern
with domestic, terrestrial issues – most of which are related to totalitarian
government control of people’s lives or over-population, food shortages,
pollution, and ecology. Consequently space travel appeared only
infrequently in the science fiction films of the early seventies. When it did
occur, moreover, it was either a result of man’s mismanagement of this
planet (as in Trumbull’s Silent Running in which Bruce Dern and crew
ferry the last vestiges of vegetative life off to Jupiter) or a product of
another species’ technology.42
The speculative societies depicted in these films resulted from the filmmakers’
shift in focus away from outside threats toward their own culture and environment. Their
futuristic visions show how civilization, in confronting the communal and ecological
That filmmakers had the opportunity to make such films stemmed from a new
creative openness in American cinema during a time that roughly coincided with the new
directions in science fiction literature. Film historians refer to this period alternately as
the “New Hollywood” and the “Hollywood Renaissance,” using both terms to designate
“a European style auteur cinema” that seemed to aspire to social critique and political
content.43 Filmmakers of the New Hollywood were typically young directors who self-
Jean-Luc Godard, and other members of the French New Wave.44 Using their film
reviews in Cahiers du cinema as a forum, the New Wave championed the validity of film
as an artistic medium and recognized individual films as the works of an auteur, typically
42
Joan F. Dean, “Between ‘2001’ and ‘Star Wars’,” Journal of Popular Film & Television 7:1 (1978), 36.
43
Cook, Lost Illusions, xvii.
44
Cook, Lost Illusions, 68; Andrew Sarris, “Notes on the Auteur Theory 1962,” in Film Theory and
Criticism, 561-564.
15
the director, who subtly or overtly infused these films with a recognizable personal style.
45
Their advocacy of “la politique des auteurs” had inspired the members of the New
Wave to become filmmakers themselves, and they consciously used cinematic techniques
and devices to explore filmic conventions and enhance the artistry of their films.46
European cinema was attracting a small but loyal following in the United States, a
fact not lost on the major studios. Over the preceding decades from 1945 to 1965, the
major studios had seen their audiences diminish due to the proliferation of television and
to changing social demographics.47 Following the poor reception of several major films
in the mid 1960s, studios began to offer more opportunities to emerging directors who
would later make up the New Hollywood. These directors were given unprecedented
creative freedom by the studios in the hopes that their films would appeal to the
increasingly younger and more cinematically literate film audience.48 The directors
responded with films that sought to be “visually arresting, thematically challenging, and
The directors of the New Hollywood shared the New Wave’s belief in the auteur
theory and treated their own films as artistic statements. Like the New Wave directors,
they often focused on genre films, both for audience appeal and to deconstruct genre
conventions.50 Their exercises in genre films often incorporated social criticism and
45
Francois Truffaut, “A Certain Tendency of French Cinema,” in Movies and Methods, ed. Bill Nicholes,
225-237.
46
See essays collected in Cahiers du Cinéma, The 1950s: Neo-Realism, Hollywood, New Wave, ed. Jim
Hillier (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985).
47
Paul Monaco, The Sixties, 43-44.
48
Cook,Lost Illustions 69, 71.
49
Ibid., 69.
50
Ibid., 159.
16
political content in a manner similar to European cinema. The seriousness that
characterized the science fiction films at this time was a product of a new social
awareness.
sometimes subverting the conventional musical practices that had largely governed film
music since the 1930s. Scores of these New Hollywood films often used musical styles
that diverged from the traditional sound of the Hollywood orchestral score, incorporating
the sounds of jazz and, later, rock music. Furthermore, some films used pre-existing
completely: “Foggy Mountain Breakdown” by Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs was used
repeatedly throughout Arthur Penn’s film Bonnie and Clyde; Mike Nichols’s The
Graduate was scored largely around a group of songs by Simon and Garfunkel; and Easy
Rider, produced by Dennis Hopper and Peter Fonda, was scored entirely with pre-
existing rock songs.51 The eclectic methods used in adding music to films in the New
Hollywood are reflected in the variety of musical treatments in the films under study.
In fact, the films under study share many characteristics with films of the New
Hollywood. Each of them can be considered an “auteur film” to some degree; in several
cases, the director is also a writer or producer of the film, implying a pre-existing vision
realized during the course of production. Each film is an individual statement in what at
the time was a new approach to the science fiction film that drew on contemporary
science fiction literature. Although only some of these films were thoroughgoing
51
Laurence E. MacDonald, The Invisible Art of Film Music: A Comprehensive History (New York:
Ardsley House, 1998), 211-212, 221.
17
products of the New Hollywood, all of them owe the better part of their existence to the
My study and analysis of the scores to these films is conducted largely against the
seminal study Unheard Melodies: Narrative Film Music.52 In this practice, films
encourage the spectator’s or subject’s “imaginary identification with the film” largely by
giving an “impression of reality” and masking as much as possible all traces of the
production such as editing – used in presenting the film.53 Such discourses also include
the musical underscore, which according to classical Hollywood practice is not meant to
should be noted that many of the films under discussion purposefully go against
Hollywood practice at some point, deliberately calling attention to the music or other
cinematic apparatus for particular effects. These instances will be discussed against the
standard of classical Hollywood practice to better assess the effect of these deviations on
a mainstream film audience. Classical Hollywood practice would be the most likely
point of reference for the audience due to its longevity and the influence that it has
exerted since the advent of the American sound film. Furthermore, classical Hollywood
52
Gorbman, Unheard Melodies, 4-7, 70-73
53
Ibid., 73.
54
Ibid., 74.
18
practice continues to be the most common point of reference for audiences and for film
scholarship alike.
In discussing individual passages or “cues,” I may take into account any musical
elements that help establish a recognizable musical style, such as treatment of melody,
focus on those cues that are clearly audible in the soundtrack as a whole when attention is
directed toward them, even if the music is not the dominant element in the soundtrack at
consider the music as one element of a soundscape that includes the film’s dialogue and
sound effects, I discuss musical passages that are sufficiently audible for them to be
visuals and dialogue. The principal functions of music in classical Hollywood practice
view or make formal demarcations (changes of scene or the beginning and ending titles),
to establish the setting and characters, and to “interpret” or “illustrate” events in the
film.56 The music achieves these functions through the spectator’s associations with
musical codes, identified by Gorbman as: pure musical codes, or elements of the musical
55
David Neumeyer and James Buhler, Analytical and Interpretive Approaches to Film Music (II):
Analyzing Interactions of Music and Film,” in Film Music: Critical Approaches, ed. K.J. Donnelly (New
York: Continuum, 2001), 53-55, 58
56
These functions are contained within the outline of Classical Film Music: Principles of Composition,
Mixing, and Editing, derived by Claudia Gorbman, as No. IV – Narrative Cueing. See Gorbman, Unheard
Melodies, 73.
19
structure per se; cultural musical codes, or cultural associations with the music’s style or
identity; and cinematic musical codes, or specific relationships between the music and
The film scholar Noel Carroll writes of film music as “modifying the film,”
roughly analogous to the manner in which adjectives modify nouns within language.58
According to Carroll, images and events within the film are “inflected” by the
accompanying music, which sometimes radically alters their meanings. Kathryn Kalinak
challenges the frequently automatic preference given to the visuals. She stresses the need
for recognizing the mutual interdependence between the music and the visuals in film,
noting that a change in music, rather than simply inflecting the meaning of an image, can
important to this study, as there are instances where the meanings of otherwise
ambiguous images and scenes in one of the dystopian scenarios are clarified through
music.
A Word on Sources
The principal sources used here are commercially released recordings of the films
and their accompanying music. All of the films discussed in this study have been
commercially released in DVD format. Commercial DVDs are valuable not only for
57
Gorbman, Unheard Melodies, 13.
58
Noël Carroll, Mystifying Movies: Fads, Fallacies in Contemporary Film Theory (New York:
Columbia, 1988), 218-222
59
Kathryn Kalinak, Settling the Score, 28-30.
20
providing opportunities to view the films but also for the critical commentary that they
often include from the director, producer, principal actor(s), or other individuals involved
In some cases, the version of a film presented on DVD may differ slightly from
the original theatrical release, usually through the addition of edited footage. Because no
one to my knowledge has undertaken a study of this film genre together with its music,
my conclusions provide an important first step to be refined by future studies that can
give attention to more subtle questions. Consequently, any differences between a film’s
theatrically released version and a version released to DVD will be addressed only when
Likewise, recordings of the music for almost all of the films have been
commercially released on compact disc and, in rare cases, LP format. These recordings
may include the actual music as heard in the film or later performances of the underscore
reconstructed from original score sources. Such recordings reflect a trend in recent
and Tribute Film Classics to include all music recorded for a given score, as well as
critical commentary on individual cues and a historical overview of the score as a whole.
These recordings approach the level of critical editions in their attempt to represent the
complete original score as closely as possible, making them invaluable resources for film
music research.
In summary, this study examines the music of ten science fiction films produced
during the era of the New Hollywood, a period marked by experimentation and artistic
21
aspirations among young filmmakers. These films are unified by their pessimistic,
dystopian visions of the future. The music in these films centers on contrasts between
opposing styles that characterize different aspects of each film. Modernist sounds appear
as one element in the musical opposition and draw on general perceptions of the
each film’s capacity for social critique, furthering the artistic aims of the New Hollywood
filmmakers.
22
CHAPTER 2
The films under study all include modernist music as one of several contrasting
referring to practices that begin to appear around the start of the twentieth century and
that fall outside or undermine the common practice of late eighteenth- and nineteenth-
realization of music that follows these alternative practices. The sounds of modernist
music heard within the films under study primarily involve unusual approaches to
form and genre as well as in harmony, rhythm, and timbre, I refer only to the sonic
phenomena appropriated by film music. In much the same way, the common practice is
There may be little to distinguish sounds described as “modernist” from those described
as “avant-garde.” In practice, the distinction between the two may be more of intent or
presentation than of the resulting sound. Arved Ashby, paraphrasing Jochen Schulte-
Bürger’s Theory of the Avant-Garde, describes the distinction as largely a social one:
23
modernists attack traditional ways of writing whereas the avant-garde opposes the very
These dystopian films rarely use modernist sounds exclusively, but instead treat
modernist passages as representing one style choice among many. Such treatment
subverts the original purpose of these sounds within the context of modernism, which
deconstruct conventional musical practices, all in the spirit of musical progress. The
relegation of these sounds to a stylistic choice lacking their musically critical function
imbued with meaning from outside, and to the extent that these passages retains any
sound is not the dominant musical style for a film, but rather competes for that status with
a more accessible style. The more accessible style can include common practice style or
a popular style (as in Silent Running and Soylent Green) against which the modernist
style is experienced.
The use of overtly modernist sounds in Hollywood film scores had been
comparatively rare before the 1960s. Some films included music by well-respected
composers such as Aaron Copland that contained modernist passages within what was
1
Arved Ashby, “Introduction,” in Arved Ashby, ed., The Pleasures of Modernist Music (Rochester:
University of Rochester Press, 2004), 8. Ashby also notes in his introduction that many of his contributors
are inconsistent on this distinction, suggesting that in the “postmodern” climate (itself a problematic term),
such distinctions are perhaps less meaningful.
24
otherwise a quite accessible score. Expressionist passages were already present in Max
Steiner’s music for King Kong (1933) and Franz Waxman’s The Bride of Frankenstein
(1935), both of which relied on them to accentuate fantastic and thrilling aspects.2 By the
early 1940s, examples of film noir were incorporating the sounds of Expressionism into
their scores, most likely to enhance their atmosphere and suspense. Hanns Eisler and
Miklos Rosza supplied many of these; Rosza further enhanced his scores with unusual
instrumentation, including an electric violin for Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca (1940) and a
aforementioned use of the theremin, Ferde Grofé included the instrument in his score to
Rocketship X-M (1950?), and Bernard Herrmann included theremins as part of his
extensive group of electronic instruments in his score for The Day the Earth Stood Still
(1951). A theremin was also used in creating the highly unusual all-electronic score for
These are just a few of what was no doubt a larger number of examples of
modernist sounds in film. Still, within the overall repertory of film music, modernist
sounds and techniques were used sparingly. Leonard Rosenman’s scores for The Cobweb
and East of Eden are credited as being among the first scores to include serial procedures,
2
Royal S. Brown, Overtones and Undertones: Reading Film Music (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1994), 118, 175-176.
3
Ibid., 119.
4
See George Burt, The Art of Film Music (Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1994), 185-186; Roy M.
Prendergrast, Film Music: A Neglected Art, 2nd ed.(New York: Norton, 1992), 119.
25
but these films appeared some thirty years after the initial appearance of Schoenberg’s
twelve-tone method.
music, it may be useful to reflect on just how well established the prevailing sound of the
nineteenth century was. By the earliest appearance of sound films in the late 1920s, the
nineteenth-century sound had been in use through over twenty years of silent film
accompaniment by excerpts from the standard repertory and short excerpts of mood
music designed to emulate them. Most of the composers creating film music had been
esteemed composers came from Germany and Austria and had experienced these
traditions first-hand.
Most important, the style became familiar to mainstream audiences both through
past films and their experiences in other contexts. Over the course of the nineteenth
century and into the twentieth, the common practice had acquired and perpetuated
dramatic connotations and associations through its use in opera, the concert hall, and,
later, to accompany film.5 These well-established associations and the audience’s ability
to recognize and react to them quickly made the style very effective in its role of
signifiers, leaving film audiences with no clear understanding of how they were expected
5
Claudia Gorbman, Unheard Melodies: Narrative Film Music (Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
1987), 4
6
Gorbman, Unheard Melodies, 4, 13.
26
to react to hearing them in the context of a film. The few composers such as Rosenman
associations for film audiences between them and the tension and extreme emotions that
extreme psychological situations and largely avoided by most film composers, ostensibly
because of concerns that such music might affect a film’s commercial appeal. Unusual
pictures that they accompanied, but probably nothing more specific than this.8
Hostility between the serious music community and film composers may also
have slowed the adoption of modernist music into American film. Composers and critics
who were advocates of modern music celebrated music’s autonomy.9 Serious critics
disparaged film music for its very lack of autonomy; classical Hollywood practice, of
course, dictated that music was subordinate to the visual aspects and dialogue, nominally
rendering music less prominent than in other, perhaps slightly more acceptable dramatic
uses such as opera.10 Critics also believed that the nineteenth-century Romantic style
dominant in most films kept film music out of touch with musical progress.11 These
critics took a dim view of the talent and skill of film composers, regarding them as selling
their talents for commerce in producing music for the mass entertainment of movies, or
7
See George Burt, The Art of Film Music, 48-49; Roy Prendergrast, Film Music: A Neglected Art, 119.
8
While the theremin was used frequently in science fiction films, there were several high-profile films that
did not use it, and several non-science fiction films that did. It may be more proper to state that the
theremin connotes “strangeness” that is then filled in by the accompanied image rather than alleging the
theremin with “connoting” science fiction at this point.
9
Dean Duncan, Charms that Soothe: Classical Music and the Narrative Film (New York: Fordham,
University Press, 2003), 34-35.
10
Ibid., 35
11
Ibid., 39-40.
27
else as composers of limited talents who in any case were capable of producing music
Film composers responded in kind. Already worried that their artistic integrity
might be compromised by their work in the studio system, which essentially treated them
the mold of the great composers whose legacy they saw themselves as inheriting.13 They
self-consciously spoke of their music in connection with Wagner, Brahms, and even the
Viennese masters Mozart and Beethoven.14 They may have had little interest in adopting
a language that was both outside their sphere of expertise and appreciation and
championed largely by a serious musical community that they believed did not respect
them.15
While the specific music varies widely in character among the ten films, the
modernist sounds fall into three general headings. Each of these may be used singly or in
some combination:
12
Duncan, Charms that Soothe, 45-48, 53-54.
13
Ibid., 36-37.
14
Ibid.; Caryl Flinn relates Dmitri Tiomkin’s acknowledgement of Brahms, Johann Strauss, Richard
Strauss, and Wagner during his acceptance speech for his Academy Award for The High and the Mighty in
Caryl Flinn, Strains of Utopia: Gender, Nostalgia, and Hollywood Film Music (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 1992), 3.
15
Bernard Herrmann was a composer who straddled both sides of this conflict. His music for Psycho,
particularly the shower scene, is regarded as a masterful use of modernist sounds in cinema. Still, the
context dictated an extreme sound, something that could be provided by Expressionism, and although what
Herrmann produced is extremely effective, it nonetheless falls within a stylistic norm. Although Herrmann
was an advocate of modernist works, conducting performances broadcast over radio, his own concert
music, particularly his opera Wuthering Heights, was considered rather conservative. See Steven Smith, A
Heart at Fire’s Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1991), 111.
28
1. Unusual Harmonies and/or Atonality. Several films include passages that are
highly dissonant or even atonal. Other passages may use otherwise tonal
of classical Hollywood practice. Even scores of the 1950s and 1960s that
included elements of jazz and popular music still largely adhered to the
films, but the sound of these passages was typically used for scenes of tension and
under study that feature unusual and dissonant harmonies may further resemble
Expressionist works (music of the “Second Viennese School”) through the use of
jarring dynamics and jagged rhythms. Other dissonant or atonal passages may
behaving more like sound mass compositions of the early 1960s (this description
harmonies may simply mark the accompanied visual elements as strange within
16
Roy Prendergrast discusses Leonard Rosenman’s use of Expressionism for scenes of emotional tension in
The Cobweb in Prendergrast, Film Music: A Neglected Art, 119.; See also Burt, The Art of Film Music, 45,
48-49.
29
2. Unusual Textures or Acoustic Sounds. Beyond the novel sounds resulting from
favored over pitch. Some passages already described as suggestive of sound mass
composition could also be included in this category. Other passages may feature
conventional texture; Planet of the Apes, for example, features some of these.
Still other passages are marked by the use of either unpitched sounds or pitched
sounds outside the traditional Western chromatic scale. Often these involve
sans maître. These sounds are frequently opposed to more traditional orchestral
sounds.
“unusual textures and sounds,” but the electronic sounds in the films under study
are noticeably distinct from the unusual acoustic sounds and textures and are often
their novel timbres to more traditional music, or it can refer to tape-based music
17
See Jacques Barzun’s address to the first Columbia/Princeton concerts. Jacques Barzun, “Introductory
Remarks to a Program of Works Created at the Columbia Princeton Electronic Music Center,” in Audio
Culture: Readings in Modern Music, ed. Christopher Cox and Daniel Warner (New York: Continuum,
2004), 367-369.
30
that combines pre-recorded and electronically generated sounds into soundscapes
of this sort may come closest to “avant-garde” in terms of sound materials used in
film.) The full range can be heard among the scores to the films under study,
from manipulation of concrète sounds in the manner of Pierre Schaeffer and the
of the Moon.
Within each film, the oppositions between different musical styles or types
juxtaposition in the film; musical stylistic oppositions will thus typically mirror the
oppositions between characters or entities with which they are associated.18 Modernist
styles incorporating one or more of the characteristics listed above are typically
juxtaposed with the film’s dystopian elements and circumstances, creating associations
between those elements and the alienating and disaffecting responses generally attributed
to the sounds of modernist music. These are set in opposition to contrasting, often
18
Noel Carroll and Kathryn Kalinak both describe music as reinforcing or “modifying” an image, but also
note that this modification can be reciprocal, allowing music to modify the image and vice versa. See Noel
Carroll, Mystifying Movies: Fad and Fallacies in Contemporary Film Theory (New York: Columbia,
1988), 218-222; Kathryn Kalinak, Settling the Score: Music and the Classical Hollywood Film (University
of Wisconsin Press, 1992), 30.
31
accessible styles associated with a protagonist or situation opposed to the dystopian
conditions.
Contrasts of harmony and dissonance are the most common oppositions in the
films under study, although oppositions may also involve contrasts of timbre and
instrumentation. Oppositions in some films may even involve contrasts between style
categories such as pop, jazz, “classical,” and specific style references such as Baroque or
Classical. Most of the films feature more than one such opposition, although one is often
so prominent as to overshadow or encompass the others. Music for the earlier films tends
to feature one prominent opposition, primarily because the music usually contains a
comparatively narrow range of styles altogether. Thus, Bernard Herrmann’s music for
citizens of an authoritarian state and the militaristic firemen who enforce the state’s ban
on books.
Scores for most of the later films feature multiple oppositions to connect the
music and dystopian elements in the film. This is true of the score for Zardoz, which
centers on oppositions of tonal vs. non-tonal harmony and archaic vs. avant-garde (sound
mass) styles. Similarly, the score for Logan’s Run centers on oppositions of tonal vs.
non-tonal harmony and orchestral vs. electronic textures, both of which figure in the
relationship between the music and depictions of the sealed, authoritarian community at
32
The following chapters discuss the scores for each film individually, noting
modernist techniques in the score, their relationship to the dystopian elements of the film,
and the types of styles to which they are opposed and the manner in which this is done.
The scores discussed in Chapter 3 center on one opposition that operates throughout the
music. Chapter 3 discusses Fahrenheit 451, Planet of the Apes, 2001: A Space Odyssey,
and Silent Running. As I have suggested, either the music in these films features a
comparatively narrow range of styles or only one of the possible oppositions has a
bearing on the relationship between the music and the film’s dystopian elements.19
Chapter 4 discusses scores in which at least two musical oppositions inform the film’s
depiction of its dystopian future. Despite the variety of music and the number of possible
oppositions in these scores, each film includes modernist styles and sounds in at least one
of its musical oppositions to convey the deficiencies in that film’s imagined future. It is
this shared characteristic that connects the music, just as the shared pessimistic vision of
The dystopian futures portrayed within the films under study reflect a number of
social concerns that had emerged during the 1960s and early 1970s. Technological
progress lay at the heart of many of these concerns. Despite much of the optimism in the
decade following the Second World War, progress and the social change that
accompanied it brought side effects that potentially threatened not only social stability
19
Although the score for 2001 offers numerous possibilities for oppositions within its music, I argue that
the oppositions discussed in Chapter 3 are the most relevant to the relationships between the music and
implications of dystopia. The distinct styles represented by the few classical pieces within 2001 produce an
opposition that can be reduced to nineteenth-century common practice music vs. avant-garde, sound-mass
music; any other oppositions involving musical characteristics would arguably be encompassed by this one.
33
but also in many respects physical existence in the United States and throughout the rest
of the world. The growth and encroachment of these problems through the 1960s and
into the 1970s quelled the earlier optimism, replacing it with a malaise that the political
scandals of the early 1970s exacerbated.20 The dystopian films of the period took these
conditions as points of departure and extrapolated from them to arrive at the deficient
futures that they portray. Hence, these future societies are the results of progress gone
As noted in the previous chapter, the effectiveness of dystopian fiction stems from
the effect of defamiliarization occasioned by its remote setting.21 In the case of each film
under study, this remoteness comes, of course, from the future setting. The extent of the
determined by the relative remoteness or immediacy of the projected “date” of the film,
which in most cases is specified for just this purpose. The film 2001: A Space Odyssey
did this explicitly in its title, suggesting an imagined world separated from the audience
by its setting while imparting a sense of immediacy through the realism of its space flight
the next millennium. The subsequent films Silent Running, Soylent Green, and Rollerball
similarly established a minimal remoteness with their respective near future settings of
2008, 2018, and 2022, which they supplemented with familiar trademarks or place
20
David Cook, Lost Illusions: American Cinema in the Shadow of Watergate and Vietnam, 1970-1979,
vol. 9 of History of the American Cinema, ed. Charles Harpole. (New York: Scribner’s, 2000), xv-xvi;
Michael Ryan and Douglas Kellner, Camera Politica: The Politics and Ideology of Contemporary
Hollywood (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988), 6-9; Andrew Ross, Strange Weather: Culture,
Science, and Technology in the Age of Limits (New York: Verso, 1991), 138-144.
21
M. Keith Booker, The Dystopian Impulse in Modern Literature (Westport, CT: Greenwood
Press, 1994), 17.
34
settings, New York City and Houston in the case of the latter films. A Clockwork Orange
and Fahrenheit 451 rely exclusively on their mise-en-scène for this effect, incorporating
costumes, props, or locations that although familiar to the film audience are often stylized
The remaining films are set farther into the future; the initial prologues of both
Zardoz and Logan’s Run situate what follows in the twenty-third century, resulting in a
greater remoteness, which, as expected, yields dystopian societies that are less like the
social circumstances of the film audience. THX-1138 achieves its similar level of
costumes, locations, and properties. Planet of the Apes, set some 2000 years in the
future, features the most remote setting, projected forward an interval of time that
species along with the simultaneous rise of the ape culture to a point equaling the
As in most dystopian fiction and science fiction, the remote settings of these films
contained real world referents that were discernable to the film audience. Joan Dean’s
overview of science fiction films produced during the decade separating 2001 and Star
Wars noted their increasing use of themes derived from “terrestrial issues” such as
ecology.”22 In their Marxist critique of Hollywood during the New Hollywood era, Ryan
22
Joan F. Dean, “Between ‘2001’ and ‘Star Wars,’ Journal of Popular Film & Television 7:1 (1978), 36.
35
another theme common to films of the era.23 All of these problems increasingly drew
public attention during the 1960s or were already within the public consciousness as a
result of the Cold War. With respect to the films under study, the range of issues
human nature, ecological collapse, and finally youth culture and radicalism. Such issues
and concerns provided the impetus for the dystopian scenarios and conditions portrayed
Technological Anxiety
All of the films feature some sort of advanced technology, since this situates an
imaginary environment in the future. In some films more than others, technology appears
to be part of the problem at the heart of the film, either directly or in close combination
As Andrew Ross and Paul Boyer note, anxiety over technological development
stemmed largely from the appearance of the atomic bomb and its threat of potential mass
destruction.24 Although the “thaw” with the Soviet Union somewhat mitigated this fear,
the Cuban missile crisis (and reflected in the satiric portrayal in Dr. Strangelove) changed
the focus of anxiety over the potential for nuclear conflict.25 Planet of the Apes is the
only film under study in which nuclear conflict becomes central to the story. The
destruction of human culture and civilization that allows the apes to develop their own
23
Ryan and Kellner, Camera Politica, 245-254.
24
Andrew Ross, Strange Weather, 141; Paul Boyer, By the Bomb’s Early Light: American Thought and
Culture at the Dawn of the Atomic Age (New York: Pantheon, 1985), 266-270.
25
Ross, Strange Weather, 141.
36
dominant culture results from nuclear catastrophe of the type envisioned during the 1950s
and 1960s.
their scope and the rapidity of their development. Computers, which had appeared during
the 1940s, became more widespread during the 1960s in science and business.26
Although the extensive and complex calculations of computers made many difficult tasks
easier and enabled others (such as carrying out the mission to the moon), the idea that
computers could replace people fueled anxieties about technology. Not only could
technology replace humans in certain tasks, but technology might also somehow
overpower humanity, a theme explored in Karel Čapek’s play R.U.R.. which introduced
the idea of the robot.27 The life and death conflict between David Bowman and HAL in
2001 is the most overt expression of anxiety about technology, as it literally portrays
technology defying and perhaps attempting to replace its maker. The Tabernacle in
Zardoz and the central computer in Logan’s Run are similar examples of artificial
intelligences that in these cases are already in a position of dominance over their
The proliferation of mass media, particularly television, affected the culture of the
period, not least in its effect on the motion picture industry.28 The idea of mass culture
26
Maurice Isserman and Michael Kazsin, America Divided: The Civil War of the 1960s (New York:
Oxford, 2004), 14, 307.
27
The robots in Čapek’s play are artificial beings created without emotions to increase the efficiency of
their labor. The robots presage the end of humanity by removing its sense of purpose in taking on all labor.
See M. Keith Booker, Dystopian Literature: A Theory and Research Guide (Westport, CT: Greenwood
Press, 1994), 309-312.
28
Paul Monaco, The Sixties: 1969-1969, vol. 8 of History of the American Cinema, ed. Charles Harpole.
(New York: Scribner’s, 2001), 43. At the same time that Hollywood was facing competition from
37
and the conformity that it could bring was already recognized during the 1950s and
suggested how the means of transmission could have a stronger effect than the content
transmitted.30 The societies in Fahrenheit 451 and THX-1138 use television or similar
also encourages conformity. The world of THX-1138 uses similar technologies for
purposes of surveillance, remotely observing the actions of its population and using
On the surface, space travel may have seemed to be an occasion for optimism, as
the achievement of manned space flight and of John F. Kennedy’s goal to send a manned
mission to the moon appeared to show the positive side of progress. At the same time,
manned space flight was very much bound up with Cold War competition to dominate
space and with anxiety about nuclear confrontation. Furthermore, the rapid onset of
space flight and the accelerated development from orbital flights to a mission to the moon
itself produced anxiety because of the rapidity of change and the proliferation of complex
developments that had moved beyond the grasp of the average individual and could only
television, Hollywood studios forged a relationship with television by creating programming through
television subsidiaries and licensing older feature films for television broadcast, providing a new market for
Hollywood’s products. See Janet Wasko, “Hollywood and Television in the 1950s: The Roots of
Diversification,” in Peter Lev, Transforming the Screen, 1950-1959, vol. 7 of History of the American
Cinema, ed. Charles Harpole. (New York: Scribner’s, 2003), 134-146.
29
M. Keith Booker, Monsters, Mushroom Clouds, and the Cold War: American Science Fiction and the
Roots of Postmodernism, 1946-1964 (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2001), 13-15.
30
Marshall McLuhan, Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man (New York: McGraw Hill, 1964) ,7,
9
38
complexity and routinization in further human technical developments.31 The film 2001
illustrated this in great detail, giving a glimpse of activity in space that, regardless of the
wonder it inspired in the film audience, also appeared routine and mechanical and
encompassed a level of complexity that required one to read special instructions before
using a toilet. Silent Running portrays space travel as less rigorous but even more
indicative of the encroachment of technology through the last preserved forests carried in
within the films. Technology makes possible the method of conditioning Alex to remove
his violent tendencies in A Clockwork Orange, and technology renders the corpses of
deceased persons into the synthetic food “Soylent Green” to compensate for the
anxiety that fueled the Cold War. The United States and Western Europe had fought a
bitter war to defeat the totalitarian National Socialist regime in Germany and now faced a
similarly authoritarian ideology governing the Soviet Union and later the People’s
Republic of China. At the same time, anti-communist hysteria in the United States
placed de facto restrictions on social and political discourse that often seemed as
31
M. Keith Booker uses the term “routinization” to describe the imposition of repetition and routine
introduced into existence in conjunction with increases in technology. M. Keith Booker, Monsters,
Mushroom Clouds and the Cold War, 17.
39
Both sides of the Cold War attempted to deflect perceptions of oppression within
their own spheres by using media and the arts to manipulate public opinion. During the
Cold War, the nations of the West made great efforts to promote themselves as bastions
colonialism often brought financial hardship and social strife.32 They sponsored
society. 33
The plots of several of the films center on an individual suffering from the
fascism. But the anxiety in many dystopian films stems from distrust of progress and
benefits for those in power. THX-1138 provides perhaps the most explicit example of
this future vision of totalitarianism, in which the drive for efficiency has moved beyond
production into the social sphere, mandating conformity in appearance, numbers instead
Even the consumption patterns in this nominally capitalist society are standardized for the
sake of efficiency.34 Much like the oppressive society in George Orwell’s novel Nineteen
32
Maurice Isserman and Michael Kazin, America Divided: The Civil War of the 1960s, 2nd ed. (New York:
Oxford, 2004), 10, 73; Henri Grimal, Decolonization: The British, French, Dutch, and Belgian Empires
1919-1963, trans. Stephan de Vos (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1978), 3-5, 153-156; Sergei Guilbaut,
How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art: Abstract Expressionism, Freedom, and the Cold War, trans.
Arthur Goldhammer (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1983), 204.
33
Guilbaut, How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art, 204-205.
34
An official voice-over announcement alerts the population to this change.
40
Eighty-Four, all possible means are brought to bear on reducing the individual to a
People are identified with numbers, familial ties have been eliminated in favor of mass
nurseries, and peoples’ life spans are limited to thirty years, ostensibly to preserve the
community’s balance of resources. Ironically, life in the domed city of Logan’s Run
revolves heavily around hedonistic pleasure in the moment closely resembling Aldous
Huxley’s Brave New World in that respect. The population is kept from reflecting on
451. Television is the principal tool of the unnamed powers in Fahrenheit 451 for
reinforcing consumption and the existing social order. At the same time, these authorities
ban books not simply for the potentially subversive ideas that they might contain, but also
because the stories of other individuals in other circumstances might make readers
unhappy with their own lives and cause them to reevaluate the society in which they live.
The corporate oligarchy in Rollerball uses the violent sport as a focus for the aggressive
the same time promoting the importance of teamwork and subsuming oneself to the
collective.
The threat of totalitarianism lurks behind the method and purpose of the
41
dehumanizing nature of the technique itself, its potential for abuse by the state is noted
ironically by one of Alex’s victims, who condemns the technique as a means to empty the
Social Inequality
Aside from worries about overt oppression from above, conflicts within and
between social groups became more prominent during the decade of the 1960s. The most
visible of these in the United States was the racial conflict that prompted the Civil Rights
Movement, which resulted in new legislation aimed at achieving racial equality for
African Americans. As the decade wore on, the movement itself began to divide into
factions that clashed over the degree and indeed the very question of integration within
white society. 35 Racial conflicts of this sort often masked or accompanied even deeper
class conflicts, a problem that Martin Luther King, Jr. began to address in 1968.36
Social inequality is a feature of many of the future societies in the films discussed.
These inequalities may stem from other conditions in the dystopia, or they may result
from the human nature that is portrayed as the heart of the dystopia. From its beginnings,
Planet of the Apes seemed to embody many aspects of the racial conflicts raging during
the 1960s.37 The makers of the film were quick to recognize this, and the racial allegory
became even more pronounced in the successive Apes films produced during the 1970s.38
42
comparatively small, controls resources and/or power that it uses to oppress a larger
group. Such conflict lies at the center of the dystopian societies in Rollerball and Zardoz.
The elite oligarchy of corporate executives in Rollerball has taken power from
bankrupted nation states and assumed control over all information, transportation, and
distribution of resources. Although they claim to have eliminated poverty and to allow
freedom in all things “that do not interfere in executive decisions,” their lavish lifestyles
and paternalistic treatment of the rollerballers indicates the levels of stratification even in
the upper reaches of the society. 39 The Eternals in Zardoz keep themselves isolated
within the Vortex from the outer world of Brutals, only venturing outside to extract slave
labor from the Brutals when the members of the Vortex are unable to remain self-
sufficient. Even in the chaotic social environment of Soylent Green, individuals such as
the Soylent executive Simonson have resources and a station that insulate them from the
Human Nature
deficiency in several of the future societies depicted, a few focused on innate human
nature and its potential to produce a dystopian future. Such a focus most likely reflected
broader interest during the 1960s in the degree to which human characteristics were
biologically determined. Desmond Morris’s The Naked Ape attempted to explain much
of contemporary human social behavior as having evolved from the nomadic, hunter-
39
Mr. Bartholomew explains the benefits of the social structure in Rollerball (1975), produced and directed
by Norman Jewison, MGM Home Entertainment, 1998, DVD. In Harrison’s original story, Jonathan E, as
the narrator, notes that “the executives have all the power and we all know they’re crooked.” See William
Harrison, “Roller Ball Murder,” Esquire 79 (September 1973), 95.
43
gatherer lifestyle of humanity’s earlier ancestors. 40 Some ten to fifteen years later,
studies from as late as the 1960s that attempted to explain social differences among
ethnic and racial groups as rooted in biology. 41 The Butler Act, a 1925 Tennessee law
banning the teaching of human evolution that was at the center of the Scopes Trials,
remained in effect until 1967, and in 1968, the Supreme Court declared a similar
Arkansas law to be unconstitutional. The existence of these laws as late as the 1960s
indicated the level of public disagreement about humanity’s alleged animal past and its
The few explorations of human nature among the films discussed are concerned
primarily with the autonomy of individual humans and with the capacity of the species
for both individual and collective improvement as well as with species preservation. A
sociopathic individual who loses his autonomy through outside conditioning; the film
appears to affirm Alex’s right to make moral choices as proof of his humanity, but his
inherently violent nature undermines any faith in his capacity to truly make such a
choice. Zardoz appears to acknowledge and celebrate humanity’s natural capacity for
development while subtly warning that this capacity can be affected and even retarded by
40
For Morris’s thesis, his general speculations on shifts in behavior in adapting to a hunting lifestyle, and
his discussion of the motivations for aggression in all animals, see Desmond Morris, The Naked Ape (New
York: Dell, 1984), 9-42, 120-152.
41
Stephen Jay Gould, The Mismeasure of Man, rev. ed. (New York: Norton, 1996), 1-61, 367-390.
42
Booker, Alternate Americas, 100.
44
Ironically, both 2001 and Planet of the Apes express pessimism about the
prospects for human development over the long term. The film 2001 hypothesizes that
to save mankind from decline and eventual extinction.43 Planet of the Apes focuses on
the core aggressive tendencies of humans, brought into sharp perspective in the
protagonist’s conflict with the “animal” apes, and posits that humanity’s aggression and
Ecological Collapse
A new public concern over the increasing degradation of the environment was
Carson’s book, based on her own research, warned of the unintended ecological hazards
of pesticides and chemicals that were becoming increasingly common in the agricultural
industry.45 Silent Spring became a focal point for politicians, industry experts, and the
public at large for emerging questions about the environmental impact of technological
progress.46 Paul Ehrlich’s 1968 book The Population Bomb predicted an impending
famine during the 1970s due to the rapidly rising world population, which he projected
would soon overwhelm the planet’s capacity to produce enough food.47 Ehrlich
speculated that mass starvation and its repercussions would quickly spread beyond the
“Third World” and lead to instability and confrontation among developed nations,
43
Booker, Alternate Americas, 87
44
Eric Greene, Planet of the Apes as American Myth, 48-50.
45
Robert Gottlieb, Forcing the Spring: The Transformation of the American Environmental Movement
(Washington, DC: Island Press, 1993), 81-86.
46
Ibid., 86.
47
Paul Ehrlich, The Population Bomb, (New York: Ballantine, 1968), 12.
45
perhaps even spurring nuclear conflict.48 The growing population was already putting an
increasing strain on the environment, Ehrlich noted, leading to more pollution and
degradation in the quality of air and water.49 The concerns expressed in Carson’s and
populated and ecologically ruined that the remnants of civilization must resort to
synthesizing food from the remains of deceased humans, seems as though it could have
come right out of the pages of Ehrlich’s book. Other films expressed environmental and
civilization. The old world of Zardoz was described as “dying” by one of the Eternals,
believing, as the robot sentries warn THX, that the surface above ground is uninhabitable,
most likely because of war or some other cataclysm.51 The prologue for Logan’s Run
states that war and the effects of pollution have driven the population to seal themselves
off from the outside world in great domed cities; life for the inhabitants within is
48
Ibid., 69-70.
49
Ibid., 46, 60, 62, 67.
50
Avalow relates the origins of the Vortex to Zed in Zardoz (1974), produced and directed by John
Boorman, Fox Home Entertainment, 2000, DVD.
51
George Lucas indicated that the society in THX-1138 had insulated itself underground following a
nuclear conflict. See notes accompanying Lalo, Schifrin, THX-1138: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack,
FSM Vol 6 No. 4, Compact Disc, 14.
46
managed by the central computer, and the need for population equilibrium necessitates a
preserve parts of the earth’s ecosystem are abruptly abandoned. The audience learns that
the world of 2008 referred to in the film has been developed and homogenized in ways
that leave no room for forests, deserts, or other specialized ecosystems or unique natural
spaces. Remnants of these have been collected into large agrarian domes that are held in
orbit near Saturn by a fleet of large spaceships. The film’s plot is set in motion by a
decision back on earth to jettison the domes, presumably because their continued
extraordinary action to preserve these domes, there is little in the film to suggest that an
overwhelming majority of the earth’s population might support his actions. The forests
and natural spaces in Silent Running were not threatened by war or cataclysm so much as
by human indifference.
The postwar generation of “baby boomers” became a source for a youth culture
that emerged as both a social and political force. Young people formed the center of the
sexual revolution, rejecting many of the previous generation’s mores concerning sexual
relationships and behaviors in favor of pursuing personal pleasure and fulfillment. Rock
music emerged as the musical medium of choice for youth, often accompanied (in public
52
The novel on which the film was based originally set this limit at twenty-one years. See William F.
Nolan and George Clayton-Johnson, Logan’s Run (New York: Dial Press, 1967).
47
LSD.53 Organizations such as Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) formed the basis
of a New Left that played a role in the Civil Rights Movement through the mid 1960s and
later vehemently opposed both the war in Vietnam and American industry, which they
Many within the New Left viewed themselves as opponents of capitalism itself, much
like the Third World revolutionaries with whom they identified, and advocated radical
Few of the films under study take up themes of youth culture directly. Although
the youthful Alex in A Clockwork Orange might seem to represent cultural trepidation
about violent youth, there is little to connect Alex and his circumstances with the social
climate of the late 1960s beyond the psychedelia-inspired motifs within the film’s mise-
en-scène. Logan’s Run, with its pleasure-seeking society perpetually populated by those
under 30, would appear to refer most overtly to the growing prevalence of alternative
lifestyles in youth culture from the 1960s into the 1970s. Unlike many of the films
produced during the New Hollywood that were critical of traditional values rejected by
much of youth culture, Logan’s Run comes down in support of traditional values by
same time, the extraordinary steps taken by Freeman Lowell to preserve the forests in
Silent Running are consistent with the type of radical action espoused by the New Left.
53
America Divided, 151-168.
54
America Divided, 17173-194; Forcing the Spring, 94-95.
55
America Divided, 184-185, 189-190.
56
Ryan and Kellner, Camera Politica, 249.
48
The film is clearly sympathetic to Lowell and portrays his desire to preserve the
The positive vision of progress that proved so inspirational in the decades before
the appearance of these films had its roots in an earlier period, before the Second World
War. Progress stemming from developments in science and technology was taken for
granted during the first three decades of the twentieth century. Independent inventors
such as Thomas Edison had already demonstrated the wonders and potential of
technology and were implementing this technology on a wide scale. F.W. Taylor’s
coupled with Henry Ford’s similar developments in the use of the assembly line to
“Fordism” that shaped mass production.57 The benefits of efficiency through scientific
outside of industry to questions ranging from social change to the operation of the
home.58 Progressive thinkers bestowed special status on engineers, seen as working for
Although such efficiency was ostensibly pursued in the name of the public good
during the 1920s, technological development was largely for the benefit of industrial
57
Michael Parrish, Anxious Decades: America in Prosperity and Depression, 1920-1941 (New York:
Norton, 1992), 38-39, 89.
58
Ross, Strange Weather, 122.
59
Ibid., 122, 105.
60
Ibid., 122.
49
capital. Business and industry adopted principles of efficiency on a large scale,
producing a vast quantity of consumer items while co-opting most of the previously
independent engineers into the larger industrial framework. In this system, progress was
usually indicated by changes of style.61 The Streamline Moderne style of the 1930s was
one of the first to herald successive stylistic obsolescence in consumer items that
The New York World’s Fair of 1939 embodied many of the popular motifs of
progress while at the same time bringing a new social consciousness, presenting a series
of exhibits that collectively pointed to an improved quality of life through the application
of science and technology.63 The principal philosophic points behind the fair included
the “creat[ion of] a postscarcity culture using machine rather than human labor; the
necessity for democratic institutions in the face of fascism; and the capacity of social and
Although machines remained the central agent of progress, the fair also emphasized the
for improving quality of life. The buildings and pavilions of the fair served as visual
including Raymond Loewy, Norman Bel Geddes, and Henry Dreyfus.65 These were
further reinforced by displays within the pavilions hosted by industry (primarily the Big
61
Ross, Strange Weather, 113.
62
Ibid.
63
Ibid. 128.
64
Ibid., 128.
65
Ibid., 129.
50
Three automakers) that included visions of the future, replete with sleek cars, rockets, and
other attractive objects.66 In sum, the 1939 World’s Fair presented a utopian view of the
The budding science fiction literature of the era reflected the spirit of the times.
and appealed to amateur science enthusiasts, who were inspired by the magazine to
the stories, the covers of the pulp magazines abounded with images of Streamlined
machines that stylistically resembled those buildings of the fair that collectively gave the
Although some of these futuristic motifs persisted in the decade following the
Second World War, the extent and nature of technological change in the meantime began
to color those images with a certain naivety. Andrew Ross draws parallels between the
New York World’s Fairs of 1939 and 1964 to show how public perceptions of the future
Although the United States in 1964 was at the height of its postwar boom,
in love with the Space Age, and fully subscribed to President Kennedy’s
New Frontier of science and technology, the World Fair’s generic
language of progress did not hold the decisive rhetorical sway it had
enjoyed in the post-Depression years of the late thirties. The resurgence
of the cult of science and invention in the post-Sputnik years did not
establish the same deep roots in popular consciousness as it had done in
the decade before Hiroshima. . . . [T]he social pathology of Bomb culture
had too pervasively defined people’s horizon of expectations about the
world of tomorrow for the rhetoric of unbounded progress to enjoy
66
Ross, Strange Weather, 130-132.
67
Ibid., 106-114.
68
Ibid., 113-114.
51
another round of popular acclaim in the old form of macro-industrial
engineering.69
During ensuing years, industrial capital continued to grow in influence and scope
and to promote its expansion as progress. At the same time, the environmental by-
products of that progress and their implications for ecological decay became apparent.
As the public’s faith in the decisions of their leaders gave way to a general pessimism
about the future, people began to feel ambivalent about the progress that was being
Fredric Jameson identifies this period as the onset of “late capitalism,” a social
and cultural state brought about by the expansion and globalization of industrial capital.71
Jameson regards the appearance of late capitalism as contributing to the growth of the
of existence:
style and fashion, the influx of advertising and media, and a growing homogenization of
69
Ross, Strange Weather, 138.
70
Ibid., 138, 140-141.
71
Jameson, “Postmodernism, or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism,” New Left Review 146 (July-August
1984), 78.
72
Ibid., 78.
52
existence.73 Jameson regards the postmodern consciousness as a “cultural dominant”
resulting from the conditions of late capitalism that is somehow both an extension of and
in opposition to modernism. The principal difference between the two appears to lie in
In the years after World War II, arts communities and organizations actively
promoted modernism. Most artists wanted to break with pre-war artistic modes that
United States government took an interest in modernist art and music, using them as
ideological foils and symbols of free expression in the West in contrast to the enforced
socialist realism of the Soviet Union or the People’s Republic of China.76 The political,
ideological, and social significance of modernist music and art was considered so great
that the CIA actually promulgated them, sponsoring art exhibitions, concerts, and
journals that promoted “radical” and “polemical” works for purposes of pro-Western
propaganda.77 Aaron Copland noted the political significance behind modernist music,
writing about twelve-tone and serial music specifically: “The twelve-tone composer . . .
73
Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on Postmodern
Culture, (Portsmouth WA: Bay Press, 1983), 124.
74
Jameson, “Postmodernism, or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism,” 55-57.
75
Guilbaut, How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art, 195-197.
76
Martin Scherzinger, “Autonomy and Formalism in Modernist Musical Aesthetics,” in The Pleasures of
Modernist Music, ed. Arved Ashby (Rochester: University of Rochester Press, 2004), 88-89.
77
Guilbaut, How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art, 204; Alex Ross, The Rest is Noise, 356.
53
is no longer writing music to satisfy himself; whether he likes it or not, he is writing it
precipitated by its support from institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art.
Modernist art was supported and funded by the United States government and the forces
of industrial capital as part of Cold War propaganda.79 This financial support signaled an
acceptance of modernism that was potentially at odds with its ostensibly critical stance.
Whereas modernism had been a radical artistic movement, its canonization marked its
appropriation by the cultural forces that it had opposed. Modernism had been
indeed, many of its principles were adopted by industrial design into a plethora of
consumer goods for purchase. The latter may have allowed the public to feel connected
progress.81
Like their counterparts in the visual arts, advocates for modernist music pursued
abstraction and complexity in the name of progress. Pierre Boulez, one of the more
polemical figures at the forefront of modernist music, called for complex and systematic
approaches to composition that went beyond the seemingly advanced twelve-tone method
78
Jennifer DeLapp, “Copland in the Fifties: Music and Ideology in the McCarthy Era,” (PhD diss.,
University of Michigan, 1997), quoted in Howard Pollack, Aaron Copland: The Life and Work of an
Uncommon Man (New York: Henry Holt, 1999), 444
79
Booker, Monsters, Mushroom Clouds, and the Cold War, 21;
80
Ibid.
81
Thomas Hine, Populuxe (New York: Knopf, 1986), 59-60.
54
of Arnold Schoenberg. Boulez criticized Schoenberg as not having followed through on
“useless” any musicians who did not see the “necessity” for such developments.82
Other critics considered the substance of the music in light of past and current
social and national conflicts. Roger Sessions had given up composing in an accessible
style for a more abstract idiom, claiming that the “physical and intellectual violence” of
Rene Leibowitz lent support to ideological claims for modernist music, stating that
The sociologist and cultural critic Theodor Adorno stressed the importance of
Industry that also promoted such mass entertainment as sports and film.85 For Adorno,
retained its critical function. Milton Babbitt stressed the importance of encouraging the
progressive development of complex music even as he acknowledged its difficulty for the
lay listener and called for its financial support from foundations and academic
institutions.86
82
See Pierre Boulez, “Eventually,” in Notes of an Apprenticeship, transl. Herbert Weinstock (New York,
Alfred A Knopf, 1968), 148; Boulez, “Schoenberg is Dead,” in Notes of an Apprenticeship, 268-276.
83
Alex Ross, The Rest is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century (New York: Farrar, Straus and
Giroux, 2007), 355-356
84
Rene Leibowitz, in Schoenberg and his School, quoted in Ross, The Rest is Noise, 357.
85
Theodor W. Adorno, “On the Fetish Character in Music and the Regression of Listening,” in Theodor W.
Adorno, Essays on Music, ed. Richard Leppert, trans. Susan H. Gillespie (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2002), 291, 304.
86
Milton Babbitt, “Who Cares if You Listen,” in Contemporary Composers on Contemporary Music, ed.
Elliott Schwartz and Barney Childs (New York: Da Capo Press, 1998), 250.
55
Mainstream audiences did not embrace modernist concert music as easily as
modernism in the visual arts. Audiences continued to find much of this music alienating,
incomprehensible, and unpalatable (although isolated similar passages in films did not
provoke such a strong reaction).87 Concert music remained complex, dissonant, dense,
and difficult despite numerous changes in methods and materials during the years
following World War II.88 Elaborate formal processes such as total serialism often
produced works that sounded chaotic to the average listener, who typically could not hear
the underlying logic in the music. Electronic music carried connotations of artificiality
and the machine, something against which some mainstream listeners had an inherent
bias.89 Even some erstwhile composers found the music too remote; recalling his
experience of the Domaine Musicale concerts under Pierre Boulez, composer Philip
Glass described it as “a wasteland, dominated by these maniacs, these creeps, who were
Some critics, notably Henry Pleasants, author of The Agony of Modern Music,
saw modern music as experimentation and novelty largely for its own sake, justified in
viable musical language because they had nothing to say and of dismissing popular
87
Arved Ashby, “Modernism Goes to the Movies,” in The Pleasure of Modernist Music, ed. Arved Ashby
(Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2004), 346
88
Alex Ross, The Rest is Noise, 355-356.
89
Jacques Barzun addresses this issue in Jacques Barzun, “Introductory Remarks to a Program of Works
Created at the Columbia Princeton Electronic Music Center,” in Audio Culture: Readings in Modern
Music, ed. Christopher Cox and Daniel Warner (New York: Continuum, 2004), 367-369. Robert Moog
also remarked on the tendency for listeners to regard synthesizers and electronic instruments as artificial in
Dominic Milano, “Robert Moog,” in The Art of Electronic Music, ed. Tom Darter and Greg Armbruster
(New York: Quill, 1984), 73.
90
Philip Glass, quoted in John Rockwell, All American Music: Composition in the Late Twentieth Century
(New York: Knopf, 1983), 111.
91
Henry Pleasants, The Agony of Modern Music (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1955), 3, 9-10.
56
criticism of their work by insisting that art was rarely appreciated in its own time.92
Unlike music of the past, the works of modern composers no longer served any social
function or purpose, and for this reason, composers felt no need to create music that
appealed to a larger audience.93 Copland, for his part, continued to support the avant-
garde despite personal misgivings that he felt about the increasing inaccessibility of the
In the social and cultural upheaval of the early to middle 1960s, performers,
audiences, and critics began to question the dogmatic reverence for complexity and
abstraction that had held sway throughout the 1950s..95 These early stirrings of
postmodernism were carrying out the critical role of modernism itself, focusing on the
modernism had been co-opted by the academy, which many saw as being in league with
the forces of industrial capital. Modernism was the art of the “Establishment,” and its
own myth of progress had become intertwined with that of the bourgeois culture it had
once opposed.97
The future implied by progress, with its social and environmental costs brought
on by technology and industrial capital, was looking less and less desirable, something
that the science fiction literature of the period reflected. It is not difficult to imagine that
92
Pleasants, Agaony, 9, 166.
93
Pleasants, Agony, 166-167.
94
Aaron Copland, quoted in Pollack, Aaron Copland: The Life and Work of an Uncommon Man, 466.
95
Scherzinger, “Autonomy and Formalism in Modernist Musical Aesthetics,” 89
96
Ibid.
97
Booker, Monsters, Mushroom Clouds, and the Cold War, 23.
57
the general public’s ambivalence toward their tarnished images of progress might have
paralleled their reaction to the alienating music associated with that same vision of
progress.
futures, the sound of modernist music, which had been bound up with the earlier notions
connoting artistic progress and industrial “progress,” was now invoked to support some
aspect of each of these futures gone wrong. Filmmakers used the difficult and alienating
sounds of this music to characterize the dystopian events and situations within their films.
The often highly technical nature of the music, whether in its complex arrangement of
production, betrayed its ultra-rational conception, which stemmed from earlier beliefs in
In one sense, the undermining of progress that resulted from the social and
aesthetic questioning of the 1960s had freed modernist sounds of some of their immediate
ideological connotations and allowed them to become one of several stylistic options in
creating film scores. In its heyday, modernist music had been proclaimed the music of
the future by its composers and advocates. Filmmakers, exploring the potential
deficiencies of progress as the basis of their cinematic dystopian futures, found it useful
58
CHAPTER 3
The scores discussed in Chapter 3 generally center on a single binary pair that
opposes modernist styles and a contrasting style. The oppositions within each film can
be summarized as follows:
2. Planet of the Apes – twelve-tone melody vs. percussive music with special
unpitched timbres
The single binary pairs for the films in this first group apply to virtually all of the cues
within each score. The oppositions themselves are fairly broad and can potentially
include a number of subsidiary oppositions. All of the films feature a binary pair that
centers on harmonic contrasts as part of the main opposition. Additional pairs that center
The following sections discuss the music for each film in more detail, identifying
the opposing styles, correlating those with the scenes and characters that they accompany,
and rationalizing the relationships between these correlations and each film’s depiction of
dystopian conditions. In each case, modernist musical styles in the score accompany and
59
characterize those dystopian conditions, conferring on them the alienating and
characterize the opposed sides of a near-future society in which books are banned and the
task of firemen is not to put out fires, but instead to seek out, confiscate, and burn all
the firemen, who are the most visible perpetrators of oppression under the authoritarian
state, and sets their music against more restrained, chromatic music that suggests the
isolation and repressed emotions of the rest of the population. The ban on books coupled
with the deliberately facile programming on the pervasive and omnipresent television
impedes the population’s capacity for intellectual and emotional depth, leaving many of
them cut off emotionally and unable to interact meaningfully with their fellows.1
duties and accepts the prevailing wisdom that books only make their readers unhappy,
undermining contentment with their lives. His interactions with his wife, Linda, are
largely superficial; she often barely acknowledges him and is wrapped up instead in
television programs that feature a “family” of personalities who simulate interaction with
1
This is particularly evident in the proclivity of characters to absently caress and touch themselves,
something that the monorail passengers are seen doing in several instances and which Montag’s wife,
Linda, (and even Montag himself) does.
60
Fahrenheit 451 was one of four films strongly shaped by Truffaut’s reverence for
exemplar of auteur cinema for the New Wave.2 The film includes a number of Hitchcock
motifs and quotations, including a dissolve cut from Linda to Montag that recalls The
Wrong Man (1957) and a dream sequence that seems borrowed from Vertigo.3 Perhaps
Truffaut’s most subtle borrowing from Hitchcock is the atmosphere of unspoken fear and
paranoia cultivated by the firemen, as illustrated in the random personal searches that
they conduct on patrons in the park and in a television news broadcast showing firemen
Truffaut’s choice of Bernard Herrmann to compose the score for the film
provided yet another Hitchcock connection. Herrmann had collaborated with Alfred
Hitchcock on a number of films, including Psycho, Vertigo, North by Northwest, and The
Wrong Man among others. Herrmann had also composed for science fiction and fantasy
films, contributing scores to The Day the Earth Stood Still, Journey to the Center of the
Truffaut shared a lack of interest in allowing them to predominate in the score. Truffaut
allegedly chose Herrmann over contemporary concert composers such as Pierre Boulez,
Karlheinz Stockhausen, or Olivier Messiaen, claiming that these composers would give
2
Annette Insdorf discusses Truffaut’s debt to Hitchcock in Annette Insdorf, Francois Truffaut (Boston:
Twayne Publishing, 1978), 39, 44
3
See the documentary on the making of Fahrenheit 451 that accompanies Fahrenheit 451 (1966), directed
by Francois Truffaut, Universal Home Video, 2003, DVD.
4
The atmosphere of paranoia in the film is markedly increased from that of the novel.
5
See filmography in Steven Smith, A Heart at Fire’s Center: The Life and Music of Bernard Herrmann
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991), 366-368.
61
him “the sound of the twentieth century,” whereas Herrmann would give him “the sound
of the twenty-first.”6 The music that Herrmann provided consists largely of chromatic
yet tonal cues that his biographer Steven Smith has called “deeply heartfelt and rich in
impressionistic nuance.”7 That said, the music is restrained in its suggestion of emotional
states; Herrmann strove for a music of “elegance and simplicity” to allude to the
the absent self absorption of the figures he sees on the monorail that he rides to and from
Most of the cues are built from short motifs, typically consisting of two to four
notes, that are developed through sequential treatment, usually by half step, into longer
passages that may themselves be repeated within a cue. Sequential repetition of motifs at
the half-step combined with closely spaced intervals within the motifs themselves and
their accompanying chords all contribute to subtle tonal shifts in the cues that Christopher
“yearning” or “romantic.”8
or unacknowledged emotions experienced by the characters. During the cue titled “The
Monorail,” Montag notices that his fellow riders are all gazing distantly
6
Smith, A Heart at Fire’s Center, 276; See also portions of Francois Truffaut, “Truffaut on ‘Fahrenheit
451,’” trans. Kay Mander and R.K. Nelson, Cahiers du Cinéma in English, No. 5, reprinted in Jerry Weist,
Ray Bradbury: An Illustrated Life (New York: HarperCollins, 2002), 135.
7
Smith, A Heart at Fire’s Center, 276.
8
Christopher Young, notes accompanying Bernard Herrmann, Fahrenheit 451: The Complete Motion
Picture Score, performed by the Moscow Symphony Orchestra cond. William Stromberg, Tribute Film
Classics TFC-1002, 2007, Compact Disc.
62
Ex. 3.1. Fahrenheit 451, “The Monorail”
themselves with a sensation of physical closeness that they are unable to receive from
other individuals.9 The chromaticism of the cue seems to attribute their actions to
imply the responses of characters, primarily those of Montag, to books. In fact, there is
little difference between the nature of the cues used in each of these situations, indicating
through music that books can provide an emotionally rich interaction comparable to that
with another person. Truffaut assigned special status to the books as such, creating what
Many critics agree that this special status brings the books themselves to the level of
characters; the multiple interspersed shots of titles succumbing to the flames as the books
are burned are meant to invoke the same sense of urgency as the loss of a person.11
9
Fahrenheit 451: The Complete Motion Picture Score, Track 13, “The Monorail”
10
Insdorf, Francois Truffaut, 51. For some critics, Truffaut’s focus on the books was so strong that it
bordered on “fetishization” of the books as objects over concern for their contents. See Dennis Allen,
Finally Truffaut (New York: Beaufort, 1985), 116.
11
Insdorf, Francois Truffaut, 49; Allen, Finally Truffaut, 117.
63
Ex. 3.2. Fahrenheit 451, “The Novel”
harmony of the cue “The Novel,” as Montag secretly begins reading David Copperfield at
night in his living room (Example 3.2). The music in the cue “The Reading” similarly
suggests the emotional power of books as Montag, finding himself disgusted by the
shallowness of his wife’s guests, defiantly reads a passage from the novel to them,
“The Novel” is significant not just because it accompanies Montag’s first true
attempt to sit down and read a book, but also because its principal motif is very similar to
the motifs used at key moments in other parts of the film. The cue consists of a four-note
motif sounded twice, repeated a step lower, and followed by a short meandering figure
that closes the phrase before reprising the whole. The initial four-note motif shares its
rhythm and harmony with a similar motif in “The Bedroom,” which accompanies Linda’s
playful seduction of Montag following her resuscitation and blood transfusion after
12
Fahrenheit 451: The Complete Motion Picture Score, CD, Tracks 14 and 27.
64
Ex. 3.3. Fahrenheit 451, “The Bedroom”
accidentally overdosing on sleeping pills (Example 3.3).13 This is the only time that the
audience sees Montag and Linda engaged in any sort of intimate behavior as husband and
wife; during all of their other scenes together, Linda barely acknowledges Montag
because she is absorbed by the television or has taken a mood-altering sedative or both.
When she is free of these distractions, she and Montag are capable of meaningful
A brief reference to the four-note “Bedroom” motif is also heard as Montag meets
briefly with Clarisse in her house, where she is hiding from the police after they arrested
her uncle. Montag is attracted to Clarisse because she is an outsider and has sparked his
interest in books. The reference to the “Bedroom” motif accompanies their conversation
as she makes plans to go into hiding among the “book people,” renegades who live far
The two cues that accompany Montag’s own arrival into the camp of the book
people, “The Road” and “Finale,” are both built on a slowly descending theme, which
hearkens back to the meandering passage from “The Novel” that accompanied Montag’s
13
Fahrenheit 451: The Complete Motion Picture Score, CD, Track 12
65
Ex. 3.4. Fahrenheit 451, “The Road”
first reading of David Copperfield (Example 3.4). The shared theme connects these two
scenes that show where Montag’s passion for books has taken him.14
In contrast to the subtle and yearning music provided as underscoring for most of
the characters, Herrmann gives distinctly modernist music to accompany the firemen.
Collectively, the music for the firemen is made up of gestures and themes that are longer
and more self-contained than any of the short motifs used in other cues. These gestures
and themes are all characterized by deliberately brusque and mechanical rhythms
gestures are often arranged in a fashion that suggests mechanistic juxtaposition rather
than the smooth flow of the more chromatic cues achieved through voice leading. This
construction can be seen in the reprises of the Fire Station motif in “Fire Station,” “Fire
Engine,” and “Fire Alarm,” all of which accompany scenes of the fire engine in motion
(Example 3.5).15
14
Fahrenheit 451: The Complete Motion Picture Score, CD, Tracks 45 and 47.
15
Fahrenheit 451: The Complete Motion Picture Score, CD, Tracks 2, 22, 38.
66
Each gestural block in the music for the firemen at times gives the impression of
having its own tonal center, causing shifts in the tonality of cues for each successive
block. Although the music for the firemen is thus not atonal, the planing of successive
blocks creates a jarring effect, especially in comparison to the smooth voice leading in
the more chromatic cues and undermines the sense of an overarching tonic. The brusque
they stand resolutely on the speeding fire engine or vigorously ransack suspicious homes
(including, eventually, Montag’s own), searching out books and dumping them in a great
pile to be incinerated by the flame thrower. The lack of any implied affect, in contrast to
that suggested by the more chromatic cues, also sets the firemen apart from the rest of the
books.
Herrmann’s decision to create such music is noteworthy not just for its
appropriateness for the activities, but also for the self-consciousness of his use of the
modernist sounds that he chose. He and Truffaut had already agreed that they did not
wish to use electronics, musique concrète, or other “commonplace and futuristic clichés”
that Truffaut believed had already been overused on European and American television.16
Still, Herrmann himself characterized his music for the firemen as modernist, even if
disparagingly so, calling it “a parody of all kinds of avant-garde music.”17 It is ironic that
Herrmann, himself an advocate for modernist concert music, would choose to parody
16
Truffaut’s journal, in Weist, Ray Bradbury, 135.
17
Smith, A Heart at Fire’s Center, 277.
67
Truffaut’s acceptance of this modernist music to accompany the firemen is
equally curious in light of his own discounting of “music of the twentieth century” by
Boulez, Stockhausen, and Messiaen, figures with reputations that had placed them on the
cutting edge of music. By the time Truffaut began making the film, the aesthetics
underlying the earlier works from the 1950s that had established the reputations of these
composers were already coming under serious question by composers and critics with
Boulez had both embraced aleatoric approaches to performance and composition over the
more rigid serial systems that they had employed in the 1950s. Their earlier vociferous
advocacy of such systematic approaches to music for a brief period may well explain
One would not expect such music to convey the level of Hitchcock-inspired
emotional subtlety on which much of the film depends (and which Herrmann’s more
traditional chromatic music conveys nicely). Furthermore, the music that Herrmann
created for the firemen works recalls Stravinsky rather than Boulez or Stockhausen, and it
modernist sounds with the firemen’s music. One can only speculate as to whether
Truffaut shared this association. Perhaps he equated the music’s association with the
18
Quoted in Alex Ross, The Rest is Noise: Listening to the Twentieth Century (New York: Farrar, Straus
and Giroux, 2007), 356.
68
oppressive firemen with the almost dogmatic dominance that modernism seemed to exert
Still, of the original music composed for the films under study, much of
Herrmann’s music for Fahrenheit 451 sounds most like traditional film music, something
true of many of his film scores and noteworthy in light of his advocacy of modernist
concert music.20 This contrasts starkly with Jerry Goldsmith’s use of modernist music
throughout Planet of the Apes, in which he went so far as to use a twelve-tone melody as
Herrmann’s indication that the music for the firemen is a conscious reference to
avant-garde sounds suggests his own willingness to associate this music with either
oppressive firemen, Herrmann also arrives at a better fit for a film that consciously
Unlike Herrmann’s score for Fahrenheit 451, Jerry Goldsmith’s score for Planet
of the Apes consists of modernist sounds throughout. It soon becomes clear that the
stylistic distinction is between atonal yet essentially traditional orchestral passages used
to reinforce the film’s protagonist and percussive timbres that support the apes. The
19
Boulez’s strong advocacy of complexity and highly organized systemization in modernist music drew on
his highly respected reputation as a composer. For an example of Boulez’s position, see Pierre Boulez,
“Directions in Recent Music,” in Notes of an Apprenticeship, trans. Herbert Weinstock (New York: Alfred
A. Knopf, 1968), 224-232.
20
Steven Smith notes this in connection with Herrmann’s original opera Wuthering Heights in A Heart at
Fire’s Center, 111.
69
score’s opposition between two distinctly modernist and thereby potentially alienating
styles mirrors the film’s ambivalent characterization of the protagonist as well as its
another planet and finds that apes are the dominant species and, moreover, that humans
behave and are treated as animals. The apes, whose deep loathing of humans has even
been adopted into their religion, consider Taylor a special threat because of his ability to
speak, which undermines their belief in the uniqueness of ape intelligence. Taylor
escapes captivity among the apes and soon discovers that he has actually returned to
earth. The mute humans are the remains of his own culture, which destroyed itself in a
nuclear holocaust some 2000 years before, thereby allowing great apes to assume the
The film is unusual because of its high level of pointed social commentary despite
its status and reputation as an “action film.”21 At the time, many considered the film to
questions about the role of compassion in human scientific progress through its
destruction.23 Indeed, Taylor’s cynical prologue at the beginning of the film, in which he
wonders if “man still makes war on his brother,” and the scriptural quotation that
21
M. Keith Booker, Alternate Americas: Science Fiction Film and American Culture (Westport, CT:
Praeger, 2007), 105; the disparaging review of Planet of the Apes in Film Quqrterly in comparison to 2001:
A Space Odyssey would seem to bear this out. See Judith Shatnoff, “A Gorilla to Remember,” Film
Quarterly 22 1 (Autumn 1968), 56-62.
22
Eric Greene, Planet of the Apes as American Myth: Race and Politics in the Films and Television Series
(Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 1996), 1-5, 14-20.
23
Booker, Alternate Americas, 99-100; Eric Greene, Planet of the Apes as American Myth, 27-28.
70
Cornelius reads at the end of the film denouncing man as one who “kills for sport, lust,
and greed” and who “will make a desert of his home and of yours” sum up the film’s
The implied deficiency in the future portrayed in Planet of the Apes appears to be
inherent in humanity. Unlike 2001, in which life was so permeated by technology that
humans behaved almost like machines, Planet of the Apes implies that humanity is
influenced by its hidden animal nature and suggests that this influence is strong enough to
overcome surface civility and drive humanity to self-destruction. Stanley Kubrick later
The music in Planet of the Apes is remarkable for its unique instrumentation,
which augments a traditional orchestra with novel instruments that include various
drums, a bass slide whistle, ram’s horn, Brazilian cuíka, and struck aluminum mixing
bowls.24 The score also calls for a gong scraped with a triangle stick, and several of the
cues were treated with echo effects in postproduction.25 The striking combination of
24
Royal S. Brown, Overtones and Undertones: Reading Film Music (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1994), 178.
25
The used of the scraped gong is revealed by the brief transcription from the cue “Searchers” included in
Fred Karlin and Rayburn Wright, On the Track: A Guide to Contemporary Film Scoring, 2nd ed. (New
York: Routledge, 2004), 213.
26
Brown, Overtones and Undertones, 178; Booker, Alternate Americas, 98. Both Paul Monaco and Eric
Greene note that the score received an Oscar nomination in 1968. See Paul Monaco, The Sixties: 1969-
1969, vol. 8 of History of the American Cinema, ed. Charles Harpole. (New York: Scribner’s, 2001), 117;
Eric Green, Planet of the Apes as American Myth, 164.
71
Ex. 3.6. Planet of the Apes, Main Title Theme.
The film’s music includes a variety of sounds and techniques reminiscent of those
absent, some passages include irregular and shifting meters, and many of the cues are
built of simultaneous and successive ostinati; in short, there are several passages in the
score that appear consistent with what Pieter van den Toorn referred to as Stravinsky’s
“general methods of procedure.”28 The polarity around which the score revolves is
essentially one of pitched material against percussive sounds, both of which may indeed
be heard in a single cue. The pitched material is derived primarily from a twelve-tone
melody that appears throughout the film in a number of guises (See Example 3.6).29
Fragments of the melody are also used as ostinati or as isolated gestures in a texture.
Bond, in his commentary on the CD recording of the score, refers to this melody as the
film’s “main theme,” although it occurs principally in conjunction with Taylor and could
The character of this main theme varies widely, depending on the contexts for its
appearance. In the film’s Main Titles, the main theme is sounded successively by high
27
Jeff Bond compares the primitivist characteristics of Goldsmith’s music to those found in the music of
Stravinsky and Bartók; see Jeff Bond, notes accompanying Jerry Goldsmith, Planet of the Apes: Original
Motion Picture Soundtrack Varése Sarabande VSD 5848, 1997, Compact Disc, 3, 4, 7.
28
Pieter van den Toorn, The Music of Igor Stravinsky (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983), xvii,
xviii, xx.
29
Goldsmith noted the score’s use of “traditional twelve-tone techniques,” stating that such techniques
were no longer truly “new,” but were still relatively new in the realm of film music. Earle Hagen, Scoring
for Films: A Complete Text (New York: Criterion, 1971), 165.
30
Bond, notes accompanying Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, 7, 8.
72
woodwinds over a low percussion ostinato, with the statements separated by an angular
piano figure and some incidental percussion.31 The main theme is similarly sounded over
expansive chords as Taylor and his companions from the spaceship explore the wasteland
known as the Forbidden Zone (this music is largely reprised as Taylor escapes into the
Forbidden Zone at the end of the film).32 The main theme also provides the rapid melody
in triplets that accompanies Taylor’s first escape into the interior of the ape city.33
Some cues feature a subsidiary eight-note theme that is derived from the main
theme; this is heard most prominently toward the end of “The Search Continues” as
Taylor and his companions find an oasis just outside the Forbidden Zone. This melody
consists of notes 1-4 and 5-7 of the theme, arranged into a line. This subsidiary theme is
also the basis of the accompaniment for the fragmented main theme heard during the
In contrast to these more traditional cues are those featuring exotic percussion,
which add a primitive sound to the texture. The primitivism of these sounds resonates
with similar visual elements connected to the apes, notably their cave-like architecture
and comparatively simple technology. Some of these unusual timbres convey the
strangeness of the landscape to the explorers. The odd metallic ringing of the aluminum
mixing bowls accompanies their bewildered responses to what they find in the Forbidden
Zone, whereas the scraped tam-tam, sounding like wind gusts or distant thunder,
31
Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Track 2
32
Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Track 4, 5, and 17
33
Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Track 10
34
Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Tracks 5 and 17.
73
The most striking sounds are produced with a ram’s horn, bass slide whistle, and
in particularly a Brazilian cuíka, all of which accompany the apes. The cuíka produces a
sound strongly reminiscent of the agitated vocalizations of apes, a sound that is almost
always heard during scenes of the apes pursuing humans, especially Taylor. The sound
of the slide whistle is also reminiscent of an ape’s soft hooting, and like the cuíka, the
slide whistle is generally heard during scenes featuring apes. These sounds are not meant
to be diegetic, but rather are included for their timbral associations with ape characters.
Finally, the sound of the ram’s horn is heard primarily in connection with the gorilla
soldiers; like the exotic drums, the ram’s horn seems intended to add a “primitive” sound
Unlike the drums, the calls on the ram’s horn could possibly be interpreted as diegetic.
There are few instances of recurring musical passages, although the main theme is
heard throughout the score and the sound of the cuíka appears regularly within the
passages that accompany the apes. The one clear recurrence acts as a musical
2001.
The film’s final cue, accompanying Taylor’s final escape into the Forbidden Zone
and his discovery of the ruined Statue of Liberty, reprises material from early in the film
when Taylor and his companions first explored the Forbidden Zone (“The Searchers” and
“Revelation, Part 2”).35 These cues all share fragmented statements of the main theme
35
Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Track 5 and 17.
74
over sustained chords punctuated by bursts of sound from the scraped tam-tam. The
sense of space created by this texture is enhanced with added echo and reverberation
effects. The reprise acts as a musical reminiscence, recalling the view of the landscape
from earlier in the film just as Taylor discovers the truth about the apes’ planet. Such
recurrences are similar to those in Fahrenheit 451, in particular the cues “Flames” and
“Flowers of Fire” that accompany the burning of the book lady’s home and, later,
Montag’s burning of his own home. The musical excerpts used in Kubrick’s 2001
Since the score consists of modernist sounds throughout, even if they are different
in conception, is it possible that both the atonal, twelve-tone melody and the timbre-based
music indicate deficiencies in the film’s depicted future? More specifically, can the
music be interpreted as signaling that both the apes and Taylor are somehow “deficient”?
That this is possible is born out by the type of character that Taylor represents and by the
His last log entry before setting the spacecraft on automatic and entering hibernation is an
hope that he will encounter something nobler at his destination. Upon landing, he makes
fun of his colleagues for their continuing to revere a culture that they have left far behind
in time and space. Taylor could be said to embody personal alienation from his own
culture.
75
Taylor’s hostile reactions to the apes, while certainly fueled by their humiliating
treatment of him based on their hatred and suspicion of his species, is also fed by his own
cultural arrogance and prejudices. These prevent him from regarding the apes as equals
any more than they can consider him as such.36 His sense of superiority extends even to
Cornelius and Zira, the only apes that treat him with dignity. Although they help him to
escape to the Forbidden Zone at great personal cost, Taylor refuses to show any
deference to Cornelius and insists on carrying a weapon. His belligerent stance allows
for virtually no self-reflection. His aggressive arrogance not only confirms the image of
humans described within ape scripture but also agrees with Taylor’s own misgivings
culture and values.37 His malaise and arrogance are therefore equally applicable to the
society that he hails from, including a sizable portion of the film audience. It is possible
culture.38 On the surface, the twelve-tone melody that accompanies the astronauts as they
walk across the strange landscape may appear to reflect the alien landscape. This music
could also reflect the alienation of the astronauts themselves: as Taylor points out, each
of them had their own personal reasons for undertaking an exploration that would quite
36
In the cave within the Forbidden Zone, Taylor badgers Dr. Zaius with his conclusion that the artifacts
point to a human resident, noting that “he was here before you, and he was better than you.” Planet of the
Apes (1968), directed by Franklin J. Schaeffner, Fox Home Video, 2000. DVD
37
Eric Greene notes that the casting of Charleton Heston in this role made this aspect of Taylor particularly
effective. Greene, Planet of the Apes as American Myth, 39-45.
38
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., The Vital Center: The Politics of Freedom (New Brunswick: Transaction
Publishers, 1998), 51-53.
76
possibly separate them from the rest of humanity for the remainder of their lives. The
film does not portray them as heroic astronauts engaged in a noble quest. Rather, it
portrays them as flawed men, capable, yet bickering among them as they face the
identification for the audience, who may come to recognize the twelve-tone main theme
as connected to Taylor. Against this music, the “ape sounds” provide a marked contrast.
“Ape sounds” are introduced into the score with the sound of the slide whistle heard
during the Main Titles, but their effective use becomes apparent during Taylor’s first
sight of the gorilla soldiers during the hunt.39 Here, interspersed within an incessant and
frantic piano ostinato are passages featuring short exclamations from the cuíka that
resemble the bellowing and grunting of gorillas. This sound is also used during Taylor’s
first attempted escape from his cage and flight through the ape city, most prominently
during a brief shot in which one of the gorillas captures Taylor with a snare around his
neck.40 The sound is also used as the gorillas quell Taylor’s outburst in front of the high
tribunal when he discovers that one of his companions has been lobotomized. It is heard
finally when the soldiers accost Taylor, Zira, and Cornelius as they explore a site in the
Forbidden Zone.
The slide whistle is also heard during Taylor’s escape to the Forbidden Zone with
Zira and Cornelius. In fact, one can discern a faint correlation between sounds of the
39
Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Track 7
40
Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Track 10
77
cuíka and slide whistle and their use to accompany gorillas and chimpanzees such as Zira
The absence of pitch content in the ape sounds takes on added significance when
considered along with the film’s twelve-tone main theme. The sounds associated with
the apes are, of course, reminiscent of ape sounds, which from the perspective of Taylor
and the audience are animal sounds and thus incoherent. Taylor and the apes regard the
individual from an animal, whether human or ape.41 The connection between the apes
and the sound of the cuíka rather than another atonal melody or figure reveals something
about how the nominally sympathetic protagonist, and the audience, may be expected to
react to the apes. The music does not confer on them the same level of coherence that it
Taylor’s capture during his first escape highlights the significance of speech in a
different way. As the gorillas hoist Taylor up into a suspended net, Zira appears, begging
the gorilla soldiers not to hurt him. Taylor, who had suffered a throat injury that made
him unable to speak, suddenly comes into view and shouts, “Get your stinking paws off
me, you damn dirty ape!” shocking all the apes within earshot with the spectacle of a
human who can speak.42 The music emphasizes this moment by providing a lull in the
frantic musical activity to allow for Taylor’s line. A brief crescendo through a stacked
tone cluster follows; as stunned onlookers react, the scene finishes with a forte F sharp
41
This is seen in the tribunal scene and in the general reaction to Taylor and his ability to speak.
42
Planet of the Apes, DVD.
78
sounding in octaves, the most consonant sound in the entire score.43 This moment of
tonal clarity in the underscore highlights Taylor’s regained power of speech and with it
As one might expect, the ostinati within Planet of the Apes differ from those used
in Fahrenheit 451, primarily by emphasizing a basic pulse rather than an odd meter like
that which accompanied the firemen in the earlier film. Whereas the music for the
firemen has a rigid, militaristic quality that is defamiliarized through its alternating 4/4
and 3 /4 measures, ostinati in Planet of the Apes are simple structures to which additional
motifs can be attached, resembling procedures in “Augurs of Spring” from The Rite of
Spring. This is true of the rapid and frantic ostinati that accompany the hunt but also of
the more evenly paced ostinati that accompany Taylor’s escape with his chimpanzee
reminiscent of the “Sacrificial Dance,” with its irregular syncopation over a regular pulse.
Stravinsky’s work most likely provided conceptual inspiration for much of the score to
Planet of the Apes. Even though many of the actual sounds of the score are quite differ
substantially from anything in Stravinsky’s work, its Primitivism seems to have inspired
some of the drum figures; the score’s use of ostinati to reinforce a basic pulse likewise
One could construe the alienation expressed by the twelve-tone melody, despite
its ostensible superiority over the unpitched musical materials, as also somehow related
43
Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Track 10
79
to the cultural breakdown that led to the nuclear catastrophe. The notion of progress
basic to modernism and embodied in the twelve-tone melody and its derivatives in the
score failed in the case of this human civilization. Progress was interrupted as humanity
fell victim to its core aggressiveness and destroyed itself; the potential for cultural
primitive than the first. Could they achieve the level of progress that Taylor represents
and, if so, would they similarly become victims to their base instincts?
For that matter, do Taylor and his kind really represent progress if his culture will
annihilate itself? The opposing modernist styles in the music for Planet of the Apes seem
to comment much more on Taylor and his culture and their implications for the future
For his highly imaginative and visual film 2001: A Space Odyssey, Stanley
Kubrick likewise took a unique approach to using only pre-existing classical music.
Although common during the era of silent films, such pervasive use of pre-existing music
had disappeared with the advent of classical Hollywood practice. Kubrick’s approach
thus provoked some controversy after the film’s release.44 He included nineteenth-
80
danger of becoming extinct and provides an unseen and unclear impetus that pushes
humanity past a boundary and allows it to develop into a new form of intelligence.
Many have remarked on the film’s comparative lack of dialogue, noting that the
Technological development has made such achievements as space travel so routine that
they no longer elicit wonder, and the dearth of meaningful dialogue renders the characters
almost as mechanical as the technology.45 Indeed, the HAL 9000 computer aboard the
spaceship Discovery is often described as having as much or more depth of character than
its human companions.46 The society that has produced these technological marvels
appears to lack human dynamism.47 This would seem to present a disquieting picture for
the film audience, who recognized the society of 2001 as their own, projected thirty-three
years into a realistically imagined future yet with familiar logos and trappings to make it
appear that much more realistic, believable, and immediate. In the face of such advanced
technology, the need for outside intervention to prevent the decline of the human species
suggests disbelief in human autonomy and in the species’ ability to ensure a positive
Even apart from the film’s use of pre-existing music, its unhurried pacing and
extended visual tableaux call for music of a different character than that heard in Planet
of the Apes or even Fahrenheit 451. Musical cues are presented with no dialogue or
diegetic sound over them, which means that they become an integral part of an audio-
45
Booker, Alternate Americas, 84-86.
46
Booker, Alternate Americas, 86; Michel Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, trans. Gilbert Adair
and Robert Bononno (New York: Faber and Faber, 2001), 134.
47
Booker, Alternate Americas, 87; Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, 127.
48
Booker, Alternate Americas, 87.
81
visual sensory experience. What is more, the audience is expected to pay conscious
attention to this music, easy enough to do since the music is featured so prominently
during extended passages of the film, with no other sounds to compete with it. The music
does not merely “modify” the visual aspect according to the prescriptions of classical
Hollywood. Rather, these musical selections explain the otherwise ambiguous scenes
Kubrick’s choices are all highly individual, and they can be related according to
their musical characteristics and their respective roles in the film. Tonal, familiar music
early in the film to the more “modern” humans of the very near future. The accessible
pieces include the opening prologue from Richard Strauss’s Also Sprach Zarathustra, the
Blue Danube waltz by Johann Strauss, Jr., and the Adagio from Gayanne by Aram
Khachaturian.
consciousness represented by the black monolith or activities outside the scope of human
ability such as David Bowman’s journey through the Star Gate. In fact, György Ligeti’s
49
Brown alludes to this when he describes the musical excerpts as “expressing in a different medium what
the film expresses in visual and narrative terms. . . .” See Brown, Overtones and Undertones, 239.
82
The other sound-mass compositions include the Kyrie from Ligeti’s Requiem, his Lux
Aeterna for mixed chorus, and his Aventures for mixed voices.50
The unfamiliar, unsettling sounds of the Kyrie accompany almost all appearances
of the black monolith, which represents the alien consciousness in the film. Ligeti
achieved the unique sound of the Kyrie through a technique that he called
“micropolyphony,” which involved setting the voice parts in closely spaced canons that
change over the course of the movement. The result is an undulating vocal texture that
sounds almost like mass wailing and could be construed as disturbing or conveying
throughout the orchestra, which shift gradually or abruptly to new combinations and
sounds as the piece progresses, very much mirroring the shifting alien vistas and
Kyrie, the harmonies and textures of Atmosphères are far removed from more familiar
Hollywood music, and they resonate with the spectacular visuals and convey Bowman’s
disorientation as the Star Gate distorts his experience of space and time.
The selections chosen to accompany human actions are also distinct in their
moods. The prologue to Zarathustra is a short, triumphant fanfare, whereas the waltz
50
Aventures was treated with echo effects for its use in the film; it appears in both its original and
processed form on 2001: A Space Odyssey – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Rhino Movie Music R2
72562, 1996, Compact Disc.
51
Philip Hayward interprets the music in this way in Philip Hayward, Introduction to Off the Planet:
Music, Sound, and Science Fiction Cinema, ed. Philip Hayward (Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
2004), 15.
83
and ballet excerpts are more leisurely and subdued examples of dance music. Kubrick’s
selection of a piece as familiar as the Blue Danube waltz has attracted perhaps the most
attention to his score.52 Characteristically reticent to discuss the motives behind his
choices, Kubrick described the waltz as particularly effective for depicting “grace and
beauty in turning.”53 The elegant and sensual sounds of the waltz accompany Dr.
Heywood Floyd’s journey to the moon base where he examines a recently discovered
monolith. Floyd’s trip includes some of the longest and most detailed scenes of space
travel in the film, often focusing on subtle details of the experience or luxuriating in the
highly realistic scenes of a journey to the moon. The slow and spare excerpt from the
Gayanne suite similarly accompanies the solitary routines of the astronauts aboard the
deep space probe Discovery as they engage in solitary recreation between performing
Of the different excerpts, only the Kyrie and the prologue truly recur; the Blue
Danube is split into different parts within what could be considered one long sequence.
And although the opening portion of Atmosphères appears as the film’s overture and
during its intermission, its only appearance within the film is in the Star Gate sequence.
The Kyrie recurs in conjunction with the first three of the four appearances of the black
monolith, acting as a reminiscence of previous appearances and even signifying the alien
52
David Patterson lists several possible interpretations of the use of this piece in David W. Patterson,
“Music, Structure and Metaphor in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey,” American Music 22 3
(Autumn 2004), 473; this piece is discussed further in Chapter 5.
53
Stanley Kubrick, originally from Adel, The Making of 2001, quoted in David Patterson, “Music,
Structure, and Metaphor in Kubrick’s 2001,” 454.
84
consciousness.54 Recurrences of the prologue to Also Sprach Zarathustra also act as
musical reminiscences, but without a specific visual reference like that for the Kyrie.
The prologue to Zarathustra first accompanies the opening titles, seen over a
conjunction of the earth, moon, and sun. The prologue next accompanies the gradual
discovery by one of the hominids that a bone casually tossed among a pile of similar
bones can be used as a weapon for hunting and for warding off rivals. Finally, the
contemplate the earth in space. David Patterson described the role of this music as
evolutionary steps taken by humanity at different points in its development. This excerpt
provides the most effective reminiscence by linking and equating the scenes of the
hominid discovering the bone tool and of the return of the Star Child.55 Several
cinematic devices call attention to these events as significant. The hominid is depicted in
slow motion, his image inter-cut with shots of felled prey animals and a planetary
conjunction involving the monolith, whereas the ambiguously depicted size of the Star
Child in space as it looks down on the earth inspires awe. The fanfare gestures of the
Strauss prologue, itself imbued with the cosmic significance of the planetary conjunctions
during the film’s opening titles, paints these scenes as victorious and triumphant, even for
those many audience members who do not know the original source of the excerpts. 56
54
Michel Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, 128.
55
Patterson, “Music, Structure and Metaphor in Kubrick’s 2001,” 451.
56
John Williamson notes some audience’s and performers’ tendency to regard this music as originating
with the film. See John Williamson, Strauss: Also Sprach Zarathustra (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1993), 8.
85
There are two attributes of humans as portrayed in the film that could be
stimulate its evolutionary development.57 A second is the extent to which the technology
of the society has infiltrated the lives of its population, so that the people of 2001 begin to
Many critics, perhaps following the lead of Arthur C. Clarke in his novelization of
the film, regard 2001 as showing humanity in stages of decline, both during the depiction
of the early hominids four million years before and in the technologically advanced near
future of 2001.59 Clarke relates that competition with other species for food and other
resources in the past would have led to the hominids’ extinction had the alien
consciousness not intervened and stimulated the hominids to use tools. Those tools
eventually led to the capability for space flight (represented visually by the familiar shot
cutting quickly from the image of the hurtling bone to the image of an orbiting satellite)
and the problematic relationships with technology.60 Clarke further relates that humanity
weapons have become so pervasively deadly that the species is “living on borrowed
time,” facing the possibility of extinction as surely as it had four million years in the
past.61 Intervention by the alien consciousness again points to a way past this impasse,
57
Booker, Alternate Americas, 86-87.
58
Booker, Alternate Americas, 84-85.
59
Michel Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, 127.
60
Arthur C. Clarke, 2001: A Space Odyssey, (New York: New American Library, 1968), 35-37.
61
Ibid., 37.
86
and that intervention comes in David Bowman’s transformation into the Star Child,
to Zarathustra, but the previous time that this music was heard, the audience saw the
newly developed hominid using his power to control and subdue the environment,
including those members of his own kind. The audience can only wonder what
Bowman/the Star Child may do with the earth that he contemplates from space.63
If the Star Child truly represents a next step in human evolution (and an abrupt
one), that can only mean the end of the somewhat familiar society of 2001 with which the
audience identifies and to which they have in some measure aspired. Whether Bowman
somehow brings about the end of the society of 2001 or it is allowed to decline on its
own, the film leaves the audience with the sense that the society of 2001 does not have
much of a future.
Kubrick’s choice of the Blue Danube to accompany the society of 2001 highlights
the complacency and routine brought on by the prevalence of technology. Although the
Blue Danube does perhaps illustrate the beauty of the motion of spacecraft, the character
and tempo of the music is comfortable and relaxed; it has nothing of the striving or
triumph implied by the Strauss prologue. This seems to contradict popular notions from
62
Clarke explored this same idea very similarly in his novel Childhood’s End, in which humanity makes a
sudden evolutionary change to a non-corporeal form with the aid of an alien species.
63
Clarke, in his original novel, emphasizes this power ambiguity with the parallelism that Bowman and the
bone wielding hominid (Moon Watcher in the novel) was each briefly the “master of the world, and not
quite sure what to do next. But he would think of something.” Clarke, 2001: A Space Odyssey, 34, 221.
Clarke’s original story, “The Sentinel,” on which the film was partially based, expressed similar trepidation
at the thought of the return of some ancient and advanced alien consciousness. The Star Child’s ambiguity
of purpose coupled with the bone-wielding hominid’s aggressive tendencies following his mastery of his
tools give a pessimistic picture of the future of humanity.
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the 1950s and 1960s equating space travel with progress, expansion, and even adventure.
Space was the “final frontier,” and the goal of reaching the moon was one that captivated
the imagination of the country if not the world. Within the film, that goal had been
fulfilled by the permanent moon base to which Dr. Floyd travels, but somewhere along
the way, the journey became so familiar, so habitual, for Floyd even so boring, that it
seemed to need a gently distracting musical accompaniment, perhaps even something like
The film offers little information about the mysterious alien consciousness
ultimately responsible for humanity’s fate. The featureless black monolith is the only
visual reference to its presence; there is nothing to indicate its motives, thoughts or plans
for humanity. The effect of its accompanying music, the Kyrie, is equally ambiguous.
Philip Hayward described the music as following in the tradition of using dissonant
music to support tense and apprehensive situations, but Arved Ashby notes that such an
assumption with respect to the music and the aliens is somewhat hasty.64 He notes that
the alien consciousness and the monolith never perform any overtly sinister actions. In
fact, the most catastrophic event in the film, the death of the astronaut Frank Poole,
Bowman’s partner aboard the Discovery, occurs with no musical accompaniment at all.65
Furthermore, the actions of the HAL 9000 computer, which was responsible for Poole’s
64
Hayward, Introduction to Off the Planet, 15.
65
Arved Ashby, “Modernism Goes to the Movies,” in The Pleasure of Modernist Music, ed. Arved Ashby
(Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2004), 365-367.
88
The alien consciousness appears to be beneficent to humanity, so why should it be
coded with dystopian music? Despite its apparent beneficence, it is unknowable, as are
its motives in aiding humanity, and its power over human destiny gives one pause.
God,” the idea that humanity needs an outside agency for evolutionary assistance at key
moments contradicts rationalist perspectives from the 1950s that celebrated human
progress, represented by technological advancement and space travel of the kind depicted
in the film.66 The possession and exercise of such power over human destiny by an alien
consciousness, leading perhaps to the end of the society that embodies the 1950s vision
future on its own. The ambiguous music of the Kyrie makes an effective musical
gestures ultimately have no real equivalence or meaning in the musical language typical
therefore, much of the disquiet and unease results from the opacity and unfamiliarity of
the music, which specifically do not give the audience any clear indication of how they
The alien consciousness may in the end save humanity from extinction, but each
time that it does so, the vast portion of humanity that does not change dies off. The
hominids became carnivores and eventually dominated the planet; other animals and
hominids that did not have the benefit of the alien intervention were swept aside.
66
Kubrick’s characterization of the consciousness is quoted in Vincent LoBrutto, Stanley Kubrick: A
Biography (New York: Penguin, 1997), 313.
89
Bowman has undergone a radical transformation to a new kind of human, and the
parallelism of the reminiscence suggests that his new manifestation will sweep aside what
is on the earth, namely the society of 2001 that is an extrapolation of the society of 1968.
Unlike Fahrenheit 451, 2001 has no music that suggests the emotions of
individual characters, mainly because the characters appear largely devoid of emotion.
The triumph implied in the Strauss prologue is the triumph of a species, expressed in epic
terms, rather than a personal triumph. The pleasant character of the Blue Danube almost
lacks emotion; the detachment and languid pacing of the scenes it accompanies limit any
Planet of the Apes and 2001 are the only films under study that feature aliens or
essentially alien characters or entities in the form of the ape species and the alien
consciousness. The type of modernist music that accompanies the alien consciousness
contrasts with that for the apes in its lack of discreet rhythms. The pacing of the scenes
with the monoliths is comparatively static; the monolith itself presents no direct physical
threat, but instead exists in the scene as an object of wonder for the characters. Its
presence in these scenes seems as much formal as narrative, further detaching it from the
world of the characters and emphasizing its strangeness for the audience. The complete
unfamiliarity of the harmony and rhythm in the Kyrie reinforces these qualities.
of the music for the apes. These percussive and animalistic sounds, although bizarre,
convey more familiar connotations that imply direct and immediate threats, realized
90
visually by Taylor’s perils on the screen. The apes are a physical rather than a cerebral
presence, and their highly rhythmic and physical music conveys this.
The score for 2001 includes some of the most overtly dissonant and atonal music
of the films discussed, and although 2001 exerts influence on later films, the particular
type of dissonant modernist music that it employs is comparatively rare. Perhaps the
closest comparison can be made to the music for Zardoz, which also includes arhythmic
Peter Schickele’s score for Silent Running uses a mixture of folk-rock styles and
established throughout the score by songs with lyrics that allude to the beauty and
preciousness of forests and nature. Much of the contrasting orchestral music uses
manner reminiscent of Stravinsky and of the music for the firemen in Fahrenheit 451.
Folk-rock stands for awareness and appreciation of the natural world in contrast to the
environments of the spaceship and the earth itself as it is described in the film.
Silent Running takes place aboard one of several large spaceships traveling near
Saturn that are carrying the remains of earth’s forests and other natural ecosystems.
Freeman Lowell, the film’s protagonist and the naturalist supervising the forests aboard
91
the space transport Valley Forge, is disgusted with the extent of human technological
expansion across the earth, which has forced the removal of forests to artificial enclosures
out in space. He eagerly looks forward to an opportunity to restore the forests back on
earth. Lowell is unable to accept the new orders for the ships to jettison their domes and
escalates until he accidentally kills one of his crewmates. Convinced that the forest's
preservation trumps all other considerations, Lowell eliminates the other two crewmen.
He then embarks on a plan to take the ship and its remaining dome out of the solar system
under the pretext of a shipboard accident, evading the remaining fleet by “running silent,”
Lowell’s plan appears to succeed for the remainder of the film, until a search
party intercepts him on the far side of Saturn. Faced with the certain destruction of the
last domed forest and the consequences of his own mutiny, Lowell sets the last forest
adrift under the care of a mechanical drone and destroys his own ship. Lowell’s
determination to save the forest from his fellow humans ironically compels him to turn to
the technology of the spacecraft and its maintenance drones. Ultimately, he entrusts the
care of the forest to the mechanical drone because he knows that the forest will be better
Because all of the action in Silent Running takes place on a ship far out in space,
the dystopian nature of Lowell’s society must be inferred from the descriptions of earth
that come up during his exchanges with his shipmates. Accordingly, the earth is
92
across its surface, not least because it lacks any trees or extensive surface vegetation.
When his colleagues argue that societal progress has brought a virtual end to poverty,
disease, and unemployment, Lowell rebukes them for their inability both to think of life
in other than economic terms and to recognize the beauty of nature. The deficiency in the
future world of Silent Running is the loss of nature because of a lack of concern to
preserve it in the face of technological development, and it is left to the film audience to
imagine from these few details how artificial life on earth has become. Indeed, the
descriptions of the earth suggest an environment that differs little from that of the
spaceship, and the viewer is almost constantly reminded by the visual images of the
Silent Running is the only film under study that includes songs within its score.
These songs are important not just for setting the film’s primary musical style, but also
because their lyrics are the most prominent indicators of the film’s ecological stance.
They resonate with Lowell’s own actions and attitudes, reinforcing his personal
commitment to the preservation of nature. They also reinforce the audience’s sympathy
with Lowell in light of the extreme actions that he takes to preserve the forest.
Lowell’s passion for the environment and his willingness to take radical steps to
preserve it recall the positions of Students for a Democratic Society and other
organizations of the New Left active during the late 1960s. These groups used highly
visible public protests to focus attention on the degradation of the environment due to the
activities of both industry and consumer society, culminating in the first Earth Day in
April 1970. At the same time, they advocated new ways of living to eliminate
93
consumption habits that contributed to pollution and waste. 67 The attitudes of the New
Left toward environmental preservation were reflected in much of the rock music of the
period.68 These attitudes also come through in the lyrics of the songs “Rejoice in the
Sun” and “Silent Running” from the score of Silent Running.69 Furthermore, these songs
were sung on the film’s soundtrack by Joan Baez, well known for her political activism
The folk songs are heard at key moments in the picture, thereby setting up the
primacy of their style. “Rejoice in the Sun,” heard in an instrumental version during the
opening titles, later accompanies Lowell’s absorption of the orders to destroy the domes
and finally underscores views of Dewey, one of the maintenance drones, caring for the
forest as the end titles roll. The song “Silent Running” accompanies a montage showing
scenes of Lowell caring for the forest following his evasion of the space fleet; the song’s
title and use of the phrase “silent running” play indirectly on the film’s title and on
Lowell’s actions. During the scenes accompanied by these songs, the forest is very much
the focus of attention, and during “Silent Running,” in particular, Lowell appears more
engaged and happier than at any other time. In addition to reinforcing sympathy for
Lowell and his own concern for the forest, the songs maintain the emphasis and attention
on the importance of nature amid the highly visible presence of the artificial environment
67
Robert Gottlieb, Forcing the Spring: The Transformation of the American Environmental Movement
(Washington, DC: Island Press, 1993), 93-112.
68
Ibid., 95.
69
Peter Schickele, Silent Running: The Original Soundtrack Album, Varése Sarabande STV 81072, 1978,
LP, Side 1Track 1; Side 2, Track 1.
94
Whereas the folk-rock songs strongly accentuate the role of the forest, most of the
orchestral music accompanies scenes that focus on technology, either directly or on its
inadvertent effects on the forest. The orchestral music falls largely into three divisions:
fanfares that accompany scenes of the spacecraft, “tense” music that accompanies
Lowell’s decisions and actions to hijack the ship, and “uneasy” music that accompanies
Lowell’s anxious bewilderment at the forest’s decline from lack of sunlight. There are
also three cues that tread a “middle ground” within the opposition between folk-rock and
indicate Lowell’s new relationship with technology on the ship, in particular with the
The opening shots of the film feature impressive views of the space transports,
and the accompanying cue, “The Space Fleet,” matches the imposing majesty and scale
of the spacecraft with a slow processional, whose march-like character is belied by the
metric shifts within each of its successive phrases.71 Unlike much of the later orchestral
music that characterizes the spaceship, this cue is essentially tonal, enhancing the
splendor of the spacecraft. It is only after the brief dialogue between Lowell and the rest
of the crew following these shots that the audience learns the original purpose of the
More discordant music based on the drum figure from the opening sequence
accompanies shots of the Valley Forge as Lowell steers it away from the rest of the fleet
70
Silent Running: The Original Soundtrack Album, Side 1, Track 6, Side 2, Track 3.
71
Each phrase within the fanfare includes successive motifs with measures of alternately three, four, and
five beats. These can be heard in “The Space Fleet,”, Track 2 of Silent Running: The Original Soundtrack
Album.
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and makes his escape. This music (Part one of the cue “Saturn”) incorporates metric
shifts similar to those in the opening fanfare, but consists of reiterated quartal motifs
mixolydian melody sounded over open fifth sonorities centered on C and B flat, while the
brass motif consists of planed quartal chords syncopated against an underlying pulse; the
brass motifs disrupt the sense of harmonic center implied by the woodwind motif. The
non-tonal harmony adds to the level of tension in this scene as Lowell makes his escape,
but it also reinforces the mechanical characteristics of the spaceship, in particular as the
sounding of the brass motif often coincides with shots of the ship in space. These cues
accompanying shots of the spaceship, both the opening fanfare and the music for
Lowell’s escape, contrast with the folk-rock music that characterizes views of the forest.
In these sequences, the orchestral music emphasizes the contrast between the technical
crew and hijack and later destroy the ship once the search parties have discovered him.
The music in both of these sequences shares many of the same motifs, primarily a
steadily reiterated pulse played on bass guitar and drums, which supports a pensive
melody for cello and marimba (in the cues “No Turning Back,” and “Getting Ready.”)73
These passages underscore the tension in their respective scenes that stems from
impending threats to the forest, whether from the initial orders for its destruction or from
the certainty of its destruction once Lowell is found. These two passages also
72
Silent Running: The Original Soundtrack Album, Side 1, Track 4
73
Silent Running: The Original Soundtrack Album, Side 1, Track 3, Side 2 Track 5.
96
demonstrate the way in which recurring music connects earlier and later sequences within
the film, much as in Fahrenheit 451 and even 2001. In this case, Lowell’s decision to
self-destruct after setting the forest adrift recalls his earlier decision to take over the ship
and attempt to escape from the fleet. In a similar recurrence, several prominent rhythms
and ostinati heard during the scene of the ship’s escape are heard again briefly as Lowell,
after being discovered by the search party, realizes that the lack of sunlight in the shadow
of Saturn is killing the forest (“Saturn” part 2). These ostinati are overshadowed in the
reprise by a triumphant and tonal flourish as Lowell sets up a series of lamps to provide
artificial light for the forest, indicating his success in finding a way to continue
The last prominent division of atonal music underscores Lowell’s discovery of the
decline of the forest and his bafflement over its cause (“The Dying Forest”). This music,
largely confined to one cue, is marked by closely spaced clusters sounded by flutes,
the triads coupled with the dissonance of the flute clusters emphasize Lowell’s surprise
and puzzlement at the fate of the forest. Although the unsettling harmony of these
elements reinforces Lowell’s agitation, it is also indirectly related to the cause of the
forest’s malady. This is insufficient sunlight, primarily because of the extreme distance of
the ship from the sun, but perhaps also because the ship has been traveling in the shadow
of Saturn to hide from the rest of the fleet. In either case, the forest’s artificial enclosure
is not allowing it to grow and prosper naturally. The disturbing non-tonal harmony
74
Silent Running: The Original Soundtrack Album, Side 2, Track 4
97
within the accompanying music suggests something of this artificiality even as it
relationship with technology in the form of the maintenance drones that perform repairs
and small tasks throughout the ship. Although the drones look completely mechanical,
characters, giving each a name (Huey, Dewey, and Louie), enlisting their aid in the care
of the forest, and developing emotional bonds with them. The music connected with the
pop-based rhythms and harmonies, giving these cues something of an “intermediary” role
between the modernist orchestral music that characterizes the spacecraft's technical
workings and the folk-rock that characterizes the forest's “natural” environment. This
musical treatment, when combined with subtle behaviors of the drones and Lowell’s
interactions with them, encourages the audience to regard the drones also as characters.
Two scenes that feature the drones in particular help to reinforce this perception,
largely because of the music that accompanies them. Following the ship’s escape from
the rest of the fleet, Lowell calls on the drones to perform surgery on his leg, which was
seriously injured during his confrontation with one of the crewmen. The accompanying
cue is based on a reiterated tonal melody set to diatonically parallel triads, which are
played by muted brass and give the melody a jazz-inflected character that almost suggests
the pop harmony in the folk-rock songs that appear elsewhere in the score.
98
This music is reprised later in the film as Lowell attempts to repair damage
suffered by Huey during an accident. The music, sounded by flutes in the reprise,
connects the image of Lowell tending to Huey with the earlier sequence in which the
drones perform surgery on Lowell (Example 3.7).75 The effect of this parallel is not just
to reinforce the perception of Huey and the other drones as characters but also to show
that Lowell’s relationship with the drones is stronger than the relationship that he had
with his human crewmates. Although he feels remorse for his actions and misses the
company of humans, the drones appear to share his devotion to the forest and to nature in
general, something that is not true of any of the other human characters in the film.
These cues may encourage the audience to experience greater sympathy for the
drones than for Lowell’s lost crewmates. While the audience may be shocked at
Lowell’s actions in eliminating his crewmates, their antagonism toward his love of nature
renders them less sympathetic from the outset, and their deaths are accompanied either by
no music or by the tense, almost expressionistic music that supports Lowell’s mutiny
(“No Turning Back”). By contrast, the poignant music that accompanies Lowell’s
75
Silent Running: The Original Soundtrack Album, Side 2, Track 3.
99
attempts to repair Huey are intended to elicit a great deal of sympathy and to encourage
the audience to share Lowell’s dismay when Huey cannot be fully repaired.
These passages sit at the center of the score’s larger opposition between folk-rock
and modernist orchestral music through their combination of characteristics from both
sides of the opposition. The extreme polarity between folk-rock and modernist orchestral
music, like the subsidiary oppositions within this larger opposition – tonal vs. non-tonal
music, pop vs. serious music, “low” culture vs. “high” culture – reflect the extremity of
the film’s opposition between nature, embodied in the forest, and technology, embodied
in the spacecraft. Lowell’s relationship with the drones and the music that characterizes
it would seem to suggest that a mediation between nature and technology is possible, and
Dewey’s management of the forest at the film’s end would seem to confirm this.
However, there is no human presence in this final scene; Lowell has sacrificed himself to
and in fact might do better without human intervention. The final reprise of “Rejoice in
the Sun” over the end titles implies that, at least for a while, the forest will thrive under
nature. The humans behind that technology ultimately determine its beneficence.
Conclusions.
Contrasts of harmony are probably the most prominent elements in the scores to
these films, with modernist approaches to harmony consistently indicating those aspects
that contribute to each film’s depiction of dystopia. Even the score for Planet of the
100
Apes, which consists entirely of modernist music, features music based on a twelve-tone
Novel and unusual approaches to harmony are perhaps the most easily
recognizable features identifying modernist music and certainly among the most
discussed. These novel and innovative approaches to harmony are also one of the
features of modernist music that mainstream audiences can find most challenging.76
Despite their difficulty, these sounds typified the latest products of Western art music that
had been recognized by the academy. If modernism informed the High Art of the West,
many mainstream audiences found it difficult to relate to sonic expressions of that High
Art.
The four films discussed in this chapter are the earliest ones under study and
therefore among the first to establish a connection between modernist music and
incorporated them into their scores.77 Stanley Kubrick chose to include some very
deliberately associated sounds that were at once alienating and among the most current
extrapolated from that same culture. Dissonant and defamiliarizing music became the
76
Aaron Copland’s discussion of appreciating contemporary music focuses primarily on matters related to
melody and harmony. He categorizes certain composers based on the relative accessibility of the harmony
of their works and notes that “the dodecaphonic school of Schoenberg is the hardest nut to crack, even for
musicians.” Aaron Copland, What to Listen for in Music (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1957), 242-246.
77
Herrmann aimed for a “parody of lots of avant garde music” while Goldsmith chose twelve-tone methods
because “although twelve-tone music is not avant-garde anymore, it’s sort of old hat but for films it is still
sort of new.” See Smith, A Heart at Fire’s Center, 277; Hagen, Scoring for Films, 165.
101
sounds characterizing the future, which was further depicted as alienating and
undertone of impermanence due to the presence of the monolith and its implications for
Planet of the Apes, with its exotic percussion and suggestions of ape noises
includes the most overt example of texture as an element of an opposition. Still, this
element opposes the similarly alienating twelve-tone melody that characterizes Taylor.
Despite the clear suggestions of menace within the ape music, the opposed twelve-tone
melody renders the audience’s easy identification with Taylor somewhat problematic.
the films under study despite the appearance of other musical stylistic references in the
films produced after 1970. These unusual and often difficult harmonies remained a
readily recognizable feature of modernist music, and their consistent use in dystopian
contexts allowed the audience to make quick associations between those sounds and
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CHAPTER 4
The six scores discussed in Chapter 4 may center on one principal opposition, but
they also feature additional oppositions that operate at a level close to that of the principal
common-practice music
3. Soylent Green – tonal vs. non-tonal music; modified popular styles vs. classical
4. Zardoz – tonal vs. atonal music; archaic vs. avant-garde music; metric vs. non-
metric music
5. Rollerball – tonal music vs. atonal music; orchestral vs. organ music; popular
6. Logan’s Run – tonal vs. non-tonal music; orchestral vs. electronic music
Each score in this group tends to include a wider range of musical styles than the scores
discussed in Chapter 3, which, of course, allows the multiple oppositions in each film.
The list is not exhaustive; rather, it gives the oppositions operating in each score that
103
Unlike the oppositions discussed in Chapter 3, which tended to apply to all cues
within a specific score, the multiple oppositions in these six scores often apply to a
limited number of cues. Not all of these oppositions include a modernist style
dystopian conditions in their respective films (this is true of the popular styles in Soylent
Green and the organ as an instrument in Rollerball). That said, each film includes at least
one opposition with a modernist style feature as an element. These modernist style
features consistently refer to the film’s dystopian conditions, whether or not they are
The discussions of individual scores that follow identify each opposition that is
relevant to the film’s depiction of dystopia, correlating musical oppositions with their
Chapter 3, the alienating and defamiliarizing effects of these modernist styles, whether
from unusual harmonies or textures, are conferred upon the dystopian conditions of each
film.
The eclectic nature of Lalo Schifrin’s score for THX-1138, George Lucas’s first
feature film, reflects the multifaceted musical background of the composer, who
performed and wrote music that ranged from jazz and pop to traditional and avant-garde
music for the concert hall. Schifrin had already established himself as a successful
composer and arranger for both television and film by the time he was contracted to score
Lucas’s film. He had achieved particular notoriety as a composer for action films and
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thrillers with his score for the Steve McQueen film Bullitt and his theme music for the
popular television series Mission: Impossible.1 The music that Schifrin produced for
THX-1138 is equally eclectic, using many distinct styles to convey different facets of the
film’s oppressive society and the protagonists who try to escape it.
society in which all aspects of behavior are monitored and regulated. All inhabitants
have shaved heads, dress the same, and are identified by numbers rather than names. The
surveillance, pervasive media broadcasts in both private and public spaces, and robot
police that detain and punish any offenders. The film’s lead character, THX-1138, is
roommate, SEN-3417), but manages to escape his imprisonment and evade the police.
He finally emerges into the world outside the sealed community, where he presumably is
free.
The film was derived from an award-winning student project that Lucas had
produced in conjunction with the film editor Walter Murch. Their collaboration related a
similar story through a complex montage of audio and visual information, much of which
is presented from the viewpoint of the omnipresent authorities. The later feature film
largely preserves this method of storytelling despite its more direct depiction of the
that strives for efficiency in all facets of life, including not just production but also
1
Tony Thomas, Music for the Movies, 2nd ed. (Los Angeles: Silman-James, 1997), 292-293, 299-300.
105
consumption and ultimately human interaction.2 Kellner and Ryan describe the society
depicted in the film as embodying in its effacement of the individual the extremes of both
capitalism and Soviet era communism.3 The highly technical nature of the society is
evident in much of the dialogue between the police sentries and in many of the
surveillance voice-overs, all of which are filled with technical jargon and laced with
The obvious areas of deficiency in this highly regimented society are autonomy
and identity, with each individual distinguished from others by his or her numeric
degree to which they reveal the extreme indifference of the societal authority. There is
no malicious brutality that dehumanizes the members of the society; they are subjugated
that it leaves no room for individuality among the society’s members. Equally
whole; there are no hints of an isolated oligarchy or other upper stratum beyond the robot
police produced on assembly lines such as the one on which THX works. Instead, any
individual can be assigned a task that can involve some measure of surveillance, anyone
can report another individual for an infraction, and anyone can potentially be an offender,
2
Leonard Heldreth, “Clockwork Reels: Mechanized Environments in Science Fiction Films,” in
Clockwork Worlds: Mechanized Environments in SF (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1983), 222-223.
3
Michael Ryan and Douglas Kellner, Camera Politica: The Politics and Ideology of Contemporary
Hollywood (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988), 247.
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An ironic byproduct of this highly regimented community is its highly
bureaucratic nature, which makes it very inefficient despite the constant media
propaganda reporting the number of error-free days on the line, announcing the
The drive for efficiency renders the society and its police inflexible and therefore
unprepared to deal with the unexpected. After being arrested, THX is not secured during
his imprisonment in the holding area and is able simply to walk away because the
authorities could not imagine that anyone would try to leave. Once his escape is known
and he becomes a fugitive running from the police, he is eventually allowed to escape
because the projected cost of his capture exceeds its budgeted expenditure.
In their discussion accompanying the CD recording of the score, Jeff Bond and
Lukas Kendall identify at least six distinct musical styles that reinforce different aspects
of the film:
instrumentation reminiscent of music from the late Baroque era. The style
derives from Schifrin’s quotation of the opening chorus from Bach’s St.
Matthew Passion to accompany THX’s emergence and the film’s end titles.
Bond and Kendall describe this style as “an impression of humanity reduced
totalitarian state,” and “an expression of man’s spirit locked within the
107
society.”4 Schifrin seemed to regard this style as something slightly more
the film’s end, most of the Baroque-styled cues accompany activities that
would seem to imply a crushing of the human spirit, such as the arrest of
THX, the death of his companion, SRT, and the arrest of his nemesis, SEN.
2) “Alienation” – This style includes tonal but highly chromatic and brooding
experience powerful and illicit emotions after having avoided their obligatory
as their confusion and anxiety over their mutual attraction that is no longer
3) “Love theme” – This refers to a recurring melody for flute, harp, and
broadcast throughout the community to calm and soothe the masses. Schifrin
4
Lukas Kendall and Jeff Bond, notes accompanying Lalo Schifrin, THX-1138: Original Motion Picture
Soundtrack, FSM Vol 6 No. 4, Compact Disc, 7.
108
5) “Religious Music” – This is also treated as source music, heard in conjunction
plainchant. When heard in the film, this music features reverberation added
“everything else,” those cues not as easy to categorize. These are the most
deliberately modernist cues and are most closely associated with the
authoritarian society, its environments, and the actions of the robot police.
These cues include such devices as tone clusters for orchestra or organ,
From the above list, it would seem readily apparent that the “Baroque,”
“Alienation,” and “Love theme” styles are connected with the protagonists, whereas the
“avant-garde” styles are associated with the totalitarian authorities. The source music
and religious music are tools of the state that occur diegetically as aids for manipulating
the masses. Aside from their presence in connection within the authoritarian
environments, the accessibility and familiarity of the source music and religious music
selections contribute to their role as tools for manipulation, something that the audience
may recognize. Although only portions of the source cues are heard intermittently in the
film, their deliberate blandness emphasizes the bureaucratic character of the authoritative
apparatus into which they are piped, lulling the collective workers into a neutral and
5
Bond and Kendall, notes to THX-1138: Original Soundtrack, 7-8.
109
Ex. 4.1. THX-1138, “Main Title,” vocal lines reprised during THX’s
arrest anticipate quotation from St. Matthew Passion later in the film.
malleable state of mind in much the same way that the mandatory medication does.6 The
colorlessness of this music again speaks to the dispassionate nature of the authority in its
drive for efficiency, using music along with other media to maintain the optimal outlook
There are few instances of recurring music within the score. Most of these are
music. The title music is the basis of one of these, accompanying the brutalization of
THX by the police following his arrest after his workplace accident. Despite THX’s
injuries and bruises, which were clearly inflicted by the police, the voices of the
cybernetic officers sound almost reassuring, telling him calmly, “You have nowhere to
go.”7 The music in both instances combines aspects of the Baroque and “Alienation”
styles, featuring two distinct ascending polyphonic vocal lines against a texture of thickly
chromatic strings (Example 4.1). The harmony and contour of the vocal lines are similar
to those in the excerpt from the St. Matthew Passion chorus that appears at the end of the
6
One could note that even repressive societies recognize the need for accessible music in soothing their
populations. The societies of the future do not necessarily listen to purely modernist music.
7
See THX-1138: Original Soundtrack, Tracks 2 and 9
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film; both the title music and the music that accompanies THX’s arrest could be
The only other clear musical recurrences are the statements of the “Love theme,”
heard as THX and LUH discover and explore their mutual attraction and later as they
comfort one another when it appears that they will be separated. This material is heard
again as THX imagines being with LUH while imprisoned in the holding area, and finally
as THX learns that she has been terminated.8 These passages act as reminiscences,
linking all of the scenes in which THX and LUH appear together intimately (although
their last encounter in the holding area is presumed to be a dream sequence). The melody
and scoring heard is virtually the same each time, although strings augment the final
statement, giving the cue an elegiac quality as THX learns of LUH’s death. Finally, the
percussive music that accompanies THX’s torture by the robot police is reprised during
the scene in which robot police interrupt THX and LUH in the holding area during his
imagined encounter with her. This further connects this relentlessly rhythmic percussive
music with the indifferent harshness of the police and other authorities.
Many of the cues within the “Avant Garde” style group are remarkable for their
apparent lack of affect, in particular when compared with the heavily chromatic cues used
to convey alienation. Schifrin described the sound of clusters, especially those for strings
as “very oppressive, and it reflects the oppression of that society.”9 Clusters within the
“Avant-Garde” style can also convey some sense of tension or oppression depending
largely on the gestures involved. Particularly loud passages or those involving a rapid
8
THX-1138: Original Soundtrack, Tracks 4, 8, 11, 15
9
Lalo Schifrin, quoted in notes THX-1138: Original Soundtrack, 14.
111
glissando may convey tension or anxiety associated with circumstances such as the
bustling crowd into which THX, SEN, and SRT merge after escaping from the holding
area.
Both he music that accompanies the police and the music that characterizes the
interiors of the sealed community use combinations of percussion and electronic sounds
that convey little if any tension, expressing the indifference of the police and the
cybernetic environment in which they operate. The percussion arrangement during the
torture sequence is almost rigid in its rhythmic precision; moreover, the dynamics of the
sounds are relatively even, with no abrupt or startling changes.10 The effect is one of
mechanical objectivity, with no fluctuations in dynamics or tempo that might indicate any
of the violence that the music is accompanying. This is disturbing because the implied
lack of affect is juxtaposed with the robots casually and coolly torturing and conditioning
THX.
accompanying shots of THX and SRT as they move through the corridors of the interior
of the sealed community reflects the highly technological environments. These electronic
timbres are simply created by playing cluster chords on an electronic organ, but because
of the registrations the resulting sound comes across less like a cluster chord than a
complex timbre typical of experimental electronic music of the 1950s and 1960s.11
Rather than the tension implied by cluster chords in the strings, these sounds imbue the
10
THX-1138: Original Soundtrack, Track 10
11
THX-1138: Original Soundtrack, Tracks 12, 14. Edgard Varèse’s Poème électronique includes similar
sounds that may have been generated the same way.
112
environments with a strangeness and unfamiliarity that reflect the unknown purposes of
the surroundings. These electronic clusters also have some of the objective quality of the
percussive music, enhanced by muted dynamics. The surroundings are more or less
indifferent to the presence of THX and SRT, and although they are clearly being pursued,
there are no alarms announcing their whereabouts. Instead, the surveillance operators
and police calmly track the movements of the escapees and go after them with cool
deliberateness.
Even in the final chase scene leading up to the film’s conclusion, as THX is
pursued by police first on motorcycles and later on foot, the music consists primarily of
slowly ascending clusters sounded by an organ. This provides some measure of dramatic
tension but does not convey any form of overt aggression on the part of the police.12
Sounds of percussion instruments are interspersed within the chase music, referring to the
earlier association between the police and the percussion music during the conditioning
scene. It is only toward the end of this sequence, as THX nears the doorway to exit from
the sealed community into the outside world, that the strings enter with more alienating
music that gradually sets up the quotation from the Bach passion as he emerges into the
sunlight.
much of the music, in particular the music closely associated with the oppressive
of percussion ensembles to much of the audience, composers such as Schifrin and Jerry
12
THX-1138: Original Soundtrack, Track 18.
113
Goldsmith turn to their timbres as a means to achieve strikingly distinct and unusual
music, as demonstrated by the percussive cues in both THX-1138 and Planet of the Apes.
Of course, the nature of the sounds and their use result in different effects that reinforce
the nature of each film’s respective dystopian society. In the case of the ape civilization,
the sounds of the various drums, in particular short rhythmic fragments as part of longer
ostinati, contribute to the Primitivist character of the score, and of course the
approximations of ape vocalizations by the cuika and slide whistle correlate directly with
the apes. The more rigid character of the metallic percussion in THX contributes to the
emotional disengagement of the technological society at the center of that film. In brief,
the percussion conveys a more overtly emotional quality in Apes, since it hints at the
underlying animal natures of both civilizations, ape and human, whereas the percussion
Schifrin also uses chromatic harmony to convey the repressed feelings of the
characters, which invites comparison with Herrmann’s approach in Fahrenheit 451. Both
films present the main characters with a certain level of detachment from the beginning,
but Herrmann’s score maintains a level of restraint that is not matched by Schifrin’s
music. This may be due to the more formally developed motifs in Herrmann’s music, as
opposed to Schifrin’s less structured “Alienation” cues, which resemble slowly evolving
beds of chromatic harmony.13 At the same time, Schifrin’s cues seem to suggest a greater
intensity of feeling than those of Herrmann, primarily due to their use of a lower register
13
Compare THX-1138: Original Soundtrack Track 3 (“Room Tone”), beginning, with Fahrenheit 451:
Original Soundtrack, Track 14 (“The Novel”).
114
and more pronounced dissonance; Herrmann’s music, by contrast, often comes across as
somewhat delicate. One might imagine that the emotions of THX and LUH could be
similarly more intense given the greater level of oppression within their society and their
The eclecticism of the score is especially noteworthy if one takes into account
Schifrin’s performing ensemble, which is like the one he used for the more pop-based
music that he composed for many police and crime dramas.14 Passages in the score that
are reminiscent of moments from such films include the “Morgue sequence,” with its
short, jagged flute exclamations and its use of electronic echo effects. Moreover, the
performance and production of the excerpt from the St. Matthew Passion, in particular,
reveal the pop orientation of Schifrin’s orchestra. The recording is distinctly “dry,”
having little natural or artificial reverberation, and the enunciation of the chorus differs
This apparently pop-based ensemble invites comparison with those used in the
scores for Silent Running and Soylent Green. Like Schifrin, Peter Schickele and Fred
Myrow, the respective composers for Silent Running and Soylent Green, had worked in
popular music as well as concert and film music. Soylent Green includes some passages
Furthermore, both of these films make fairly extensive use of source music, especially
Soylent Green., although the effects are different in each. The overall moods of the
respective films are quite different, however; Soylent Green comes across as a more
14
Bond and Kendall note that Schifrin’s ensemble consisted of a 40-piece string orchestra, two wind
players, three keyboard players, and three percussionists. THX-1138: Original Soundtrack, 9.
115
mainstream film by an established director (which it was) and depicts a world slipping
out of control rather than one under rigidly tight control. The eclectic music of THX-
oppositions with its variety of styles. Yet, despite this stylistic variety, modernist
characteristic within these styles consistently refer to some aspect of the totalitarian
society.
expanded the method that he had used in 2001: A Space Odyssey, basing his score on
Kubrick included a greater number of musical selections, which gave the score a greater
stylistic variety overall than that for 2001. Furthermore, Wendy Carlos realized some of
greater variety of styles allows for more stylistic oppositions to characterize the film’s
dystopian conditions.
A Clockwork Orange tells the story of Alex, a young hooligan whose greatest
other acts of brutality – and music, especially the music of Ludwig van Beethoven. After
murdering one of his victims, Alex undergoes experimental conditioning to quell his
violent impulses, but the conditioning has two unfortunate consequences: it leaves Alex
open to violence enacted on him by some of his past victims, and it causes him to become
116
The film addresses questions of Alex’s loss of autonomy and the lack of empathy
and morality on the part of both Alex and the state. The audience may well experience
ambivalence toward Alex, recognizing that the state has been evil toward him, while also
recognizing that he has been evil himself. Anthony Burgess’s original novel presented
the story as a fable extolling an individual’s need for free moral choice, claiming that the
lack of such a choice rendered an individual less than human, essentially a “clockwork
orange.”15 Kubrick’s film offers a modified version of this belief that is tempered by his
personal lack of faith in the nobility of mankind. He believed that the inner bestial nature
thereby acting as musical reminiscences in the same manner as the prologue from Also
Sprach Zarathustra and the Kyrie from Ligeti’s Requiem in 2001. Despite this similarity
of use, the greater stylistic variety of the music in A Clockwork Orange makes it difficult
to recognize a single overarching stylistic polarity like that between the tonal selections
and the atonal, sound-mass selections in 2001. Complicating this further is the fact that
only one cue clearly qualifies as modernist. One can recognize several binary
oppositions in the musical score: electronic vs. orchestral vs. acoustic music, classical vs.
15
Burgess reflects on the meaning of the term “clockwork orange” and distinguishes between his original
intent to create fiction showing a character’s capacity for moral trasformation, and the film version of his
story which he regards as more of a fable or allegory. See Burgess’s preface to Anthony Burgess, A
Clockwork Orange, New York: Norton, 1962/1986), viii-xi.
16
See Michel Ciment’s interview with Stanley Kubrick in Michel Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition,
trans. Gilbert Adair and Robert Bononno (New York: Faber and Faber, 2001), 149-151, 157-163.
117
popular music, and even the operatic music of Rossini vs. the symphonic music of
Beethoven.
The film as a whole has been described as overtly postmodern in both visual and
musical respects. The art critic Robert Hughes described the world of the film as “a vast
cultural emptiness” full of “culture objects cut loose from any power to communicate, or
even to be noticed.” Royal Brown described the score as fraught with “non-referential
images,” that contribute to its “ecstasy of musicality.”17 Even such details as the
mismatched items making up the costumes, in particular the inclusion of stylized hats by
the various youth gangs such as bowlers, top hats, berets, and shakos, are reminiscent of a
form of cultural assembly featuring the “dead styles” and “cultural masks” comprising
The stylistic diversity of the film’s music similarly seems to be the result of a
postmodern sensibility. Royal Brown notes the incongruity between the excerpts by
Rossini and Beethoven and even Alex’s quotations from “Singin’ in the Rain” and the
violence of the “young thugs” in the film, attributing the “mythic power [of the]
cinematic personae” to the film’s “access to the purity of a nonreferential image in the
appear to be deliberately implied references in many of the musical choices; these will be
17
Robert Hughes, “The Décor of Tomorrow’s Hell,” Time, Dec. 1971, 59; Royal S. Brown, Overtones and
Undertones: Reading Film Music (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994), 241.
18
Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on
Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Forster (Port Townsend, WA: Bay Press, 1983), 113-114.
19
Brown, Overtones and Undertones, 241.
118
discussed further in Chapter 5. He sees the use of electronics as crucial in connecting the
The electronic sounds of the synthesized musical arrangements provide the most
overtly modernist characteristic of the score. Moreover, the excerpt from Timesteps, an
original electronic piece by Carlos, includes harmonies and timbres more reminiscent of
avant-garde electronic music than those used in the film’s electronic arrangements of
earlier classical works. Whereas the defamiliarizing effect of the electronic sounds is
in her popular Switched on Bach album, the defamiliarizing effect of these arrangements
stems from their reinterpretations of established classics as much as from the electronic
sounds themselves.
The qualitative difference between the sounds of orchestral music and those
possible with electronic instruments in the early 1970s will most likely produce a
defamiliarizing effect for audience members regardless of whether or not they are biased
against music apparently produced by “machines.”21 Many within the film audience may
not recognize the electronic pieces as synthesized or related in any way to classical
electronic music, even though Kubrick may well have expected such sophistication. Still,
most within the film audience would perceive the difference in timbre between the
orchestral and electronic music, perhaps imagining the latter to be produced on some
20
Ibid.
21
See Jacques Barzun, “Introductory Remarks to a Program of Works Created at the Columbia Princeton
Electronic Music Center,” in Audio Culture: Readings in Modern Music, ed. Christopher Cox and Daniel
Warner (New York: Continuum, 2004), 367-369.
119
form of elaborate organ, a common perception of synthesizer-based music.22 In any
event, the defamiliarizing effect of the electronic arrangements could easily invite the
The title music appears so often that it can be considered a theme for Alex.23 It
might be tempting to conclude simply that this artificial music expresses something about
Alex, perhaps that his lack of both empathy and morality make him less than human.
This might seem reasonable, but it does not account for prominent orchestral cues that
also appear in close connection with Alex, especially the overture to La gazza ladra and
the scherzo from the Ninth Symphony. These two cues accompany significant events for
Alex within the story: La gazza ladra accompanies Alex’s rapturous participation in
various forms of “ultra-violence,” and the scherzo accompanies his personal “musical
ecstasy” as he listens to the piece and imagines scenes of violence on a grander scale.
The latter cue also establishes the depth and nature of his attraction to the music of
Beethoven.
With the exception of the title music, each of the recurring cues does so only
once, again reinforcing the power of that cue as a reminiscence device. Closer inspection
of these recurrences shows that one of these, the scherzo from the Ninth Symphony, is
not a strict recurrence because the second appearance is not the same cue; it is in fact an
electronic arrangement of the scherzo rather than the orchestral version of the scherzo
that accompanied Alex’s fantasies early in the film. The scherzo is the only selection that
22
Wendy Carlos noted this tendency in Dominic Milano, “Wendy Carlos,” in The Art of Electronic Music,
ed. Tom Darter and Greg Armbruster (New York: Quill, 1984), 122.
23
This is true particularly if one includes the two appearances of the cue titled “Beethoviana,” which is an
adaptation of the melody from the Title Music.
120
appears in both formats, orchestral and electronic. The electronic scherzo accompanies
Alex frantic attempts at escape and finally at suicide after being shut up in an upstairs
room by F. Alexander and his associates and forced to endure listening to music,
specifically the scherzo from the Ninth Symphony. Furthermore, the sound of this
scherzo on the film soundtrack is processed with “flanging” effects that enhance its
electronic quality but are also unique among the film’s musical selections.24
The audience viewing this scene can easily infer that the processed sound, which
could include the electronic timbres, somehow reflects Alex’s altered response to the
scherzo as a result of his conditioning and makes this reflection audible. Such a
perception could easily be reinforced by considering the final bars of the orchestral Ninth
Symphony heard by Alex and the audience at the end of the film. Alex, having had the
Ludovico Technique reversed by the Ministry of the Interior in a public relations move,
The excerpts of the Ninth Symphony that Alex specifically hears are the
orchestral scherzo that he hears in his bedroom, the electronic scherzo that spurs him to
attempt suicide, and the orchestral finale that he hears after his conditioning is reversed.
Considered by themselves, these cues could lead to the conclusion that the electronic
timbres somehow reflect the effects of Alex’s conditioning by the Ludovico technique.
More broadly, one might conclude that the electronic timbres somehow reflect the
dehumanization that results from the conditioning, in particular the subject’s lack of
24
“Flanging” is an electronic effect resembling an exaggerated chorus or phasing.
121
autonomy, but also the implied lack of empathy that the conditioners demonstrate for the
subject. The problem, of course, is that this accounts for only one electronic excerpt and
does not explain any significance behind the various other electronic selections, many of
Both of these hypotheses are plausible, and they can still be seen as viable if they
are considered together. That is, the electronic timbres draw on connotations of
“artificiality,” “mechanism,” and therefore “deficient humanity” to refer to both Alex and
to the state and its methods, including the Ludovico conditioning technique. Such a
Alex is portrayed as a sociopath whose capacity for autonomy is questionable from the
mayhem; he can no more escape his own inherently brutish nature than any other human.
The repressive measures of the state may reduce offenders to “clockwork oranges,” but
further reduced by his conditioning, he was already “less than human” to begin with.26
The hypothesis that the electronic timbres can refer both to Alex as a deficient
character and to the state as a dystopian agency makes it easier to accept that electronic
timbres are indicative of dystopian tendencies within the film. Still, simply combining
the hypotheses may seem too convenient and broad. An indication of the director’s
25
Ciment, Kubrick: The Definintive Edition, 149, 157-163; LoBrutto, Stanley Kubrick, 339-340.
26
122
intentions regarding electronic timbres might make this combination seem less arbitrary.
Although the director’s intentions are by no means the primary consideration for
what associations Kubrick made with the electronic sounds, speculation on Kubrick’s
intentions with respect to the film’s electronic sounds may give this hypothesis more
credence.
The audio processing of the electronic scherzo heard before Alex’s suicide
attempt was added during editing and was not part of Carlos’s original recording.27
Kubrick most likely added this processing to give the audience an aural signal that Alex
was hearing a familiar work differently and that this makes him uncomfortable. This, of
course, raises the question of exactly what the characters are hearing when they
acknowledge hearing music that the audience also hears. Traditionally, the audience has
assumed that source music of this sort was strictly diegetic, that the characters hear what
the audience hears. However, some films deliberately blur the distinctions between
diegetic and non-diegetic music and sound to give the audience a more nuanced
Does Alex hear an electronic version of the scherzo that leads him to jump from
the window? For that matter, does he hear an electronic version of the Turkish March as
certain. Although he protests the doctors’ “using Ludwig Van like that,” he does not
27
Comparison of the recordings in the film and on the album of music released by Carlos clearly indicates
the difference.
28
Copland expressed annoyance with this device by composers such as Max Steiner in Aaron Copland,
“Second Thoughts on Hollywood,” Modern Music.
123
elaborate by commenting on “that ghastly, limpid electric version.” This leads to the
conclusion that within the diegesis at least it makes no difference.29 The music may be
diegetic, but the medium of the music is apparently non-diegetic, that is, expressly for the
The audience hears the electronic scherzo before the suicide attempt, the
orchestral scherzo earlier in Alex’s room, and the final orchestral bars of the symphony at
the end of the film. As previously mentioned, the audience (and Alex) hears a version of
the Turkish march (realized by Carlos) while viewing Nazi propaganda films as part of
the Ludovico sessions. This cue had been heard earlier in the film during Alex’s perusal
of the record shop as he met two young partners for an afternoon tryst, but the music in
this earlier scene was not marked as diegetic music. Still, the Turkish March heard by the
audience in each scene is the electronic version, which further reinforces the tenuous
connection between the electronic timbres and the dystopian nature of both Alex and the
state.
original composition Timesteps, both the most overtly modernist and the closest to an
original cue in the film.30 Timesteps lends its modernist sounds and medium to the actions
of the state that limit Alex’s autonomy, namely the Ludovico technique intended to quell
29
Katherine McQuiston also acknowledges the ambiguity regarding the diegetic medium of the Turkish
March excerpt that accompanies this scene in Katherine McQuiston, “Recognizing Music in the Films of
Stanley Kubrick,” (PhD diss., Columbia University, 2005), 271n44.
30
Timesteps was influenced and inspired by Carlos’s reading of Burgess’s original novel of A Clockwork
Orange. Chris Nelson, notes accompanying Wendy Carlos, Wendy Carlos’s Clockwork Orange:
Complete Original Score. East Side Digital ESD 81362, 1998, Compact Disc, 5
124
his violent behavior. Although the timbres of this cue could simply be considered more
electronic music in support of Alex, Timesteps is different from other electronic music
associated with Alex thus far. It is not a reprise of the title music, as might be expected
from its more numerous recurrences, and the comparatively non-tonal harmony and
pronounced electronic sound of Timesteps are distinctly different from the rest of the
The electronic sound of Timesteps seems to resonate with the clinical setting of
the conditioning sessions: the presence of lab equipment, Alex secured in a strait-jacket
with his eyes held open, and the watchful presence of the doctors at the rear of the
theater. This music seems to support the clear impression of something being done to
Alex rather than supporting Alex himself. This music reflects the actions of Drs.
Brodsky and Branom in applying the Ludovico Technique to Alex at the behest of the
Ministry of the Interior; it reflects the state apparatus affecting the autonomy of the
protagonist. Its overtly modernist harmonic character is consistent with similar uses of
modernist music to characterize deficient futures in the other films discussed. And its
Orange, encouraging the audience to associate all of the electronic music with some
The opportunity for Kubrick to use music realized by Carlos did not come about
until after filming of A Clockwork Orange was complete and editing had begun. Wendy
Carlos relates how she and her producer, Rachel Elkind, contacted Kubrick and informed
him of Carlos’s current project, which included an electronic realization of portions of the
125
choral section of the Ninth Symphony and Timesteps to introduce the novel sounds of
synthesized vocals. Kubrick agreed to use some of these existing pieces and asked
Carlos to create additional realizations of pieces that had already been contracted
(presumably the scherzo, the Title Music [Purcell’s Music for the Funeral of Queen
Mary], and perhaps a portion of the overture to La gazza ladra).31 Carlos herself
suggested an electronic version of the latter portion of the William Tell overture for the
scene of Alex’s afternoon tryst, since the radically increased tempo would lend the time-
lapse action a more comic character.32 Had Carlos not become involved with the film,
one could assume that these pieces would have been tracked from existing orchestral
If Kubrick had used tracked orchestral recordings exclusively, would he still have
used the “flanging” effect on the reprise of the scherzo that almost drives Alex to suicide?
It is likely that he would have done so to achieve the same effect that the flanging has
even on the electronic version: to add a measure of oddness to the sound of the cue that
serves as an aural indicator that Alex’s hearing of this piece is causing his distressed
response. The flanging effect applied to the orchestral track would have been just as
effective in conveying Alex’s diminished state following his conditioning and would
have thereby portrayed the state’s actions in using the Ludovico Technique as
Once Carlos was brought in, Kubrick became very interested in electronic music
31
Nelson, notes to Carlos’s Clockwork Orange, 6.
32
LoBrutto, Stanley Kubrick, 351.
126
the subject (as was his usual method).33 The new medium certainly increased
possibilities, and Kubrick’s purpose can be inferred by examining where electronic cues
From Carlos, Kubrick took the Turkish March portion of the Ninth Symphony
and a portion of Timesteps, both of which Carlos had already produced. Carlos produced
other cues, some of which contained modernist elements similar to those of Timesteps,
but Kubrick retained only the excerpt from Timesteps in conjunction with Alex’s first
conditioning session. Furthermore, Kubrick requested that Carlos realize music already
contracted; since the scherzo exists in both orchestral and electronic versions, it must
have been among those already contracted. Carlos herself mentions her suggestion to
replace the excerpt from the latter part of the William Tell overture and of Kubrick’s
request for a unique version of Purcell’s Funeral Music; this must have been decided on,
realized electronic ones, no doubt hoping to gain something from the medium of the new
settings to enhance the musical selections themselves. Having already dealt with themes
Kubrick would have quickly come to appreciate any associations between machines,
mechanisms, artificiality, and electronic music. Indeed, it is but a short leap from
mechanisms to the “clockwork oranges” of the film, individuals on either side of the
33
Ibid.
34
Carlos notes that her version of La gazza ladra that appeared on his album was “how we would have
done it, had there been time”; it is not clear whether she was asked by Kubrick to produce a version of this
excerpt and ran out of time, or simply had hoped to produce a version to suggest, and time constraints made
it impossible. See Nelson, notes to Carlos’s Clockwork Orange, 6.
127
conditioning debate who are ultimately no more autonomous than any others because all
are subject to the basic unpleasant, savage, and brutal nature of humanity that civilization
barely disguises.
Viewed in this way, such an association with the electronic music is appropriate
as it is used: Alex already has little autonomy because of his inherent nature but is
autonomy that he does have. The electronic versions of cues “heard” by Alex indicate for
the audience his diminishment through their contrast with his reactions when “hearing”
orchestral cues. The electronic versions of cues “not heard” by Alex also convey his lack
At the very least, the film’s opposition between electronic and orchestral music
orchestral music prevents any easy correspondence of meaning, enhancing the audience’s
dilemma of sympathizing with Alex as the protagonist despite his lack of empathy, or
condoning the state’s means of forcibly limiting his capacity for violence despite the lack
Although virtually all of the cues in A Clockwork Orange are tonal, they do not
feature the subtle chromatic tonality that conveys shades of emotion in Fahrenheit 451,
largely because none of the characters in A Clockwork Orange exhibit such subtle
emotions but also because the harmonic practice of the cues generally does not allow for
much chromatic dissonance. Furthermore, the identities of the pre-existing excerpts play
128
a role in the affective responses to the music. The same can be said of the music for
Timbre as an opposing term in the music would seem to be shared with Planet of
the Apes and its distinction between unpitched percussive and orchestral passages based
on the twelve-tone melody. Yet the polarity of electronic and orchestral sounds in A
also distinct from those in THX-1138, which have more to do with timbre and cluster
effects than with a novel instrumentation for otherwise conventional music. At the same
time, the novel instrumentation in A Clockwork Orange remains that film’s principal
familiar repertory.
Fred Myrow’s score for Soylent Green bears similarities to THX-1138 and Silent
Running in its use of pop instrumentation and further resembles THX-1138 in its
eclecticism. Although centered on a pop-based idiom, the score also includes more
introspective and expressionistic passages and, in what may be a nod to 2001, excerpts of
classical music.
exhaustion of the planet’s ecology have reduced quality of life for the earth’s population.
The people lack basic physical needs for subsistence, such as reliable food and shelter. In
a broader sense, people lack meaning in their lives and dignity as individuals.
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euthanasia. Upon dying, most people are not mourned or buried, but rather are picked up
by sanitation squads like refuse, for, as it turns out, the foodstuff Soylent Green,
unbeknownst to the population, is created from the bodies of dead individuals. There is
level executive within the Soylent Corporation. Thorn discovers that the executive was
killed to hide the government’s terrible secret: the deteriorating environment can no
longer produce food for the population, necessitating the production of food from
deceased persons.
The score refers to a number of styles, including jazz, soul, rock, abstract
electronic music, and introspective “night” music, and it also includes excerpts from
classical music. The pop music styles, including jazz and soul, assume primacy in the
score due to their prominence throughout most of the film. The classical and abstract
Modernist elements in the score are infused throughout most cues to varying
degrees. Scenes depicting characters engaged in stealthy activities, such as the assassin
entering the luxury apartment tower of the Soylent executive, Simonson, or Thorn
discreetly observing the apartment of Simonson’s driver, Tab Fielding, are accompanied
by introspective and sometimes even pointillistic music.35 In these cues the gradually
evolving textures, anchored by slowly shifting chords played by strings or muted brass
35
Fred Myrow and Jerry Fielding, Soylent Green/The Demon Seed: Original Motion Picture Soundtracks,
FSM Vol 6 No. 8, Compact Disc, Tracks 3 and 4.
130
outbursts from other instruments, for example an electric guitar or pitched percussion.
Locations such as Simonson’s apartment, Fielding’s apartment, and the lobby for
“Home” are characterized by banal source music rooted in jazz or soul that is colored by
modernist inflections in its harmony or timbre, defamiliarizing it in such a way that the
music becomes unsettling and even threatening. Modernist sounds come fully to the fore
in the electronic pulses that accompany Thorn’s investigation into the Soylent plant
The scene of Sol Roth’s death includes the only music that is completely devoid
Tchaikovsky, Beethoven, and Grieg, and it accompanies Sol’s elective suicide, during
which he views archival images of the natural world that has disappeared due to
ecological collapse. The scene is poignant for its portrayal of Sol’s death and of Sol’s
personal remembrance and nostalgia for the unspoiled world of the past.
One of the most common means of blending pop-based and modernist music in
the film is to set up a pop-based framework or “groove” and then gradually infuse it with
modernist sounds or materials of some kind. The title music to Soylent Green illustrates
this approach. The cue begins with an almost blues-based riff that leads into a busier
section, while accompanying a still-photo montage of city life from the early twentieth
population, and activity.36 This newly active section contains jazzy syncopation that
recalls jazz-inflected music of Leonard Bernstein or even Aaron Copland, reinforcing the
36
Soylent Green/Demon Seed: Original Soundtrack, Track 1
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urban images within the montage. As this activity continues, increasingly dissonant
string chords begin to sound, first quietly, then gradually increasing in intensity until they
almost overwhelm the jazzy syncopated music, while the images shift to those of traffic
congestion, factory smokestacks, and crowded city streets. The activity abruptly drops
off, returning to the opening tempo, but with a more somber mood, punctuated by an
This montage during the main title sequence acts as a prologue, showing how
background of the film’s story. The pop-based music during the film’s titles might add to
the immediacy of the film for the audience and might resonate with the look and feel of
the film, which are very evocative of the early 1970s despite the film’s setting of 2022.37
Almost all of the remaining pop-based music can be interpreted as source music,
which nonetheless includes sounds that reflect the futuristic setting of the film. The
but also through unusual harmonies and other kinds of unusual sounds. This is most
readily apparent in the jazzy source cue “Can I Do Something For You” which serves as
the ambient background for Simonson’s apartment and accompanies most of the activity
there between Shirl, Simonson’s concubine or “furniture,” and Thorn.38 The cue’s light
jazz is augmented by electronic effects such as filtered white noise and the inharmonic
sounds of a ring-modulator that supplement the melodic leads by flute and violin over a
37
The costume styles seem very reflective of the 1970s despite the film’s futuristic setting.
38
Soylent Green/Demon Seed: Original Soundtrack, Track 2
132
chordal organ and simple percussion groove. The accompaniments sounded by these
The cue “Tab’s Pad” is similarly based on a distinct style, this time derived from
soul or even funk-rock. Tab Fielding’s companion is shown listening to this music as she
enjoys the luxury of a jar of strawberries before Thorn arrives to search the apartment.
The funk style of this cue may reflect Tab Fielding’s station (as Simonson’s driver,
Fielding lives in an apartment that is not nearly as luxurious as Simonson’s and is not
pattern and is performed by a diverse group of instruments including electric bass and
guitar, clavinet, piano, saxophone, trombone, and other instruments that are often
featured within funk music. The cue is also punctuated at points by a brief tremolo figure
played on what sounds like an amplified cello or other string instrument; this tremolo
different sound space from that of the other instruments. Like the inharmonic sounds that
add a degree of strangeness to “Can I Do Something For You,” this processed and
“artificial” sound defamiliarizes through both its novelty and its violation of the cue’s
treat of strawberries, or taking a shower) that the film audience most likely takes for
39
Soylent Green/Demon Seed: Original Soundtrack, Track 5.
133
granted but have become largely unattainable luxuries within the film’s context. The
pop-based source music that underscores these scenes may convey some of the
defamiliarize them and serve to reinforce how they are perceived differently within the
Some unfamiliar activities and institutions brought about by the deficient state of
the environment are similarly accompanied by pleasant, yet unsettling source music. The
cue “Home Lobby Source” accompanies Sol Roth’s entry into the lobby of “Home” to
submit to voluntary euthanasia. This music is also very simple jazz-pop reminiscent of
environments. This cue is remarkable for its slightly unusual harmony and melodies and
its unusual arrangement that features chimes (not an instrument normally heard in
elevator music).40 Over a pleasant jazz guitar riff, unison strings and an alto saxophone
sound a melody that makes extensive use of a whole-tone scale, followed by a second
melodic fragment that meanders through whole-tone and chromatic scales. Statements of
this melody are separated by an unusual break also based on a whole-tone scale and
featuring tuba and flute played in parallel intervals (two octaves plus a tritone), producing
40
Soylent Green/Demon Seed: Original Soundtrack, Track 7.
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Ex. 4.2. Soylent Green, “Home Lobby Source,” “break” motif.
character of the cue (Example 4.2). The sound of the chimes is a comparatively
Something for You,” but it also sonically complements the parallel tritones during the
break.
The effect produces oddly disturbing music that reflects the cheerfully presented
but grim purpose of “Home,” a center for assisted suicide, where individuals can go to
experience their last moments much as they might spend a few moments at a salon or spa.
The timbre resulting from the parallel flute and tuba most strongly creates the dark
character of the cue, and the chimes, while adding a similarly unusual timbre to the style
type, also convey a weak sort of “death knell” for those going “Home.” The banality of
this music contrasts with the “serious” classical music that follows during the scene of
Sol’s death.
The most overtly modernist music is a very short cue, “Infernal Machine,” that
individuals picked up by the sanitation crews into the foodstuff called Soylent Green.
The cue is almost entirely electronic and consists of syncopated, inharmonic pulses
against a background of high-pitched, inharmonic tones that sound like the output of a
135
ring-modulator. This brief track is reprised two or three times as Thorn surveys the
extent of the Soylent operation. The mechanical pulses and the inharmonic and almost
metallic sounds provide a chilling background for the food processing plant and for
Two scenes are conspicuously accompanied by classical music that is free of any
of the modernist sounds or inflections that characterize the rest of the score. The first
depicts Thorn and Sol enjoying relishing a meal prepared from food that Thorn pilfered
from Simonson’s apartment. The second depicts Sol viewing images of lost nature as
part of his elective suicide. Sol’s and Thorn’s feast is accompanied by Mozart’s
Kegelstatt Trio, K489; the director, Richard Fleischer, believed that scoring the scene
with classical music would emphasize the luxury of the experience for Sol and Thorn by
classical excerpts that add a bittersweet quality to the images of animals, forests, and
The classical excerpts in the score refer strongly to the past through their
distinctly older styles, and the absence of modernist inflections in these excerpts leaves
classical music in Soylent Green serves as an indicator of nostalgia for the time when the
environment was capable of providing a much better quality of life for the population.
The specific excerpts included in the medley that reinforce this nostalgia are discussed in
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The film’s moody, introspective night music is perhaps most reminiscent of that
from THX-1138 (notably such cues as “First Chase” and “Third Escape”). There is some
irony in the appearance of similar music accompanying societies that could be considered
opposites. Both are oppressive to a degree, and both represent responses to a catastrophe.
Whereas the society in THX-1138 exerts extreme control over all aspects of the
population and exaggerates the effects of catastrophe (whether real or not), the society of
Soylent Green appears to have virtually lost control. It is capable only of occasionally
hauling away dead bodies, sending police to prevent food riots, and essentially
sanctioning cannibalism to minimize starvation, but incapable of any social cohesion that
could eventually produce a solution. Both films are nonetheless scored at times with
similarly introspective and moody music produced by similar pop-based ensembles and
Zardoz – Classic and Archaic Styles as a Metaphor for an Underlying Natural Order
The music for John Boorman’s Zardoz might appear at first to be a simple
opposition between accessible music by Beethoven and more difficult avant-garde music
similar to the opposition in 2001: A Space Odyssey. The two films revolve around the
common theme of arrested human development and use music to support the broader
human progress that has been caused by the accumulation of power and resources by an
elite group of intellectuals who have achieved immortality. This group of Eternals
withdraws into their isolated community, the Vortex, and engages in endless academic
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discussions while casually exploiting the remainder of humanity who endure harsh
conditions outside the Vortex. It is only through the destruction of the Vortex by one of
the outsiders that human development, progress, and evolution can continue.
Like other aspects of the film, the music of Zardoz invites comparison with that of
2001 in several ways. Zardoz generally opposes dissonant, atonal music against more
clearly accessible music, sometimes using one type to accompany extended scenes
without dialogue that focus instead on visual imagery for their meaning. Both films
make use of pre-existing classical music, even featuring a particular work as a “main
theme.” Whereas 2001 features the prologue from Also Sprach Zarathustra as one of its
principal recurring themes, Zardoz features excerpts from the Allegretto of Beethoven’s
Seventh Symphony as a major element. The atonal music in Zardoz is typically very
abstract, having no clear metric pulse and existing essentially as sound-mass music like
Despite these similarities, there are also distinct differences between the music for
each film. The Beethoven excerpt in Zardoz is the film’s only example of pre-existing
music, and although it is as central to Zardoz as Also Sprach Zarathustra is to 2001, the
Kubrick’s film. Furthermore, the music in Zardoz features a broader range of styles than
those in 2001, including Renaissance and early Baroque music, late Classical music, hints
of impressionistic music, and sounds reminiscent of the most avant-garde music. Over
the course of the film, it becomes clear that the avant-garde music is meant to
characterize the Vortex, the enclave of the Eternals, whereas the Beethoven quotations
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Ex. 4.3a. Zardoz, Main Title (paraphrase of Beethoven, Symphony No. 7,
Second Movement)
appear more and more to be connected to Zed, the film’s protagonist and an outsider to
the Vortex.
Only two musical ideas recur. One is the Beethoven Allegretto, and the other is
an irregular and almost impressionistic melody for solo flute. The recurrences of the
Allegretto are remarkable because each is set in a different historical style. Measures 27-
100 of the familiar orchestral version accompany a lengthy sequence at the end of the
film, but the opening titles are supported by an arrangement of mm. 27-74 in which
countertenor voices, supported by an organ, replace the melodic lines for viola and first
violin (Example 4.3a). The resulting sound suggests early Baroque sacred music. Two
additional excerpts occur at key moments in the film, each lasting about ten measures and
arranged for viols and recorders respectively, further suggesting the sound of archaic
music (Example 4.3b). These stylistically varied recurrences not only emphasize the
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Ex. 4.4 Zardoz, melodic fragments associated with Avalow
musical opposition between tonal and non-tonal music but also engender two additional
garde music, and the particular strains of the Beethoven Allegretto are set against the rest
of the score.
The remaining music, composed specifically for the film by David Munrow,
includes a variety of gestures and devices more typical of modernist music. These include
tone clusters sung by human voices or performed on an organ, an irregular melody for
solo flute, and passages that use electronic sounds. The irregular solo flute melody,
whom Boorman refers to as the “high priestess” and who is valued by both the Eternals
and Zed for her special insight; this melody recurs each of the five times that we see her
(Example 4.4). Brief cluster chords sounded by a pipe organ accompany shots of the
floating "Zardoz head” airship as it flies over the landscape. Vocal cluster chords are
heard as the Eternals discover Zed within the Vortex and indeed are sung by the Eternals
as one of their number, Friend, is cast out for violently denouncing the group. Finally,
electro-acoustic sounds are sounded primarily in connection with the Tabernacle, the
artificial intelligence that maintains the Vortex. This music is exclusively timbre-based
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and ranges from short inharmonic sounds heard in brief passages to an extended cue that
synthesized sounds but also concrète sounds consisting of short segments of dialogue and
other processed vocals. In fact, of the scores under study, only the music of Zardoz
The very stylized nature of Boorman’s film imbues it with a sense of “profundity”
that recalls the intellectual weight of 2001. At the heart of Zardoz is a reverence for an
implied natural order that brings progress and evolutionary development and governs the
recurring life cycle of birth, death, and rebirth. The Eternals, having achieved
immortality, have interrupted that cycle, and their enslavement of the remaining human
population prevents any further development from taking place. Moreover, the isolation
of the Vortex does not allow the remaining population to benefit from its intellect or its
age. The petty factionalism, boredom, and decadence of the Eternals further show the
The excerpts from the Beethoven symphony serve as a musical metaphor for the
underlying natural order. The successive variations could be understood to suggest the
cyclical progress that underlies natural human development. Boorman uses the opening
variations to accompany a stylized montage at the end of the film, in which Zed and
Consuella, one of the leading Eternals who had actually been hunting Zed, escape the
dying Vortex and live out the rest of their lives in a nearby cave. The audience sees Zed
and Consuella in a series of portraits that show the birth of their son, his maturity, and his
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eventual departure, along with the couple’s old age and death and ending with a shot of
Zed’s handprint on the cave wall. The montage shows this natural life cycle within the
lives of Zed and Consuella, and the accompanying music encourages the audience to
situate them within the larger progressive life cycle of humanity implied by the film.
The earlier paraphrases of the Beethoven Allegretto set in archaic styles can be
thought of as both anticipations of this final sequence and hints of the “natural order” still
at work despite the interference of the Vortex. Indeed, Zed describes himself as
essentially a product of that force; in breeding him for their own purposes, the Eternals
Apart from the obvious contrast in tonality between the modernist cues and the
paraphrases of Beethoven, the modernist passages are also remarkable for their degree of
abstraction. They contain virtually no hint of tonal harmony or regular rhythmic pulse.
The vocal and organ clusters and the electronic cues contain no recognizable rhythms.
Even the solo flute melody, by far the most accessible of these modernist cues, lacks a
definite tonal center and any sense of a regular pulse. These abstract cues create an effect
similar to that of the Kyrie in 2001; their materials are so foreign to a mainstream
audience that they impart a distinct and utter alien-ness and incomprehensibility to the
Vortex and its inhabitants. Such alien-ness complements the degree to which the Vortex
is cut off from the rest of humanity and the rest of the world. The prodigal founders of
the Vortex describe it as “going against the natural order,” and the music for the Vortex
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The unnaturalness of the Vortex is further indicated by the temporal distance
between its music and the archaic and Classical styles of the Beethoven Allegretto. The
Beethoven settings reflect various stages of an established, traditional practice that the
music of the Vortex violates and attempts to suppress. Of course, the Vortex is
ultimately brought down by the forces of the natural order working through Zed. And the
modernist music that encodes the Vortex is similarly swept aside in favor of the
Norman Jewison’s 1975 film Rollerball, a film about a violent and popular
futuristic sport, was intended to address the growing power and influence of big business
and the escalation of violence in professional sports. Ironically, many critics and fans
came to view the film as glorifying the very violence it was meant to condemn.41
Rollerball posits the world of 2018 as governed by major corporations that use the
sport to control the population, emphasizing group effort over individual achievement,
channeling the aggressive and potentially revolutionary sentiments of the people, and
distracting them from the actions of the executives in charge. Problems arise when a star
player, Jonathan E, refuses to retire despite the insistence of the corporate executives.
41
Jewison recalled that moviegoers in the United States actually wanted to know the actual rules governing
play. Norman Jewison, This Terrible Business Has Been Good to Me: An Autobiography (New York: St.
Martin’s, 2004), 204. Discussions of the film in David Cook’s Lost Illusions and Ryan and Kellner’s
Camera Politica describe the film as a statement against corporate culture with little or no mention of the
violence of the game. See David A. Cook, Lost Illusions: American Cinema in the Shadow of Watergate
and Vietnam, 1970-1979 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000), 243-245; Michael Ryan and
Douglas Kellner, Camera Politica: The Politics and Ideology of Contemporary Hollywood (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1988), 255-256.
143
Jonathan defies the corporate executives by continuing to play, while trying to learn the
origins of the corporate culture that sponsors Rollerball. In the end, his only effective
means of defiance is survival as he becomes the sole player left alive in the championship
game.
but more importantly it shows how that culture has sapped human empathy and
compassion not only from the oligarchy’s own ranks but also from the population as a
whole. The executives often act capriciously, with little regard for the effects of their
actions. Jonathan is still bitter over the loss of his wife to an executive who desired her
and used his position to take her. Junior executives attending the party at Bartholomew’s
rollerballers themselves. One executive’s escort is overheard repeating a rumor that the
rollerballers are all robots rather than real humans, thus making the carnage more
acceptable. As rule changes make the game more violent, in a bid to build excitement
and to force either Jonathan’s retirement or his elimination, the crowds respond as hoped,
occasionally urged on by the increased brutality to engage in fights in the stands. The
film audience can easily infer that a similar callousness extends to the population as a
whole, that the fans attending the game have themselves become non-empathic
individuals through the manipulation and repression of the executive class to maintain its
power.
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The music in Rollerball reflects the opposing forces of the executives, largely
personified by Bartholomew, and Jonathan, as he defies their orders for him to retire.
Like most of the scores discussed, one of the principal musical oppositions involves
harmony, pitting tonal music that supports the protagonist against atonal gestures for the
executives. Although crucial within the score, this opposition is largely hidden among
the tonal classical excerpts that make up most of the score. It only becomes apparent in a
few brief instances of jarringly dissonant atonal music for organ at key points at which
the oppressive influence of the executives is keenly felt. Like the executives themselves,
who exercise their power over the population from within unseen circles, the atonal
portion of the score’s harmonic opposition is only recognized at those moments when it
instrumentation. Specifically, the tonal music connected with the protagonist is all
orchestral, whereas music connected to the executives and to the game of Rollerball itself
is all played on a pipe organ. The organ music associated with the game is tonal. It
includes the film’s main and end titles, some incidental music, and examples of source
music that precede two of the matches. The minimal amount of atonal music played on
the organ helps to establish a set of musical connections between the striking sound of
that instrument, the public image of the executives, and the game of Rollerball that they
sponsor. The sound of the organ plays a role in the score similar to that of the public
façade cultivated by the executives, which presents them as powerful and imposing while
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The orchestral cues and title music for organ are examples of pre-existing
classical music, whereas the incidental and source music for organ and two additional
pieces of source music for rock band were newly composed for the film. The orchestral
selections include excerpts from symphonies by Shostakovich: mm. 41-61 of the first
movement of the Eighth Symphony, mm. 1-18 of the third movement of the Fifth
Symphony, and fig. 128-131 from the finale of the Fifth. The orchestral selections also
include the Adagio in G Minor attributed to Tomaso Albinoni by Remo Giazotto and
Tchaikovsky’s waltz from Sleeping Beauty. The film’s title music and the only pre-
There are few recurrences of music in the film. The toccata is reprised during the
end titles, and a portion of the closing bars accompanies the end of the first sequence
involving the game between Houston and Barcelona. The complete Adagio is heard later
in the film after having been introduced earlier. Much as in 2001, these recurrences serve
to recall circumstances earlier in the film when the cues were first heard.
regarding the game and his defiance at Bartholomew’s insistence that he retire,
culminating in his journey to Geneva to consult the Archives.42 The excerpt from the
Eighth and from the Adagio of the Fifth are slow, introspective, and even mournful
passages primarily for strings, which easily support Jonathan’s trepidation at defying the
42
Jonathan’s earliest conversations about the origins of the game with his trainer, Cletus, are accompanied
by the excerpt from the Eighth Symphony. The excerpt from the third movement of the Fifth accompanies
junior executives at a party who destroy a row of trees on a corporate estate with a grenade pistol as
Jonathan, resolved to issue demands in exchange for his retirement, looks on from a window. The
climactic ending leading to the fourth movement of the Fifth Symphony accompany Jonathan’s journey to
the Archives in Geneva in an attempt to learn the history of the corporations.
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executives and his resentment of the power that they have over him. The heroic buildup
in the excerpt from Shostakovich’s finale reflects Jonathan’s resolve to travel to Geneva
and learn the secret history of the corporations once and for all. As “pure” film music,
these excerpts closely mirror the moods of the scenes they accompany, conveying a sense
Of the organ pieces associated with the executives and the game, the Toccata in D
Minor is the most prominent. This piece has a history of associations with horror and
suspense.43 The organ itself has accumulated similar associations. As Irvin Bazelon
notes, “The full bodied-overtones and ritualistic connotations of the organ lend
themselves to melodramatic subject matter. The instrument plays a prominent role in the
numerous variations of Phantom of the Opera and similar shock films.”44 From the
opening scenes of the film, depicting the setup before the first game, the toccata
established a connection with the game, the organ becomes associated with the corporate
executives through its sounding of the “corporate anthem,” source music played in the
arena before the start of each match.46 These musical cues, the Toccata in D Minor and
43
An orchestral arrangement of the toccata served as the title music to the 1932 version of Dr. Jekyll and
Mr. Hyde starring Fredric March, and the piece appeared as diegetic incidental music performed by Boris
Karloff’s character in the 1934 film The Black Cat. As late as 1954, Disney’s 20,000 Leagues Under the
Sea featured the mysterious and malevolent Captain Nemo performing the toccata aboard his submarine,
the Nautilus.
44
Irvin Bazelon, Knowing the Score: Notes on Film Music, (New York: Arco, 1981), 104-105.
45
The organ may or may not be acting as source music during this sequence.
46
Two different “corporate anthems” are heard during the film, one preceding the match between Houston
and Madrid at the beginning and another before the match between Houston and Tokyo midway through
the film. Both are purposefully banal and hymn-like in their own way; the Houston theme is set very
traditionally in a series of balanced phrases, while the Tokyo theme incorporates some purposefully
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the corporate anthems, convey the horrifying nature of the spectacular game and hint at
the power and influence of the corporate executives by drawing on both the
cinematic/horrific and also the political and even religious connotations of the organ.
Beyond the film’s associations with the instrument, specific brief passages on the organ
Jonathan enters the main offices of the Energy Corporation to meet with Bartholomew,
the accompanying organ music begins with a solo atonal melody and gradually builds to
atonal music sounded by the organ occurs as Jonathan arrives at the Archive in Geneva.
Aerial views of the mountains and shots of Jonathan ascending the steps of the Archive
are accompanied by the finale of Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony. The building tension
in the music leading to the coda reinforces our sense of Jonathan’s belief that he is about
to get the desired answers. As the elevator doors open to the reception level, a jarring
organ chord replaces the symphony’s anticipated coda. Jonathan then discovers that the
information is irretrievably lost in the complex and cumbersome computer system of the
Archives. Whether by design or ineptness, the corporate executives have thwarted his
attempts to gain information that might have allowed him to subvert the corporate
culture. The organ chord that disrupts the coda of Shostakovich’s finale conveys the
stylized “Oriental” attributes no doubt intended to reflect the setting of that particular match. Rollerball
(1975), produced and directed by Norman Jewison, MGM Home Entertainment, 1998, DVD.
148
The remaining music in the score further enhances the characterizations of
Jonathan and the executives that was set up by the opposition between the music for
organ and symphonic music by Shostakovich. The Adagio in G Minor, heard initially as
source music in Jonathan’s recordings of his former wife, Ella, serves almost as a love
theme for the film; Jewison even considered it to be the film’s “main theme.”47 The
sentimental mood of the Adagio matches Jonathan’s brooding over his loss of Ella. In
contrast the climactic passages of the piece are used as underscore to accompany Ella’s
confrontation with Jonathan, during which he realizes that she is being offered to him at
the behest of the executives if he will comply with their wishes and retire.
The waltz from Sleeping Beauty that accompanies Jonathan and his teammate
Moonpie on a visit to the Luxury Center may prompt a comparison with the use of the
Blue Danube waltz from 2001. Jewison described this cue as “essentially Muzak,”
echoing the sentiment of Irwin Bazelon regarding the Blue Danube in 2001.48 The light
and elegant waltz music conveys the sophistication and prestige of the Luxury Center,
which has many of the amenities desired by executives (such as secretaries, as Moonpie
points out) and acts as another public face for executive life.
In contrast to the superficial sophistication of the Luxury Center and its music, the
film includes two rock-based source cues for the executive party that Bartholomew hosts,
cues as the film’s only examples of “contemporary music.” Their rock and blues based
47
Jewison describes the Adagio this way in both his commentary accompanying the DVD release of the
film and his notes accompanying the soundtrack recording. See Rollerball, DVD; See also André Previn,
Rollerball: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Varese Sarabande 302 066 354 2, 2002, Compact Disc, 2.
48
Jewison, commentary accompanying Rollerball, DVD.
149
styles suggest a less formal atmosphere than that of the Luxury Center. Using structures,
gestures and instrumentation largely indistinguishable from those in much music of the
mid 1970s, these cues also include subtle details that, like the source cues in Soylent
Green, mark these source cues as aberrant products of the dystopian atmosphere of the
executive party. The cue “Executive Party” includes more obvious details, mainly the
altered twelve-bar blues harmonic pattern substituting flatted supertonic and flatted
dominant harmonies as the ninth and tenth chords, and the lead melody sounded by a
synthesizer that emphasizes G sharp and a B-flat minor scale in the context of an A minor
Ex. 4.5. Rollerball, “Executive Party,” lead line and chord pattern.
Vamp (Example 4.5).49 As in the source cues from Soylent Green, these non-harmonic
inflections to the pop idiom of the cue, particularly when sounded by an electronic
instrument, mark the source music as both futuristic and “deficient.” This enhances the
decadence of the executives as they network, show off their escorts, and revel in their
49
Rollerball: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, Track 4.
150
Rollerball is similar to both 2001 and Zardoz in its use of one recurring piece to
suggest and reinforce a key element in the film’s story. At the same time, Rollerball
differs from those films in that its main recurring piece, the Toccata in D Minor, does not
receive as much “screen time” as the prologue from Also Sprach Zarathustra or the
by the supplementary source and incidental cues for the organ, which keep its striking
timbre along with the memory of the piece itself in the audience’s attention. The
distinctive sound of the instrument retains its presence and its clear association with the
game and the corporate sponsors, despite its relatively infrequent appearances in the
score. Within the group of organ pieces as a whole, the Bach toccata can be likened to
the spectacle of Rollerball itself, whereas subtler and yet more disturbing atonal organ
passages are hidden in its shadow, much like the executives who exercise their
Logan’s Run – Orchestral Music, Electronic Music, and a Prescription for Dystopia
Jerry Goldsmith’s score for Logan’s Run contains some of the most clearly
opposed musical styles: passages built up using the unique timbres of synthesizers
contrast with orchestral passages that resemble more traditional film music. The sense of
support characters and circumstances within the story; in fact, Logan’s Run has the only
score in the films under discussion that includes leitmotifs in this traditional manner.
Logan’s Run is set in a future urban society in which almost all aspects of life are
regulated by a central computer. The society exists in a great domed city that is isolated
151
from the outside world because of a war and environmental catastrophe, which are
hedonistic, but all residents must submit to compulsory euthanasia at age thirty in an
elaborate ritual known as Carrousel. Individuals wishing to live past the thirty-year age
limit try to escape to a mythical place called Sanctuary; an elite corps of police called
“Sandmen” hunts these “runners.” Logan is a Sandman charged with locating Sanctuary,
but finds himself sympathetic with the runners, especially with his contact, Jessica.
The sealed environment of Logan’s Run would seem to invite comparison with
that of THX-1138. Both feature highly regimented societies in which individuals are
designated by numbers rather than simple names, but they differ sharply in the nature of
their respective social interaction. Whereas the highly prohibitive and oppressive society
of THX-1138 recalls that of Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, the casual relationships, lack
of familial bonds, and implied shallowness of the culture of Logan’s Run make it
In some respects, the world of Logan’s Run seems to have been set up as a straw
community to extol the virtues of the nuclear family and other traditional values in the
electronic music in the score, the film’s generally more traditional approach to film music
in both its substance and methods may reflect a subtle attempt to appeal to the more
50
Ryan and Kellner consider film’s negative portrayal its collective society as a commentary on leftist
social tendencies in Ryan and Kellner, Camera Politica, 249. Leonard Heldreth takes issue with
believability of Logan’s and Jessica’s immediate affinity for “natural” world upon their escape, noting that
their lifetime experience in the domed city should render the outside world terrifying; the point, of course,
is to further characterize the domed city as unnatural and unpleasant. See Leonard Heldreth, “Clockwork
Reels: Mechanical Environments in Science Fiction Films,” 220-221.
152
conservative portion of the mainstream audience. Perhaps because of its overt support of
a “traditional” society, the film is quite conventional in its storytelling, relying largely on
unusual sets and locations and on novel special effects rather than on novel cinematic
Running. Instead, a few leitmotivic musical themes are reprised throughout the score,
locations. The full musical recurrences are in the electronic music, typically reprises of
short, programmed ostinato patterns that are then assembled into larger cues.
Lukas Kendall and Jeff Bond provide extensive discussion of the score and of
Goldsmith’s use of motifs in the notes that accompany the remastered CD release of the
film’s soundtrack music.51 As one might expect, the score reserves modernist music for
the somewhat oppressive domed city and traditional tonal or impressionistic music for the
world outside. The modernist music falls into two sub-groups: electronic music created
exclusively with synthesizers and music scored with strings, piano, and the sounds of a
string synthesizer. The music that accompanies Logan and Jessica’s journey through the
ruins of Washington, D.C. is for a full orchestra and features prominent wind and brass
parts that provide a further sonic contrast with the music reserved for the domed City.
51
Lukas Kendall and Jeff Bond, notes accompanying Jerry Goldsmith, Logan’s Run: Original Motion
Picture Soundtrack, FSM Vol 5 No. 2, 2002, Compact Disc, 6-19.
153
Ex. 4.6. Logan’s Run, City Motif.
The purely electronic music accompanies the interiors of the City, the activities of
the Sandmen, and Logan’s contacts with the central computer, whereas the string-based
music accompanies Logan’s contacts with Jessica and the underground runners.52 Almost
all of the modernist music makes extensive use of the “City motif.” Bond describes this
as a three-note chromatic motif (A, A-sharp, B) often followed by a variant (A, A-sharp,
C). These occur together so frequently, however, that it is probably more correct to refer
to the entire six-note group as the City motif (Example 4.6). Its closely spaced intervals
encompass[ing] the oppression of the future society, characterizing the City, its ruthless
Sandmen enforcers, and the icy, female-voice central computer.”53 This motif is
incorporated throughout cues that accompany the City and even some scenes outside. The
motif becomes a theme stated repeatedly during the opening titles, it is used as a
programmed ostinato in much of the synthesizer music, and it even acts as a leitmotif for
the City’s culture when it accompanies Logan’s nemesis, Francis, in the world outside.
All of the electronic music is generated with synthesizers, and although the
timbres are distinctly electronic, most of this music makes full use of the chromatic scale
rather than purely unpitched sounds or on inharmonic timbres. The sounds used are
52
Kendall and Bond, notes to Logan’s Run: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, 6-11.
53
Kendall and Bond, notes to Logan’s Run: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack, 6.
154
common ones for the synthesizers readily available at the time: swept filters, very wide
and rapid vibrato or other similar sound modulation, short repeating ostinato patterns
generated with programmed sequencers, and a few inharmonic sounds that may be the
result of ring modulation. These sounds may be further enhanced with artificial
reverberation and echo effects. The results sound very machine-like, suggesting the
central computer and its extensive control over City systems. This music is also strongly
Buchla synthesizer, notably his Silver Apples of the Moon. Significantly, the equipment
used in Logan’s Run resembles that used by Carlos to create the electronic music for A
A second theme that recurs extensively is much longer in its full form than the
City motif, and it is clearly tonal. Referred to as the “Love theme,” it appears to suggest
the attraction between Logan and Jessica, although Bond and Kendall assign it a broader
scope, calling it “a signpost for human emotion and freedom itself” (Example 4.7).54
Fragments of this theme appear early within the string-based modernist music for the
City, reinforcing Logan’s contacts with Jessica and the underground support network for
runners. The theme is heard more fully during the cue “The Sun,” as Jessica and Logan
54
Kendall and Bond, notes to Logan’s Run: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack,, 6.
155
emerge from the outskirts of the City, and is further interspersed in the music that
accompanies the scenes of outside. This “Love theme” assumes its broader scope during
the film’s final scenes as the residents of the City emerge into the outside world from the
Two other, more minor themes are introduced during the sequence outside,
reflecting the contrast in environment with the enclosed City and providing further
musical contrasts with the City’s dissonant music. The first of these, acting as a theme
for “Outside,” is a simple theme outlining a triad; this theme appears in rapid sequences
mountainous vista in the distance (Example 4.8a). The second, also heard in conjunction
with the world outside, is modal and conveys a sense of mystery that is distinct from the
oppressive character of the music for the City (Example 4.8b). This second outside
theme is used during scenes of the ruins of Washington; its sounding in conjunction with
reiterated open fifths in the strings and piano give the music a ritualistic quality that
156
Austere music for strings and piano returns as Logan and Jessica return to the City
Logan following his capture is accompanied by a return of the electronic music. Logan’s
insistence that Sanctuary does not exist clashes with the computer’s calculated
computer and opens the domes to the outside for everyone in the City. Orchestral
reprises of the music for outside color the computer’s destruction as triumphant for all of
the residents who are now free to rediscover the old social behaviors of their twentieth-
century forebears.
That the film’s society seems a “straw” one intended to show the virtues of
conventional middle-class culture is imbedded as much in the music as in the rest of the
film. The City, with its society of free love and collectivism is coded as undesirable
through the use of mechanical electronic music or dissonant and austere strings. In
contrast, the natural world outside and the ruins of Washington, which serve as a
reminder of familiar American consumer culture, are coded as desirable through the
tonal, accessible, and even lush orchestral music that accompanies these. Any social
critique at work in the film seems biased in favor of mainstream culture and values rather
than challenging any aspects of that culture or presenting any portions of the future
society of Logan’s Run as viable. The more overt social commentary of the novel,
involving tensions between the emerging youth culture of the 1960s and its relationship
157
to the exploding population of the planet as a whole, was downplayed in the film’s
Although the electronic cues are striking and effective, they are not integrated into
the rest of the score to the extent that the electronic episodes in Zardoz or Soylent Green
are. In Logan’s Run, the use of synthesizers seems very self-conscious, which adds to the
obviousness of this aspect of the score’s modernist/tonal opposition. The electronic cues
for the film might not be out of place in THX-1138, even though most of that film’s
music is more transparent, most likely to allow more audio space for the various elements
that make up its complex soundtrack. The lack of such a complex soundscape for the
Likewise, the characters do not experience any complex emotional states that
would call for the harmonic subtlety heard in Fahrenheit 451. Indeed, there is not much
in the score by the end of the film that would leave the audience unsettled; the film’s
conflict is resolved, the inhabitants appear set on a path back to a more recognizable and
“proper” mode of living experienced by the film audience themselves, and the music has
followed these events with moods and gestures prescribed by classical Hollywood. The
film presents itself largely as entertainment, and the music guides the audience’s
55
Leonard Heldreth, “Clockwork Reels: Mechanical Environments in Science Fiction Films,” 220-221;
David A. Cook notes that the film was advertised as the most elaborate science fiction film since 2001 at
the time of its release in Cook, Lost Illusions, 244-245.
158
Conclusions
second group of films even with the wider variety of musical styles represented in these
scores. This should not be surprising; as with the first group, unusual harmonies are
useful point of contrast for characterizing dystopian conditions despite any additional
dystopian aspects in each film, although the contexts vary. These often dissonant
harmonies are accompanied by a greater number of unusual textures and timbres, most of
which are created using electronics. These unusual timbres and textures may form the
basis of a cue or may be incorporated into a cue based on a more accessible style,
Electronic timbres are more prevalent in this latter group of scores largely because
the resources for producing electronic music had become much more readily available.
The electronic music of this second group draws on the sounds and techniques of tape-
based music that arose concurrently with many of the other musical developments in the
1950s.56 Although the groundbreaking works produced during this period largely defined
the sound of electronic music for the next two decades, the techniques used to create
them were slow and cumbersome. Commercially produced synthesizers that made this
process easier and more convenient began to appear during the 1960s, but were not
56
Boulez and Karlheinz Stockhausen were among the early champions of such tape based music. For an
overview of developments, see Paul Griffiths, A Guide to Electronic Music (New York: Thames and
Hudson, 1980), 12-24.
159
widely available until the early 1970s, when manufacturers introduced newer and simpler
All of the scores that feature electronics include some form of contrast between
the electronic sounds and orchestral music, with the electronic sounds often serving as the
indicator of dystopian conditions. The actual form taken by the electronic sounds varies,
ranging from textural beds to realization of common practice music. In all cases, the
Several of the scores in this group contain cues composed in popular styles such
as rock or jazz. Silent Running had perhaps foreshadowed the use of popular musical
styles, although many New Hollywood films such as The Graduate, Bonnie and Clyde,
and Easy Rider were noted for the popular music in their scores. The popular music cues
in this second group are remarkable for their use as source music and for including
defamiliarizing electronic sounds or other sounds that refer to the dystopian conditions.
These cues are another means by which electronic sounds can refer to the dystopian
environment.
further opposition between notions of “high” and “low” culture, an opposition confirmed
by the prominent place given to classical excerpts in many of these scores. On one hand,
this mixing of popular and classical styles might be regarded as another expression of the
postmodern consciousness, which typically seeks to erase the distinctions between high
57
Griffiths, A Guide to Electronic Music, 18-19; Dominic Milano, “Robert Moog,” in The Art of Electronic
Music, ed. Tom Darter and Greg Armbruster (New York: Quill, 1984), 69-73.
160
and low culture.58 On the other hand, these juxtaposed representations of high and low
culture may point to questions within the film community about the validity of film as an
artistic expression. The auteur theory to which many in the New Hollywood subscribed
was rooted in the conviction that films were artistic statements. In some instances, the
directors of these dystopian films consciously included classical music as part of the
film’s score to draw on the artistic status of that music, whether to enhance the status of
the film or to use that status as the basis of commentary within the story.
Despite the wider variety of musical styles in this second group of films, the
consistent with those of the first group; the wider variety of styles simply increases the
number of forms that these correlations can take. By the appearance of Logan’s Run, in
associations between modernist musical styles and depictions of dystopia may themselves
have potentially become clichés. If so, this would point to the effectiveness of those
modernist sounds in the context of dystopian films and further highlight the consistency
with which those associations were made during the ten-year period that saw the
58
Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” 112.
161
CHAPTER 5
In his study of film music from 1975, composer Irvin Bazelon noted the
industry, ostensibly to enhance the status of the films through their use of recognized
discussion:
Bazelon’s comments could apply to each of the films discussed that include pre-
existing music as part of the musical score. After 2001 and its follow-up, A Clockwork
Orange, pre-existing classical music became relatively common in science fiction films
during the early 1970s. Although it had not been uncommon for European films to
include some classical music in their scores during the 1960s, this practice was rare in the
United States before the appearance of 2001. However, it was consistent with the manner
in which some of the earliest films of the New Hollywood, including Bonnie and Clyde,
The Graduate, and Easy Rider had used pre-existing popular music. These films relied
on the audience’s familiarity with the musical selections to bring an added dimension to
the film experience, which went beyond moods and drew on the music’s cultural
1
Irvin Bazelon, Knowing the Score: Notes on Film Music, (New York: Arco, 1981), 35-36.
162
associations, something that European directors had already accomplished in their films
The classical selections in 2001 were rich with meanings, bringing a level of
sophistication to the film that was not normally associated with the genre of science
fiction. Significantly, of the seven films under study that appeared after 2001, five of
these included some form of pre-existing classical music. Four of these five films feature
classical selections prominently in their scores, and the pieces selected typically relate to
the film’s story in a manner that invites interpretation and suggests a sophistication
similar to that of 2001. Although it may be impossible to say with certainty that the
example of 2001 directly influenced this practice in the subsequent films, it is certainly
clear that directors of these later films intended to achieve similar results with their
similar musical approaches. Classical music seemed so much a part of the sound of
science fiction during the early 1970s that George Lucas initially considered including
classical excerpts in the music for his next film, Star Wars.3
Naturally, the ability of pre-existing music to impart meaning to a film through its
connotations requires that it be recognized by the film audience. The availability and
prevalence of classical music on long playing records by the mid 1960s allowed for such
2
Royal S. Brown, Overtones and Undertones: Reading Film Music (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1994), 239; Russell Lack, Twenty Four Framce Under: A Buried History of Film Music, (London:
Namura, 1997), 297-298. Anahid Kassabian refers to the perceiver’s individual experience of this
culturally loaded music as contributing to “affiliated identifications.” See Anahid Kassabian, Hearing
Film: Tracking Identifications in Contemporary Hollywood Film Music, (New York: Routledge, 2001),
117, 141-144.
3
Michael Matessino, notes accompanying Star Wars: A New Hope – Original Mition Picture Soundtrack,
RCA Victor, 09026-68772-2, Compact Disc, 6; John Williams also acknowledges this in his notes
accompanying Star Wars (Original Soundtrack Recording) (20th Century Records, 2T541 0898, 1977, LP).
163
a possibility.4 As if to better insure their recognition, most of the classical selections
featured in these films are examples from the standard repertory by well-known
composers with whom audience members with an average exposure to such music would
be familiar. 5 At the very least, the excerpts fall within the common practice and thus
overlap with the familiar styles and codes of classical Hollywood film music. This
ensured that the excerpts could at least perform the traditional functions of film music,
providing the cultural and musical codes of classical Hollywood, for those audience
Such a practice provoked controversy. In his 1947 book Composing for the
Films, Hanns Eisler had dismissed such uses of “stock” or “trademarked” music as one of
several “bad habits,” although he considered it to be limited to lower budget films.6 His
disdain for using pre-existing music was somewhat reflected by the emphasis that film
composers placed on the originality of their music during the early sound era. Already
anxious about the artistic validity of their craft and the subordination of their music to a
film’s narrative, film composers stressed the originality of their music and its resulting
4
Aaron Copland extolled the virtues of the LP as a means of access to a broad repertory, going so far as to
include a recording list. Aaron Copland, What to Listen for in Music, (New York: McGraw Hill, 1957),
251, 292-298. See also Russell Lack, Twenty Four Frames Under,299.
5
Krin Gabbard and Shailja Sharma allude to this in their discussion of music in A Clockwork Orange,
describing the excerpts of Rimsky Korsakov’s Sheherezade and Elgar’s “Pomp and Circumstance March
No. 1” as “well known pieces” that were included “so the audience could congratulate themselves on their
knowledge of great music, or to phrase it more cynically, their knowledge of middle-brow orchestral music
of the past that is often crassly marketed as “The Greatest Music the World has Ever Known.” Krin
Gabbard and Shailja Sharma, “Stanley Kubrick and the Art Cinema,” in Stanley Kubrick’s “A Clockwork
Orange,” ed. Stuart McDougal (Cambridege: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 98.
6
Hanns Eisler, Composing for the Films (New York: Oxford, 1947), 15-16.
164
specificity to the film for which it was created.7 Both of these were regarded as measures
Eisler’s objection to the use of pre-existing music may also have stemmed from
the co-author of his prescriptions for film music, Theodor Adorno. Adorno was
culture. He regarded such works as musical “fetishes,” employed by the powers behind a
Culture Industry that manipulated the mass audience through popular music and media.9
These works had become commodities, their popularity a measure of their quality, and
any meanings that they might impart to the mass audience would stem from their
commodity status.10
In the 1950s, European directors began to include classical works in their film
scores to elevate the status of their pictures. Fellini, Bergman, Visconti, and Buñuel often
included eighteenth-century Classical music in their films. They created subtle and
cerebral works in a medium that was still establishing itself as an art. Including the
Classical music of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven allowed them both to draw on the
classic status of that music and to imply a parallel between the emotional and intellectual
sophistication of the music and the intended sophistication of the film as a whole.11
7
Dean Duncan, Charms that Soothe: Classical Music and the Narrative Film (New York: Fordham,
2003), 15-22.
8
Ibid. (Combine with previous note).
9
Theodor W. Adorno, “On the Fetish Character in Music and the Regression of Listening,” in Theodor W.
Adorno, Essays on Music, ed. Richard Leppert, trans. Susan H. Gillespie (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2002), 293-294.
10
Ibid., 294-295.
11
Russell Lack, Twenty Four Frames Under: A Buried History of Film Music (London: Namura, 1997),
297-298.
165
Similarly, 2001: A Space Odyssey and other dystopian films of the New
Hollywood drew on the classic status of pre-existing musical selections to augment the
role of music. These selections interacted with the modernist musical styles associated
with the deficiencies behind each dystopia, while the broader connotations of the
selections interacted with the film’s story or scenario. This gave the film an aura of
intellectual sophistication that had rarely been ascribed to science fiction films in the
decades before the New Hollywood. The new sophistication thus achieved presumably
encouraged contemplation of the dystopic elements within each film, enhancing its role
as social critique.
Kubrick’s intention with 2001 was to produce a film with an almost “literary”
seriousness in a genre that was not taken particularly seriously in the mid 1960s. The
research that he conducted into both the mechanics of space travel and science fiction
literature testify to his commitment to make a high-quality film, as does his insistence on
visual effects that were captivating but also remarkable for their level of realism, even
forty years after the film’s release. Perhaps the most overt indication of his aspirations
for the film was his collaboration with the noted science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke,
himself regarded as an expert on futurism and space travel at the time. Clarke’s short
story “The Sentinel” and novel Childhood’s End provided material incorporated into the
film’s story.12
12
Arthur C. Clarke is credited with the idea of the shuttle rocket to ferry astronauts from a planet surface to
a larger spacecraft or orbital station. Clarke’s story, “The Sentinel,” relates the discovery of an alien
artefact on the moon that acts as a beacon for the civilization that planted it millions of years before, and his
166
Such meticulousness was necessary for 2001 to convey properly the magnitude
and scope of the themes Kubrick wished to explore. While reticent to give definitive
interpretations of any of his films, the director did describe his depiction of an
Although Kubrick had hired a composer for the film at the urging of MGM
studios, he was already considering using pre-existing music early in the editing stages,
presumably for its evocative properties. Kubrick had contacted Alex North, the
composer for the score of Spartacus, and requested that he produce as many as a dozen
cues for 2001. North later noted that Kubrick had already resolved to include at least one
example of classical music along with any music that he composed.14 The substitute cue
that North offered in its stead closely resembles the opening prologue to Also Sprach
Zarathustra, suggesting that the prologue was the piece that he had intended to include.15
In the end, of course, none of North’s music was used, and Kubrick retained the prologue
to Also Sprach Zarathustra along with the other pre-existing selections that made up the
score.
Kubrick was no doubt drawn to these musical works because of their potential to
imbue the film with extra meaning. This would not have been possible with North’s
originally composed music. In his previous film, Dr. Strangelove, Kubrick had already
novel Childhood’s End (1953) describes mankind’s sudden evolution into non-corporeal beings with the
help of an alien species who act almost as “midwives” for this development.
13
Quoted in James Gilbert, “Auteur with a Capital A,” in Stanley Kubrick’s “2001: A Space Odyssey” –
New Essays, ed. Robert Kolker (New York: Oxford, 2006), 29.
14
Robert Townson, “The Odyssey of Alex North’s 2001,” notes accompanying Alex North, Alex North’s
“2001,” National Philharmonic Orchestra, Varèse Sarabande VSD-5400, 1993, Compact Disc, 2-3.
15
Ibid.; North’s opening title cue closely imitates the prologue to Also Sprach Zarathustra.
167
shown a proclivity for using music to provide wry commentary in addition to evoking a
mood or making a narrative reference. The shots of an aerial tanker refueling a bomber
aircraft. On the other hand, the wistful optimism of Vera Lynn singing “We’ll Meet
Again” under scenes of thermonuclear conflict added a note of very dark humor to the
For 2001, Kubrick imagined the entire score in this way, using classical excerpts
not just for their implied moods but also for the added level of meaning. Royal Brown
expressing in a different medium what the film expresses in visual and narrative terms.”16
This procedure proved particularly effective in 2001; the film’s relative lack of dialogue
and extended visual sequences rely on the music to “explain” the scenes in the film’s
story. In his later films, Kubrick continued to use pre-existing music, sometimes
All of the musical excerpts in the score of 2001 carry additional meaning in the
manner described by Brown. The two excerpts that recur at key moments in the film’s
story, the prologue to Also Sprach Zarathustra and the Kyrie from Ligeti’s Requiem,
however, might be said to call most emphatically for interpretation because the scenes
how the respective styles inform the film’s implied future for humanity, interpretations
that I believe can be supported by the extramusical associations of and the meanings
16
Brown, Overtones and Undertones, 239.
168
constructed with each piece. My interpretations are part of a multitude of interpretations
put forth regarding the meanings of musical selections in 2001. Although these readings
agree on many points and diverge on others, all of them respond to the apparent need to
rationalize the juxtaposition of the evocative musical examples and of the equally
momentous scenes.
Much has been made of the Nietzschian implications of the film’s scenes of
planetary conjunctions, the evolutionary steps taken by the hominid discovering the
power of tools, and of David Bowman’s appearance as the Star Child, all of which are
accompanied by the prologue from Strauss’s tone poem.17 The evocations of Nietzsche
result, of course, from the intertextual relationships between Nietzsche’s text, with its
concept of the Übermensch, Strauss’s tone poem with Nietzsche’s title, and the stages of
human development depicted in the film. Michel Ciment describes Kubrick’s use of this
prologue as “preparing us for the profundity of his intentions,” but as otherwise no more
illustrative of Nietszche than was Strauss.18 The music’s literary connection may have
been lost on much of the audience, who knew the music only from the film, perhaps
indeed believing that the music was actually composed for 2001.19 Michel Chion
17
Vincent LoBrutto, Stanley Kubrick: A Biography (New York: Donald Fine, 1997), 308; M. Keith
Booker, Alternate Americas: Science Fiction Film and American Culture (Westport, CT: Praeger, 2006),
82; Michel Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, trans. Gilbert Adair and Robert Bononno (New York:
Faber and Faber, 2001), 128; David Patterson lists several other mentions in David W. Patterson, “Music,
Structure and Metaphor in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey,” American Music 22 (Autumn
2004): 451.
18
Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, 128.
19
This possibility is implied in John Williamson, Also Sprach Zarathustra, Cambridge Music Handbooks
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 8.
169
downplays the Nietzsche connection in favor of the perceiver’s experience of the music’s
gestures.20
becoming” is perhaps the most apt. 21 In learning to use tools, the hominid effectively
“become” a new type of human. The music characterizes these episodes of becoming as
positive through its triumphant rhetoric, but also marks them with a “literary”
significance by using a musical piece with literary associations. The cultural references
that the Strauss excerpt makes move the film’s thesis beyond the bounds of science
fiction and situates it among the basic questions posed by mankind. At the same time, the
cultural references showed a level of sophistication not typically associated with science
fiction films.
Opinions about the meanings of the Kyrie vary more. Patterson remarks on the
which appears before scenes of “monumental discovery,” such as the hominid’s adoption
of bone tools, the discovery of the buried monolith on the moon’s surface, and Bowman’s
entry into the Star Gate.22 For Patterson, the Kyrie acts as a lament for that which is then
lost: the hominids’ connection to nature, the budding cosmic awareness of the scientists
and of human culture, and ultimately human consciousness as we know it.23 Ciment
regards the Kyrie as a leitmotif that for the alien consciousness, which invokes “Clarke’s
20
Michel Chion, Kubrick’s Cinema Odyssey, trans. Claudia Gorbman (London: BFI, 2001), 91-92.
21
Patterson, “Music, Structure and Metaphor in Kubrick’s 2001,” 451.
22
Patterson, “Music, Structure and Metaphor in Kubrick’s 2001,” 453.
23
Ibid.
170
idea that all technology, if sufficiently advanced, is touched with magic and a certain
irrationality.”24 Indeed, the Kyrie’s text, an appeal to a higher power for mercy, fits the
implied relationship between humans and the alien consciousness that Kubrick described
as “a scientific definition of God.”25 The text does little to offset the unsettling sounds of
the music because this largely obscures the text. In combination, the words and music
suggest an awesome and impenetrable God, before whose enormity humanity appears
irrelevant, and for whom finite human achievement and progress are of little
consequence.
Patterson describes the Blue Danube Waltz as the “single-most discussed work
from 2001”; the plethora of comments on its use certainly provides a great variety of
opinions.26 Kubrick’s best known remark on the piece was “It’s hard to find anything
much better than ‘The Blue Danube’ for depicting grace and beauty in turning. It also
gets about as far away as you can get from the cliché of space music.”27 Ciment calls the
inclusion of the waltz a “brilliant idea,” that “not only evokes the music of the spheres
with a deliciously buoyant humor but adds a dash of Kubrick’s characteristic nostalgia
for a period when Johann Strauss’s melody cradled revelers on board the Big Wheel in
Vienna’s Prater.”28
24
Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, 128.
25
Quoted in James Gilbert, “Auteur with a Capital A,” in Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey – New
Essays, ed. Robert Kolker (New York: Oxford, 2006), 29.
26
Patterson’s article includes at least ten quotes on this piece alone in Patterson, “Music, Structure and
Metaphor in Kubrick’s 2001,” 453, 473.
27
Stanley Kubrick, originally from Adel, The Making of 2001, quoted in David Patterson, “Music,
Structure, and Metaphor in Kubrick’s 2001,” 454.
28
Ciment, Kubrick: The Definitive Edition, 131.
171
Patterson remarks on the musical symmetry between the opening gestures of the
waltz and those of the prologue to Zarathustra. He notes how the “softened” opening of
the waltz in comparison to the grand opening of Zarathustra mirrors the parallel
confrontations between the groups of aggressive hominids and their more civil scientist
counterparts aboard the space station.29 Katherine McQuiston emphasizes the circular
nature of the waltz music, discussing the cue in connection with the prevalence of circle
figures in the images of the spacecraft’s interiors and exteriors and their relationship to
the movement of the craft.30 Irvin Bazelon focused on a more immediate connection
between the scenes of the spacecraft and the sounds of the waltz, calling the music
(affectionately):
Chion similarly reacts to a perceived detachment in the juxtaposition between the waltz
and the otherwise silent views of the spacecraft, the characters’ conducting of their
29
Patterson, “Music, Structure and Metaphor in Kubrick’s 2001,” 455-457.
30
Katherine McQuiston, “Recognizing Music in the Films of Stanley Kubrick,” (Columbia University:
PhD diss., 2005), 185-193.
31
Irvin Bazelon, Knowing the Score, 110-111.
32
Chion, Kubrick’s Cinema Odyssey, 94.
172
These descriptions by Bazelon and Chion evoke a sense of space travel infused
with routines imposed by technology that slowly siphon off individual and collective
human autonomy. Yet their readings are hardly authoritative. What is clearly most
significant about the music for 2001 is that it invites interpretation. Brown’s description
what the film expresses in visual and narrative terms” leaves open the question of what
Equally significant was the example that 2001 set for filmmakers who would
create science fiction films in its wake. Kubrick’s 2001 not only invited filmgoers to
interpret the film and its music. It similarly encouraged interpretation of other films and
their music. Kubrick’s use of art music, especially art music with literary significance,
added to the already high technical and intellectual quality of his film. In its attempts at a
new cinematic sophistication, 2001 paralleled the new levels of sophistication in science
fiction literature, and the film’s art music references gave the film a broader cultural
deficiency inherent in humanity. In the latter film, the specific deficiency is a lack of
empathy, stemming from the selfishness and brutality of human nature, making
individuals act out of self-interest rather than altruism. Kubrick summed up the film’s
image of human nature by stating, “Man isn’t a noble savage, he’s an ignoble savage. . . .
173
I’m interested in the brutal and violent nature of man because it’s a true picture of him.
And any attempt to create social institutions on a false view of the nature of man is
probably doomed to failure.”33 This contrasts with the deficiency implied in 2001, which
the assistance of an outside force or entity. The social stagnation of the society of 2001,
brought on by the encroachment of technology into all facets of life, seems as though it
would result in the effacement of this “natural human state” behind a demeanor that is
Clockwork Orange. The “artificial” and “unnatural” electronic timbres were considered
to characterize both Alex and the state as “deficient” in their humanity. Their
deficiencies result specifically from their lack of empathy for their victims – Alex, for the
victims of his ultra-violent escapades, and the state, for the citizens that it subjects to
between Alex’s “normal” self and the changes that he experiences through the Ludovico
Technique centers on his hearing of the scherzo from the Ninth Symphony. Under the
influence of the conditioning, the sound track plays an electronic version of the scherzo
that is subjected to further processing as Alex reacts with the fear and illness caused by
the conditioning.
particular irony within the film. The popular associations of joy and human brotherhood
33
Kubrick to Craig McGregor, New York Times, January 30, 1972.
174
that stem from the last movement and its text are difficult to reconcile with Alex’s
penchant for ultra-violence. Significantly, however, there are few excerpts from this final
movement heard in the film. The one that does recur is an electronic arrangement of the
Turkish March section, which is marked as “deficient” by its electronic timbres. Instead,
the scherzo, an instrumental movement, is heard on the soundtrack during early scenes
showing the intense pleasure that he derives from it and the distress that he later endures
when he hears the piece after having been subjected to the Ludovico Technique. The
scherzo has no text proclaiming the ideals associated with the symphony, and the
depictions of Alex suggest that his appreciation of the symphony is on a purely visceral
level.
Art music figures strongly in both the novel and film versions of A Clockwork
is generally assumed to represent the best that culture can offer, revealing or reflecting
values, truths, and ideals that promote and encourage the good of all. The Ninth
Symphony, and especially its fourth movement, has traditionally been regarded in this
inclusion of the Ninth in his novel. But Alex’s love for the symphony does nothing to
improve his moral character. In fact, he cites music as inspiring for his predilection for
violence.
Burgess and Kubrick seem to diverge in their positions on the value of art and its
ability to spur the improvement of humanity. Burgess approaches this question with a
belief, that mankind, given the opportunity, will ultimately choose the good. Peter
175
Rabinowitz, discussing the differences in the treatment of music in the novel and film,
notes that Burgess’s depiction of Alex in the novel explores questions of ethos and how
music affects and reflects an individual’s character.34 In the full novel’s final chapter,
which was not part of the film adaptation, Alex is shown giving up his pursuit of violence
and looking forward to the prospect of joining mainstream society; significantly, he also
expresses a new interest in smaller and more “sentimental” musical genres, in particular
lieder.35
Kubrick’s film version, in omitting this final episode, ends with Alex essentially
returned to his violent state of the beginning of the film, still unaffected by his
appreciation of music, even the uplifting music of Beethoven. Beethoven is given a more
prominent position in the film version; the film specifically names him as Alex’s favorite
composer and the Ninth Symphony as his favorite work. Whereas in Burgess’s novel the
Ludovico Technique caused Alex to react negatively to any music that might produce a
strong affective response, Alex’s negative reactions in the film are limited to the Ninth
Symphony, ostensibly because of its inclusion in the soundtrack of the Nazi films used
during the sessions. By restricting Alex’s negative response to the Ninth Symphony,
Kubrick focuses more on the cultural associations of the music than on affective
responses to the musical sounds. Kubrick draws heavily on the image of Beethoven as a
universally recognized and admired figure whose music imparts truths and ideals that are
34
Peter Rabinowitz, “A Bird of Like Rarest Spun Heavenmetal: Music in A Clockwork Orange,” in
Stanley Kubrick’s” A Clockwork Orange”, ed. Stuart McDougal (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2003), 119-121.
35
Alex: “I was slooshying more like malenky romantic songs, what they call Lieder, just a goloss and a
piano, very quiet and like yearny. . . .” quoted in Anthony Burgess, A Clockwork Orange (New York:
Norton: 1962/1986), 186. This final chapter was omitted from the first American editions of the novel, and
the early American version was the basis of Kubrick’s film adaptation.
176
commonly understood and appreciated, an image consistent with the popular associations
of the “Ode to Joy.”36 The film’s focus on this image of Beethoven enhances the irony of
Alex’s love of the symphony and, more importantly, expresses Kubrick’s own lack of
faith in the ability of art to change human nature.37 The film’s focus on the Ninth
brotherhood associated with the Ninth Symphony. His visceral enjoyment of the
symphony encourages his personal fantasies, which, contrary to the symphony’s popular
connotations of unity, center on images of violence.39 Beethoven does not express ideals
or truths in music to him; instead, to paraphrase Alex, “Ludwig van . . . just wrote
music.” He listens to the scherzo following his assault with his droogs on the writer, F.
Alexander, and his wife, and, as discussed in Chapter 4, the alternately orchestral and
electronic versions of the scherzo heard in the soundtrack can be heard as indicators of
The three excerpts of the fourth movement that do occur in the film are consistent
with Alex’s visceral enjoyment of the symphony as represented by the scherzo. Two of
these incidents feature an excerpt from the Turkish march, first as Alex peruses the
record shop and second as Alex is subjected to Nazi propaganda films during his
36
Rabinowitz, “A Bird of Like Rarest Spun Heavenmetal,” 125-127; James Wierzbicki, “Banality
Triumphant: Iconographic Use of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony in Recent Films,” Beethoven Forum 10 2
(Fall 2003), 118-126.
37
See Kubrick’s comments on the relationship between violence and art in Ciment, Kubrick: The
Definitive Edition, 149-151, 163.
38
Robert Hughes sums this up effectively in Robert Hughes, “The Décor of Tomorrow’s Hell,” Time, Dec.
1971, 59.
39
Alex imagines himself as Dracula amid visions of a hanging, people crushed by falling rocks, and other
images. See A Clockwork Orange (1971), produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick, Warner Home
Video, 2001, DVD.
177
conditioning. In both of these circumstances, the excerpt heard is the electronic
arrangement by Carlos, which implies deficiency by virtue of its electronic timbres and
arguably because of the resulting comparative unintelligibility of the text. A third excerpt
from the finale, a choral/orchestral rendering of the coda, accompanies Alex’s press
conference with the Minister of the Interior following his “cure” (the reversal of the
Ludovico Technique) and his subsequent fantasy of sexual cavorting in a snowy patch as
a host of Victorian onlookers applaud. Here, his responses to the music are indicated by
facial expressions that coincide with specifically instrumental gestures of this passage,
and his sexual fantasy does not become visible until the instrumental bars after the choral
parts have ended. His response to the fourth movement is just as visceral as his response
to the scherzo, as demonstrated by his reactions to the instrumental portions of the choral
movement.
Notwithstanding his interest in music and his flair with his Nadsat dialect, Alex
does not consider himself to be particularly intellectual and appears to place little value
on rational thinking. When confronted by his droog Georgie, who makes plans for
organized heists beyond petty thievery and violence in order to realize greater proceeds,
Alex muses to himself that “thinking is for the gloopy (i.e. dull) ones, and the oomni ones
rely on, like, inspiration and what Bog (God) sends.”40 He considers little beyond his
All of the various classical excerpts within A Clockwork Orange add to the film’s
“veneer of art,” presenting a variety of classical styles that reflect the film’s overall
40
Alex, quoted from A Clockwork Orange, DVD.
178
fragmented collection of artistic images. But the excerpts by Beethoven lie at the center
of the musical characterizations of deficiency and at the center of the film’s own
discourse on the value of art. As Kubrick would have it, Alex fails to respond to the
symphony’s idealism because like most human beings he is already little more than a
clockwork orange.
relatively little classical music. However, the sounds of the rest of the score contrast so
strongly with these classical excerpts that their very appearance is more striking in
Soylent Green than in the other two films. Classical music accompanies the scene of Sol
Roth’s suicide as he views pastoral scenes of deer in forests, seabirds on the coast,
underwater reefs, and other images of nature lost to environmental degradation; the music
is treated largely as source music within the film. Initially, this scene was to be
accompanied by original music; indeed, the composer Fred Myrow composed a cue in the
style of Ravel for Sol’s death. Perhaps because the film had earlier used Mozart’s
Kegelstatt Trio to accompany Thorn’s and Sol’s sumptuous meal of food taken from the
classical selections for the scene of Sol’s death. Fleischer contracted with conductor
41
Lukas Kendall and Jeff Bond, notes accompanying Fred Myrow and Jerry Fielding, Soylent Green/The
Demon Seed: Original Motion Picture Soundtracks, FSM Vol 6 No. 8, Compact Disc, 10.
Compact Disc. Fried made his selections, but had to get them approved by Fleischer, producer Walter
Seltzer, and also Charlton Heston. Fried’s production of new recordings for the film contrasted Stanley
Kubrick’s licensing of excerpts from commercially available recordings of classical works in 2001 and A
Clockwork Orange.
179
All of the excerpts that Fried selected seem purposefully chosen to emphasize the
pathos behind Sol’s choice to end his life and his nostalgia for the unspoiled nature
depicted in images projected before him as he undergoes elective suicide. Fried’s choice
of the beginning of Beethoven’s Sixth Symphony plays on that work’s associations with
nature and reinforces Sol’s nostalgia for the world of the past. The excerpts from Grieg’s
Peer Gynt suite similarly draw on the programmatic aspects of that work. Fried also
included the second theme from the first movement of Tchaikovsky’s Pathétique
Symphony to accompany the brief shot of Sol as the attendants of Home administer the
The sense of nostalgia comes not just from the excerpts and their sources but also
from the way that the excerpts are combined. The music is made up of “highlights” from
each piece, deftly connected by brief orchestral passages that Fried composed to connect
them. The very brief quotation from Tchaikovsky’s Pathétique Symphony leads almost
The excerpts include enough of each piece for the listener to get the sense of the full
source before the score moves to the next excerpt. The result is an “idealized collection
of significant moments from great music of the past,” similar to the visual effect of the
idealized images of nature displayed before Sol on his deathbed. The effect for the film
audience is like that for Sol. The pieces are perceived as representing a nostalgic
180
remembrance of the past that preserves only selected cherished memories separated from
Even members of the audience not familiar with these specific excerpts would no
doubt recognize – either consciously or subliminally – the code of signs in the music that
convey nature and tragedy. Such associations are consistent with those used by Kubrick
in 2001 and A Clockwork Orange, which ask the audience to regard the stages of human
The excerpts included in Soylent Green are in general more accessible than, and
do not carry the same intellectual weight as, the pieces used in Kubrick’s films. In
addition to their programmatic connections to the story, their familiarity no doubt made
them attractive candidates for “well known pieces” included “so the audience could
classical repertory would instantly have raised the artistic level of the film, and their
These highbrow implications are limited within Soylent Green because these
classical excerpts are largely confined to the one scene of Sol’s death. The reprise of the
Beethoven exposition along with the scenes of nature during the film’s closing titles
42
Such nostalgia could be considered symptomatic of the “fetishization” criticized by Adorno in Adorno,
“On the Fetish-Character in Music,” 294.
43
Paraphrased from Gabbard and Sharma, “Stanley Kubrick and the Art Cinema,” 98.
181
warning to Thorn’s cries that “Soylent Green is people” as the closing credits begin. The
reprise of Beethoven coupled with the scenes of nature brings the sense of nostalgia for
nature directly to the audience’s attention, raising the possibility of losing nature to
Unlike the excerpts used in 2001, the classical excerpts in Soylent Green include
no examples of modernist music, nor are they rearranged using instrumentation that could
death is separate from the rest of the score not just by its context in the film, but also by
its instrumentation, styles, and the collective identities of its components. Thus,
distinguished from the rest of the score by its style, instrumentation, and collective
identity, this “older” music enhances its nostalgic function in the scene.
Lalo Schifrin’s inclusion of a quotation from Bach’s St. Matthew Passion during
the final scene of THX-1138 appears at first to be an anomaly in an eclectic score with no
other pre-existing music. Because the excerpt comes so late in the film and is performed
and produced in a manner more typical of popular music, many in the audience may not
have immediately recognized the passage as a quotation from a pre-existing piece. The
The opening chorus of the passion accompanies THX as he escapes from pursuing
police by exiting the sealed underground complex that houses the totalitarian society and
emerges into the open air, finding a placid landscape lit by a dazzling sunset rather than
182
the blasted remains of a nuclear holocaust. The ascending gesture of the vocal lines in
the opening chorus, coupled with the image of THX’s emergence, appear to have inspired
Schifrin’s inclusion of this excerpt. The composer was moved by the hope implied in this
image, and believed that Bach’s passion provided the best musical expression of that
hope: “So when I used the St. Matthew Passion, the music is growing and growing like
an energy that keeps going up and up. The idea of growing and bringing this incredible
space and freedom is totally contrary to the oppression of my clusters. It opens up.”44
Schifrin noted that he included this reference to the Bach passion on his own
impulse, largely because of the values that he associated with Bach’s music and the way
that those values intersected with the portrayal of humanity in Lucas’s film.45 His
affinity for the Bach passion may have inspired him to use “Baroque” style as one of the
six general style references throughout the score. This supposition is supported by the
similarity between the Baroque references in the title music and the music for THX’s
arrest and the entrance of the voices from the opening chorus of the passion. The
ascending vocal lines in the title music sound like a simplified imitation of these gestures
The quotation of the Bach passion in THX-1138 is unique among the classical
excerpts in the scores under study in that Lucas, who could be considered the film’s
“auteur,” did not stipulate its use. While the audience may easily recognize the piece and
notice the affinity between the gestures in the chorus and the images of THX’s
44
Lukas Kendall and Jeff Bond, notes accompanying Lalo Schifrin, THX-1138: Original Motion Picture
Soundtrack, FSM Vol 6 No. 4, Compact Disc, 14.
45
Ibid.
183
emergence, the full significance of the quotation lies not with the film’s director but with
the composer.
John Boorman’s Zardoz includes many disparate musical styles. These range
Concertgebouw Orchestra Amsterdam to the film’s original music, in both modernist and
archaic styles, composed by David Munrow, leader of the Early Music Consort of
London and an advocate for the performance of “early music.”46 Although Beethoven’s
symphony accounts for much of the “veneer of art,” stylistic similarities to early music in
the score had their own aura of sophistication. Beethoven as a figure is not as overtly
indication of the significance he placed on the work, and the archaically styled
arrangements suggest that he may have intended to include the piece from the
beginning.47 He gives no further specific reasons as to why he chose this piece, so one
can only speculate that the movement may have had some personal significance beyond
what can be inferred from its use in the film. Beethoven’s status as an artistic and
intellectual figure may have enhanced the sense of profundity much as Strauss’s prologue
to Also Sprach Zarathustra gave intellectual weight to 2001. The resolute rhythms of the
46
Howard Mayer Brown, “Instruments of the Middle Ages and Renaissance: in memorium David
Munrow,” Early Music 4 3 (July 1976), 289-293.
47
Boorman refers to the Beethoven symphony as “terribly moving” in his commentary accompanying
Zardoz (1974), produced and directed by John Boorman, Fox Home Entertainment, 2000, DVD.
184
Allegretto variations provide a striking contrast to the irregular rhythms of the original
music that characterizes the Vortex, creating an effective musical metaphor of the
“natural order” of human development that underlies the plot of the film. The use of
music by Beethoven as the basis of this metaphor gives the idea an additional authority
that stems from the humanist ideals associated with Beethoven. Indeed, writers of the
nature.48
Despite Boorman’s own claims that his film is essentially a critique of class-based
that had been eliminated and perhaps reversed in the society of the Vortex.49 Following
the destruction of the Vortex, Consuella, who had been an intellectual, a leader in the
Vortex, and Zed’s staunchest opponent, takes a subservient position as Zed’s mate during
the film’s final montage. In this case, the idealistic and humanist authority of Beethoven
might be perceived as lending its authority to one form of oppression, based on gender,
Even at the time of the film’s release, some critics found the film’s inadvertent
any connotations of femininity within the film to be positive rather than negative.
Speaking in an interview soon after the film’s release, he described the three principal
48
Scott Burnham, “The Four Ages of Beethoven,” in The Cambridge Companion to Beethoven, ed. Glenn
Stanley (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 272-287.
49
Interview with John Boorman in Philip Strick, “Zardoz and John Boorman,” Sight and Sound 43 2
(Spring 1974), 77; Boorman’s description of class conflict in the film still left genre hierarchies
unacknowledged in John Boorman, Adventures of a Suburban Boy (New York: Faber & Faber, 2003), 204.
50
Stephanie Goldberg, “Zardoz: Boorman’s Metaphysical Western,” Jump Cut 1 (1974), 8-9; Marsha
Kinder, “Zardoz (review)” Film Quarterly 4 (Summer 1974), 49
185
female characters as embodying mythic types: “Avalow is the pure mystic, the pure
virgin prophetess that you find in myths. . . . May is a kind of earth mother in the guise of
knowledge, . . . Consuella is [Zed’s] logical partner . . . because she is the one who has
opposed him, and leads the attack on him. ‘In hunting you,’ she says, ‘I’ve become
you.’”51 The negative reaction from feminist critics left him somewhat baffled: “[T]he
Women’s Lib people think it’s saying that male virility is the only answer, which is a bit
of a misreading because after all the women are the dominant people in the film. . . . In
the scene where they give him their knowledge, they are the sexual aggressors and he’s
totally passive.”52
“misreading” may seem curious at first, especially in light of the somewhat violent end to
the Vortex at the hands of the male Exterminators, one should recall that
contemporaneous films differed little in their depiction of female characters. Most of the
living space, while the vast majority of female characters in Rollerball are companions
implied message of male dominance in Zardoz is hard to ignore, especially in light of the
pronouncements that the “natural order” should be restored by bringing an end to the
Vortex, which the film visually characterizes as feminine. Indeed, one could easily
suspect (as Marsha Kinder alludes) that the voices of the Renegade scientists calling the
51
Strick, “Zardoz and John Boorman,” 77.
52
Ibid.
186
Vortex a “challenge [to] the natural order” and “an offence against Nature” might well
have been Boorman’s.53 Whether consciously or not, the director calls on the “terribly
moving symphony of Beethoven” to sanction the natural order implied by the film, and
this natural order seems to affirm traditional gender roles as equally “natural.”
The visual elements that code the Vortex as feminine include the costumes and
interrelationships between the characters. All of the inhabitants are dressed in clothes
with bare midriffs that could be construed as feminine. The de facto leaders of the
nominally egalitarian community are all women. The males are all slight and appear
effeminate, and it is revealed that their immortality has rendered them impotent since
and stronger than the males of the Vortex, he is more aggressive and more physically
active, and he is more virile. As an Exterminator, he has “taken women” in the name of
Zardoz and he has demonstrated physical arousal during one of Consuella’s experiments.
The opposed musical styles – Baroque and Classical contrasted with distinctly
modernist sounds – reinforces these opposing gender associations for Zed and the Vortex.
Zed, as the protagonist, acts to restore the natural order that has been disrupted by the
Vortex, and he is supported by references to the Beethoven symphony that give authority
to that order. The Vortex itself, which is responsible for the suspension of the natural
order, emerges as an Other to Zed and the natural order that he champions. And the
53
Kinder, “Zardoz (review),” 56.
187
music that characterizes the Vortex is an equally distinct Other to the more traditional
Many writers have commented on the heroic quality of Beethoven’s most famous
music. Scott Burnham has noted Beethoven’s particular uses of musical gestures,
subjective identification with the music.54 Moreover, the scale and immediacy of these
assertion, heroism, moral redemption, and even forces of nature beyond the music itself.55
By the bicentennial of Beethoven’s birth in the 1970s, the composer and his music
had become so intertwined with the Beethoven myth and its connotations of heroic
striving and natural forces that these could be evoked simply with brief quotations of his
music or even with his likeness.56 The paraphrases from Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony
draw on this legacy as they underscore Zed in the film, reinforcing his role as a champion
for natural human development against the artificial and static immortality of the Vortex.
Susan McClary has pointed out that the “heroic striving” and “natural forces”
perceived in Beethoven’s music are themselves the product of artifice. Such qualities
her, reflect male conceptions of desire. 57 Beethoven’s music was regarded as a standard
for presenting this perspective, and his means of articulating it, frequently using extreme
54
Scott Burnham, Beethoven Hero (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995), 24, 29-30.
55
Scott Burnam, “The Four Ages of Beethoven,” 272-287.
56
Burnham, “The Four Ages of Beethoven,” 287-289.
57
Susan McClary, “Sexual Politics in Classical Music,” Feminine Endings: Music, Gender, and Sexuality
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1991), 68, 69; see also, McClarry, “Getting Down Off the
Beanstalk: The Presence of a Woman’s Voice in Janika Vandervelde’s Genesis II,” Feminine Endings
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1991), 126-127, 130.
188
gestures (that, for McClary, can spill over into violence), have been considered “more
serious, more virile, [and] more consequential,” than those of most other composers.58
Even if the notions as heroism and virility associated with Beethoven’s music are
artificially constructed, this does not make them less perceptible to audiences familiar
with the composer and his popular image. Indeed, McClary’s contention that such
inclusion of the symphony as tacitly affirming the gender bias in the picture and its
implication of a natural order. These gender connotations in the music and in the visuals
may not seem especially significant on their own. Indeed, the gender codes in the visual
images are so clear that they hardly need reinforcement from the music. They become
more significant in the film’s conclusion, where the role of the Beethoven excerpt as a
metaphor for the natural order becomes clearer. The impression of “naturalness” is
enhanced by Beethoven’s music, which is clearly distinct from the modernist music
associated with the Vortex. “Nature” is restored by Zed and supported by the moral
authority of Beethoven.
The score for Rollerball consists almost entirely of pre-existing music. Aside
from the atonal organ music heard in Bartholomew’s office early in the film and the brief
organ cluster heard as Jonathan arrives at the archives, all of the important musical
58
McClary, “Sexual Politics in Classical Music,” 76; McClary, “Getting Down Off the Beanstalk,” 127-
129.
189
Director Norman Jewison was concerned during production that the film could
quickly become “dated” because of choices that determined the look and sound of the
film. In his commentary accompanying the DVD release, Jewison spoke of his desire for
the film to have a “timeless” quality. His decision to use classical musical excerpts in the
score reflects this desire for timelessness in the music.59 He does not indicate whether
Andre Prévin, the score’s conductor, had any part in this decision. Although Prévin
himself had been celebrated for his experience with jazz in film scores, he had developed
disdain for popular music and even some film music during his tenure as conductor of the
Jewison’s conviction that such timelessness could best be achieved with concert works.
In either case, Jewison believed that including examples of classical concert music, which
were not subject to changes in fashion like popular music or even film music, would best
The six pre-existing musical selections cover a range of familiarity, from the
easily recognizable to the comparatively obscure. The Toccata in D Minor, perhaps the
most recognizable work because of its previous use in films, effectively establishes the
organ as the instrument associated with the executives and initiates the timbral opposition
between music that evokes the executives and orchestral music, which is associated with
the protagonist, Jonathan.61 The Adagio in G Minor was arguably less familiar, although
by no means unfamiliar. This piece had an interesting history: Remo Giazotto had
59
Norman Jewison, commentary accompanying Rollerball (1975), produced and directed by Norman
Jewison, MGM Home Entertainment, 1998, DVD.
60
André Previn, No Minor Chords: My Days in Hollywood (New York: Doubleday, 1991), ix, x, 143-145.
61
Among the films featuring the Toccata in D Minor are Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1931?), The Black Cate,
(1935), and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954).
190
attributed the Adagio to Albinoni, and the Adagio had been used in earlier films such as
Orson Welles’s adaptation of Franz Kafka’s The Trial.62 The waltz from Tchaikovsky’s
Sleeping Beauty was no doubt vaguely familiar to audience members, who may have
known it from either the ballet or the concert hall. One might argue that its identity was
not critical because of its role in the film’s score; Jewison described it as “Muzak,” a
characterization that recalls critics’ branding of the Blue Danube waltz in 2001.
The excerpts by Dmitri Shostakovich, although taken from two of his more
popular works in the West, were most likely the least familiar of the score’s selections for
a mainstream film audience. Although their position in the classical repertory affords
these works as much claim to timelessness as the other selections, their authorship by a
single composer, their more recent styles and dates of composition, and their relative
obscurity in comparison with the other selections sets them apart within the score. Their
separateness prompts the question of why they were included and how their inclusion
underscore: for Jonathan’s initial questions about the origins of the Corporations and
Rollerball, the gleeful vandalism of the junior executives that he witnesses as he awaits a
meeting with Bartholomew at his estate, and his arrival at the Archives in Geneva to get
at restricted sources that will reveal the history of the Corporations and of Rollerball.
These particular scenes depict revealing moments in the antagonism between Jonathan
and the executives, which grows as the film progresses. This antagonism is not unlike
62
Jewison describes the Adagio as composed by the Italian composer Albinoni in his commentary to
Rollerball, DVD.
191
the relationship between Soviet authorities and Shostakovich. Such a similarity is
admittedly a coincidence but may well have occurred to conductor Andre Prévin, whose
affinity for the music of Shostakovich may have prompted him to use that coincidence.
himself maintained a deep admiration for the Soviet composer, working under what he
personal image of the composer as a heroic figure who worked under oppressive
executives who exercise increasing control over his participation in their game, which he
has mastered.
Whether on his own or in consultation with Jewison, Previn may have chosen
excerpts from the Shostakovich’s Fifth and Eighth symphonies because of their own
places in Shostakovich’s troubled relationship with the Soviet authorities who frequently
persecuted him because of his music. The Fifth Symphony was, of course, born out of
such condemnation and bore the public epigraph of a “response to just criticism,” a
63
Martin Bookspan and Gordon Yockey, André Previn: A Biography, (Garden City, NY: Doubleday,
1981), 331; Richard Morrison, Orchestra: The LSO – A Century of Triumph and Turbulence (London:
Faber and Faber, 2004), 190.
64
When the alleged memoirs of Shostakovich, Testimony, appeared in 1979, Previn produced a public
endorsement of their authenticity based on “his own research and from that of his musical friends inside the
U.S.S.R.”; he described the book itself as “filled with quiet heroism. The fact that this man turned out
some of the twentieth century’s greatest symphonies and quartets under those circumstances is beyond
belief.” See Bookspan and Yockey, André Previn, 332.
65
192
response that may or may not have wholeheartedly supported the ideology of the
its public program of personal struggle and triumph and the speculation surrounding its
confront Bartholomew at the party and witnesses the vandalism of the junior executives
is well summed-up by both the sounds and the program of tragic loss of the Fifth
Symphony’s third movement, which briefly accompanies this scene. Similarly, the
personal triumph implied in the symphony’s finale supports Jonathan’s apparent triumph
as he arrives in Geneva to have his questions answered. Unlike the symphony and its
program, there is no ambiguity regarding Jonathan’s quest; the jarring organ cluster
substituted within the finale clearly indicates that his quest has been thwarted. Similarly,
the pessimism implied by the first movement of the Eighth Symphony, a controversial
The likelihood that mainstream film audiences might recognize these references
was quite remote. Despite the growing presence of these pieces in the concert repertory,
they did not have the same level of “timelessness” in popular culture as had been
achieved by the Toccata in D Minor largely through its appearance in films since the
1930s. Still, such references might explain why these particular pieces by Shostakovich
66
Richard Taruskin discusses many perspectives on the reception of this symphony based on reviews and
other sources dating from its premiere in Richard Taruskin, “Public Lies and Unspeakable Truth:
Interpreting Shostakovich’s Fifth Symphony,” in Shostakovich Studies, ed. David Fanning (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1995), 28-36.
193
were used alongside the other, more historically remote excerpts. Furthermore, these
types of associations had a precedent in 2001, a film that did not shy away from obscure
authority.
Conclusions
The classical excerpts often participate in a broader opposition between high and
low culture. Although such an opposition is admittedly obvious, its significance stems
from its use in the genre of science fiction, which was considered a marginal genre up to
the release of 2001. The culture of the New Hollywood, which celebrated the
to explore and deconstruct genres and their conventions as part of a greater recognition of
cinema as an art form.67 The socially critical dystopian scenarios in the New Hollywood
science fiction films already represented one way in which science fiction films were
The classical music in the score to 2001 recalls the similar use of art music by
European directors such as Fellini and Bergman, two individuals whom Kubrick
particularly admired.68 The artistic status afforded to 2001 by the inclusion of art music
may have stemmed as much from its similarity to European art cinema as from the
67
Cook, Lost Illusions, 71, 159.
68
Russell Lack, Twenty Four Frames Under, 296-301; Gerald Fried remarked on Kubrick’s special affinity
for Fellini and Bergman in Vincent LoBrutto, Stanley Kubrick: A Biography (New York: Penguin, 1997),
150.
194
classical music itself. Such experimentation was typical of the directors active during the
early years of the New Hollywood.69 Viewed in this way, 2001 becomes a hybrid of
“high” art cinema and the “low” genre of science fiction. The classical music in the
score can be considered to reflect its art house pedigree in addition to providing
Subsequent science fiction films followed suit with oppositions that similarly
featured classical music as an element of “high culture,” but that centered on different
points specific to each film. Kubrick’s follow-up to 2001, A Clockwork Orange, used its
art music to confront the value of art itself. The juxtaposition of gang violence and art
music in A Clockwork Orange becomes a critique of the art’s ability to instill virtue.
Music is more central to high culture vs. low culture oppositions in Soylent Green
and Rollerball, each of which includes both classical excerpts and pop-styled source
music. The juxtaposition in Soylent Green of the lost natural world with the musical
relics of high culture gives additional emphasis to the value of what was lost, particularly
in light of the defamiliarizing popular music that characterizes much of the rest of the
film’s world. The rock-based source music that accompanies the executive party in
Rollerball clashes with the classical music making up the rest of the score. It suggests
the executives’ desires for immediate satisfaction through power or sex and their inability
to appreciate more elevated notions implied by the timeless classical music. The opposed
Baroque, Classical, and modernist styles in Zardoz seem to evoke a conflict or opposition
in high culture itself, perhaps alluding to that between the radical tendencies of
69
Cook, Lost Illusions, 161.
195
modernism in any artistic medium and the traditions that it seeks to disrupt. These
oppositions make effective metaphors for the intellectual Eternals and their resistance to
Such oppositions involving classical music and questions of high and low culture
were possible because of the consciousness of the New Hollywood, whose audience was
younger, better educated, and much more informed about films and film literature than
repertory due to the availability of LP recordings made it possible for them to recognize
the musical elements in those oppositions. The New Hollywood’s flexible approach
toward genre allowed filmmakers to consider science fiction a possible medium for such
oppositions.
conventionalized genre films by the mid 1970s. These films featured few if any of the
idiosyncratic features of auteur exercises in film genres and instead followed genre
prescriptions closely in the hopes of maximizing audiences. Most critics consider this
trend to have begun with Steven Spielberg’s Jaws in 1975, also the year of release of
Rollerball, the latest of the dystopian films under study that featured classical music.
Logan’s Run, which appeared the following year, had a high-quality original score that
Classical Hollywood practice. After its initially positive critical response, later writers
70
Cook, Lost Illustions, 71.
196
commented on the film’s reliance on clichés and its unlikely happy ending.71 The film’s
more conventional if excellent music, coupled with the emphasis on visual effects,
strongly suggest that Logan’s Run was affected by this trend toward more orthodox genre
films that left it little room for the potentially multivalent musical treatment found in
71
Cook, Lost Illusions, 244-245; Leonard Heldreth, “Clockwork Reels: Mechanized Environments in
Science Fiction Films,” in Clockwork Worlds: Mechanized Environments in SF, ed. Richard D. Erlich and
Thomas P. Dunn (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1983), 221; M. Keith Booker, Dystopian Literature: A
Theory and Research Guide (Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 1994), 346-347.
197
CHAPTER 6
During the course of this study, I have described ways that dystopian science
fiction films produced between 1966 and 1976 used modernist music to characterize their
dystopian futures. Not only do the films discussed have a common theme in their
depiction of the future as somehow “deficient,” but also their specific use of modernist
musical sounds to characterize their respective futures connects them. The general mood
of cultural anxiety expressed in these films was also reflected in the dystopian scenarios
that characterized science fiction literature of the period as well as in the more
consciously critical films in other genres from the early years of the New Hollywood.
During the 1970s, changes in response to a recession in the film industry between
1969 and 1971 redefined the types of films being made. Statistics had shown that studios
could realize bigger profits by investing more money into fewer films, with the
expectation that one of the films would be a “hit” with returns that could finance the
remaining films.1 At the same time, studios raised the costs of distribution to maintain
their income from exhibition of films despite the lower number of films being
distributed.2 Finally, the studios began devoting production to genre pictures such as
gangster films, horror films, and science fiction films, each of which could guarantee an
1
David Cook, Lost Illusions: American Cinema in the Shadow of Watergate and Vietnam, 1970-1979, vol.
9 of History of the American Cinema, ed. Charles Harpole. (New York: Scribner’s, 2000), 25-27.
2
Ibid., 17.
199
audience. Studios also increased marketing tie-ins and merchandising of films to further
boost profits.3
counterculture had left many audiences with a desire for films reflecting traditional
values and conservative themes. After some extreme early examples in 1971 (Straw
Dogs, The French Connection, Dirty Harry), this shift took place gradually over the
course of the decade.4 At the same time, many of the auteurist directors of the New
Hollywood had achieved a level of success that made it difficult for them to maintain
their independence from the system that had fostered their success in the first place.5
Most critics agree that Star Wars, appearing in 1977, significantly affected
expectations for science fiction films specifically and for films generally.6 Star Wars
represented a new kind of science fiction film, one that strove to entertain with escapist
fantasy rather than provide an undertone of escapist fantasy.7 The film’s special effects
were groundbreaking, setting a new standard for the look of science fiction films that
eclipsed the example of 2001 from the previous decade.8 Star Wars not only confirmed
the viability of science fiction films but also brought them to the forefront as one of the
3
Ibid., 29.
4
Michael Ryan and Douglas Kellner, Camera Politica: The Politics and Ideology of Contemporary
Hollywood (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988), 37-39.
5
Cook, Lost Illusions, 156-157.
6
Cook, Lost Illusions, 139-141, 245-247; Ryan and Kellner, Camera Politica, 228-229
7
Lucas stated: “[I]nstead of making ‘isn’t-it-terrible-what’s-happening-to-mankind’ movies, which is how
I began, I decided that I’d try to fill that gap. I’d make a film so rooted in imagination that the grimness of
everyday life would not follow the audience into the theater.” Quoted in notes accompanying Star Wars
(Original Soundtrack Recording) (20th Century Records, 2T541 0898, 1977, LP).
8
Cook, Lost Illusions, 246-247; See also Peter Biskind, Easy Riders, Raging Bulls: How the Sex-Drugs-
and Rock’n’Roll Generation Saved Hollywood (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998), 342, 344.
200
more popular genres.9 Star Wars, moreover, expanded the trend in Hollywood toward
the goal of “blockbuster” films already set in motion by Jaws in 1974, encouraging
studios to concentrate more resources on a select few films that were expected to generate
Fredric Jameson described Star Wars as a “nostalgia film” that exemplifies the
pastiche aesthetic of postmodernism. Star Wars incorporates and evokes subtle motifs
from a variety of earlier film styles and types, notably the western and the serialized
adventures of Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers from the 1930s.11 The music of Star Wars
also reflects this notion of nostalgia and pastiche, employing traditional nineteenth-
Hollywood practice.12
the score, and the few examples that do exist underscore marginal alien threats operating
outside the film’s central struggle between the protagonists on the side of the Rebel
Alliance and the forces of the evil Galactic Empire.13 There is no critical message behind
this music, nor is there any sort of dystopian reference to anything outside the film. This
lack of a critical stance has attracted the disparagement of some writers who see the
9
Cook, Lost Illusions, 248.
10
Cook, Lost Illusions, 47-51, 245-248.
11
Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” in The Anti-Aesthetic: Essays on
Postmodern Culture, ed. Hal Forster (Port Townsend, WA: Bay Press, 1983), 116-117.
12
Kathryn Kalinak, Settling the Score: Music and the Classical Hollywood Film (Madison: University of
Wisconsin Press, 1992), 190-191; James Buhler, “Star Wars, Music, and Myth,” in Music and Cinema, ed.
James Buhler, Caryl Flinn, and David Neumeyer, (Hanover, NH: Wesleyan University Press, 2000), 33-57.
13
Buhler, “Star Wars, Music, and Myth, ” 47-48. Buhler notes in particular that the score does not use
atonal or non-tonal music to characterize the Empire despite its use of technology to assert its authority.
Such a tendency might have been expected in the dystopian films under study, but would perhaps not be
consistent with the nostalgic musical idiom that is the basis of the score for Star Wars. Furthermore, the
lack of any atonal or modernist sounds to characterize images of technology in Star Wars may suggest that
the associations between these sounds and images of technology or dystopia were no longer effective.
201
film’s simple yet almost mythic story and unabashed appeal to emotions as playing to
Star Wars was soon followed by Close Encounters of the Third Kind, Steven
Spielberg’s film about alien visitors that stemmed from public fascination with UFOs.
This offered a distinctly uplifting and simple plot similar to that of Star Wars, which
audiences regarded as a fresh and appealing approach to science fiction films. The aliens
in Close Encounters possessed dazzling technology and, once they revealed themselves,
stood in marked contrast to the dour and cynical images of the future and of technology
that had characterized science fiction during the previous decade. Furthermore, the
extraterrestrials themselves were a far cry from the unseen and awe-inspiring aliens at
In many ways, the music of Close Encounters of the Third Kind is much like that
of Star Wars, in that it primarily employs the sounds and practices of classical
Hollywood. The score for Close Encounters, however, includes several passages that are
overtly atonal and modernist; many of these seem closely modeled on sound mass
compositions similar to those by Ligeti used in 2001. By the end of the film, the few
instances of such music give way to richly orchestrated tonal music that centers largely
around a highly sentimental quotation of the Disney tune, “When You Wish Upon a
Star.”15 As in Star Wars, the familiar tonal music at the end of the film not only
14
Ryan and Kellner, Camera Politica, 228-236.
15
Neal Lerner considers the absorption of the modernist music by the tonal music in the score and the
highly sentimental quotation of the Disney tune as having regressive and even fascist undertones. Neal
Lerner, “Nostalgia, Masculinist Discourse, and Authoritarianism in John Williams’ Scores for Star Wars
202
encourages identification with the film’s protagonist, Roy Neary, but also characterizes
the aliens as clearly benevolent despite their awe-inspiring technology. Seen in this light,
the earlier atonal passages might be said to convey the strangeness and mysteriousness of
the extraterrestrials, the terror of the characters when they first make contact with them,
or even the spectacle of their encounters with Neary. The film’s sentimental ending
denies any possibility of the extraterrestrials having malicious motives, nor does it signal
any sort of dystopian ending for human civilization or the human species.
Star Wars and, to a lesser extent, Close Encounters represent a stage in a series of
approaches to film genre that had taken place over the 1970s. At the beginning of the
decade, auteurist directors had deconstructed genres within their highly individualistic
films. By the middle 1970s, the larger “event” films stayed true to their genre
conventions to preserve their audience. By the end of the 1970s and into the 1980s, the
type of genre pastiche seen in Star Wars was evident in other films that self-consciously
various elements and references that make up the film have been taken from other
sources and combined to produce something new that evokes the sense of something old.
and Close Encounters of the Third Kind,” in Off the Planet: Music, Sound, and Science Fiction Cinema,
ed. Philip Hayward (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004), 104-106.
16
Cook, Lost Illusions, 159-161
17
Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” 113-117; Fredric Jameson, “Postmodernism, or the
Industrial Logic of Late Capitalism,” New Left Review, 146 (July-August 1984), 65; Fredrick Jameson,
Postmodernism, or the Industrial Logic of Late Capitalism (Durham: Duke University Press, 1991), 286.
203
Such pastiche is possible because these elements exist as cultural commodities that in
many cases have lost most if not all of their original meanings, allowing them to be “re-
animated” into new cultural constructs such as the genre pastiche film.
canonization by the academy and consequent “cooption” by industrial capital as the High
Art of the West during the 1950s and 1960s. 18 But, as mentioned above, modernism’s
critical power had stemmed largely from its ability to stand outside of commodified
cultural “meanings,” calling into question those meanings and any formal norms that
implicitly supported them.19 The commodification of modernism tied its forms to the
institutions that supported them, equating it with the forces of industrial capital that
modernism and the industrial capital supporting it that when they used modernist musical
styles in their dystopian films to depict possible results of the progress that industrial
capital advocated.
By the time of the shift in values during the middle 1970s that brought the earlier
critical and experimental phase of the New Hollywood to a close, these associations had
begun to lose their specificity as these visions of the future became less compelling. That
they had become something of a prescription is apparent in the latest of the films under
study, Logan’s Run. Although its distinct musical styles are unambiguously associated
18
M. Keith Booker makes this point after Jameson in M. Keith Booker, Monsters, Mushroom Clouds, and
the Cold War: American Science Fiction and the Roots of Postmodernism, 1946-1964 (Westport, CT:
Greenwood Press, 2001), 22.
19
Martin Scherziger discusses this with respect to Schoenberg and Adorno in Scherziger, “In Memory of a
Receding Dialectic: The Political Relevance of Autonomy and Formalism in Modernist Musical
Aesthetics,” in The Pleasure of Modernist Music, ed. Arved Ashby (Rochester, NY: University of
Rochester Press, 2004), 81-83.
204
with dystopian elements in a manner consistent with that of earlier films, other aspects of
the film’s setting and plot seem almost to evoke a formulaic “dystopian community” as
much as they derive from the novel on which the film is based.20 Indeed, much of the
“critique” in the film appears to be directed toward those aspects of life in the domed
community that went against more conservative and traditional family values, which
The modernist music follows the formula set by the preceding films, using non-
tonal features to characterize the oppressiveness of the society and electronic sounds to
convey the mechanical artifice of the central computer responsible for the unnatural
social order within the domed city. The modernist music for Close Encounters, which
appeared the year after Logan’s Run, was, however, already being used in different
contexts to different ends. The meaning of modernist sounds in science fiction films was
Significantly, the interval before and after the appearance of Star Wars also saw a
change in the way that films treated technology and notions of a dystopian future.
Whereas visions of a technological future had largely been pessimistic and bleak in the
films under study, Star Wars and the films that followed it showed a new acceptance,
coexistence, and even comfort with technology that contrasted with films up through
Logan’s Run.22 At the same time, contemporaneous science fiction literature and its
20
See Leonard Heldreth, “Clockwork Reels: Mechanized Environments in Science Fiction Films,” in
Clockwork Worlds: Mechanized Environments in SF, ed. Richard D. Erlich and Thomas P. Dunn
(Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1983), 220-224; for comparison, see also William F. Nolan and George
Clayton Johnson, Logan’s Run, (New York: Dial Press, 1967).
21
Ryan and Kellner, Camera Politica, 247-249.
22
Vivian Sobchack, Screening Space: The American Science Fiction Film (New Brunswick: Rutgers
Univeristy Press, 1987), 223-230.
205
emerging “cyberpunk” aesthetic envisioned highly technological futures that bore
resemblance to the dystopian communities portrayed in the literature and films of the
previous decade. These stories tended to celebrate their extensive technology and its
incursion into society rather than to regard it as contributing to the degradation of society.
technology as “a figure for a whole new economic world system.”23 He considers the
capitalist consumer society that postmodern culture finds it difficult to envision a future
that is significantly different from the present.24 Two celebrated films that share the
aesthetics of cyberpunk, Blade Runner (1982) and The Terminator (1984) illustrate both
this more problematic approach to representing the future and the prevalence of
technology in that future. Blade Runner, set in a highly detailed, decaying Los Angeles
of 2019, is modeled on a detective story and borrows many visual motifs from 1940s
films noirs. The Terminator, although centered around a near-future conflict between
humans and cyborgs, is actually set in the present; the story follows a young woman
pursued by a cyborg assassin from the future because her as yet unborn son will become
technology, both films use their settings as opportunities for visual splendor, delighting in
the images of technology for their own sake as much or more than in their contributions
23
Jameson, “Postmodernism, or the Cultural Logic of Late Capitalism” 58; Jameson, Postmodernism, 286.
24
Jameson, Postmodernism, 285-286.
206
to the story. The music for each film also celebrates the plethora of technological
imagery with electronic instrumentation, but with accessible styles that allow ready
includes subtle hints of jazz harmonies and voicings that resonate with that film’s noir
pop-electronic music by such artists as Tangerine Dream and enhances the mechanical
quality of the film’s cyborg villain through the use of repetitive motifs. Modernist
musical styles do not appear in either of these films. Instead, the music includes more
Even if these films had used modernist styles or sounds, it is not clear that such
sounds would still have carried the meanings that they had conveyed in the dystopian
films produced before the middle 1970s. Mention has already been made of the
modernist passages in Close Encounters of the Third Kind and of their disconnection to
dystopian themes or imagery in the films under study. John Corigliano’s music for Ken
Russell’s Altered States (1980) uses modernist sounds throughout, although as in Close
fiction films of the Hollywood Renaissance. Arved Ashby describes the music for
unusual and strident sounds and gestures for their ability to evoke suspense or horror
207
similar to the effects of Penderecki’s Threnody for the Victims of Hiroshima, Stravinsky’s
Rite of Spring, or even Bernard Herrmann’s music for the shower scene in Psycho.25
By the early 1980s, modernist musical styles had lost their specific connection to
visions of dystopia. These sounds were being included in different filmic contexts, often
carrying connotations of tension that were little more specific than those associated with
the Expressionism of the past. Films with visions of highly technological futures
resembling the dystopias of the New Hollywood used distinctly different styles of music
that were more accessible and that reflected the changes in perception toward these
images previously termed “dystopian.” In film, modernist styles had become dead styles,
equivalent to the “masks” and “the voices and the styles in the imaginary museum.”26
They no longer alluded to a dystopian future but had instead become relics of both a
dystopian conditions in these ten films is significant because it demonstrates how these
musical sounds took on new meanings. The passage of time from the high modernism of
the 1950s and the inclusion of modernist sounds in motion picture scores allowed
modernist music to acquire new associations, particularly for mainstream audiences that
had little exposure to such music in the concert hall. At its height, modernism had been
largely formalist and abstract, focusing more on exploring the extreme possibilities of a
given medium. In music, the serial works produced by composers of the Darmstadt
School, the sound-mass compositions of composers such as Ligeti and Penderecki, and
25
Arved Ashby, “Modernism Goes to the Movies,” in The Pleasure of Modernist Music, ed. Arved Ashby
(Rochester, NY: University of Rochester Press, 2004), 377.
26
Jameson, “Postmodernism and Consumer Society,” 115.
208
the electronic works issuing from the studios at Cologne, Paris, and the Columbia-
Princeton Center all resulted from modernist exploration of different musical parameters.
Adorno, continued to recognize a critical role for modernist practices and techniques.
During the Cold War, this critical role took on ideological dimensions, with the West
championing modernism as exemplifying the free expression that was not possible in the
By the time that modernist musical sounds had made their way into the dystopian
science fiction films of the New Hollywood, they had taken on more specific meanings of
their own. These alienating sounds stood for a bleak future. They stood for the
authoritarian societies of the future. They stood for invasive and oppressive technology.
They stood for the decline of the natural world as a result of industrial expansion,
catastrophic war, or other equally damaging human activities. For a period of about ten
years, filmmakers imparted these sounds and styles with new meanings that diverged
from the notions of modernism as experienced in the concert hall. Whether those
filmmakers drew on the generally perceived difficulty of these sounds or their privileged
status in circles of high culture sponsored by government and industry, the sounds of
modernist music became something of a fixture in the soundtracks for dystopian futures.
209
Because these dystopian science fiction films were themselves a form of social
criticism, the modernist music within their scores could still be thought of as having a
critical function. Rather than serving as a vehicle for deconstruction, the music drew on
a priori conceptions of its difficulty and alienation and applied those qualities to scenes
and conditions of dystopia with which it was juxtaposed. The film’s power of social
critique and deconstruction typically resided in its scenario. The role of the modernist
music was to modify images of the dystopian conditions, reinforcing any dire qualities
unpleasantness that might already be attributed to the music. The music served as an
That filmmakers continued to use these musical styles in these contexts indicates
their belief that the music successfully performed this function. Still, it can be difficult to
realize fully the nature and extent of popular responses to what had been a specialized
musical medium by mainstream audiences. To what extent did modernist music convey
dystopia to them? How long did this music continue to have this association even after
its use in those contexts declined? How might that association have influenced the
reception of such music in different filmic contexts, such as that of Close Encounters or
Altered States? Arved Ashby correctly implies that the context of an individual film will
perhaps have the greatest effect on the reception of any modernist music it contains.27 At
the same time, the persistent association in film between modernist music and dystopia
over the course of a decade would seem to suggest a more stable meaning, although that
210
Statements by figures such as Aaron Copland or Henry Pleasants on the reception
Moreover, their observations were made some fifteen to twenty years before the
dystopian science fiction films under study appeared. Current essays on the reception of
modernist music, such as those included in The Pleasure of Modernist Music edited by
Arved Ashby, are intended for specialists and do not address the reception of such music
by a mass audience. Research into the reception of modernist music by this audience, in
both concert settings and film music after the 1970s, might answer a number of questions.
In the end, the modernist music accompanying these dystopian films connoted
progress, but not the same notion of progress that informed similar music composed for
the concert hall. The modernist music emphasized filmic depictions of extrapolated
consequences of social and technological developments occurring during the 1950s and
1960s, which industrial capital promoted as progress but whichsocial activists, science
fiction writers, and even filmmakers regarded as worrisome trends. Filmmakers drew on
the popular perceptions and cultural status of these musical sounds to reinforce their
pessimistic visions of the future, thereby imbuing these sounds with new meanings for
28
Aaron Copland, What to Listen For in Music (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1957), 242-251; Henry
Pleasants, The Agony of M odern Music (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1955), 85-87, 149, 166.
211
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Greg Armbruster. New York: Quill, 1984: 69-73.
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van den Toorn, Pieter. The Music of Igor Stravinsky. New Haven: Yale University
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____________. “Getting Down Off the Beanstalk: The Presence of a Woman’s Voice in
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Weist, Jerry. Ray Bradbury: An Illustrated Life. New York: HarperCollins, 2002.
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1963. Translated by Stephan de Vos. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1978.
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University of Chicago Press, 1983.
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Science Fiction Films – Literary Sources
Boorman, John. Zardoz. New York: New American Library, 1974.
Boulle, Pierre. Planet of the Apes, trans. Xan Fielding. New York:
Gramercy Books, 1963.
Clarke, Arthur C. 2001: A Space Odyssey. New York: New American Library, 1968.
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Nolan, William F. and George Clayton Johnson. Logan’s Run. New York:
Dial Press, 1967.
Filmography
Fahrenheit 451 (1966), directed by Francois Truffaut, music by Bernard Herrmann.
Universal Home Video, 2003. DVD
Planet of the Apes (1968), directed by Franklin J. Schaeffner, music by Jerry Goldsmith.
Fox Home Video, 2000. DVD
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick. Warner
Home Video, 2001. DVD
THX-1138 (Director’s Cut) (1970), directed by George Lucas, music by Lalo Schifrin.
Warner Home Video, 2004. DVD
A Clockwork Orange (1971), produced and directed by Stanley Kubrick. Warner Home
Video, 2001. DVD.
Soylent Green (1973), directed by Richard Fleischer, music by Fred Myrow. Warner
Bros. Entertainment, 2003. DVD.
Zardoz (1974), produced and directed by John Boorman, music by David Munrow. Fox
Home Entertainment, 2000. DVD.
220
Rollerball (1975), produced and directed by Norman Jewison, music by André Previn.
MGM Home Entertainment, 1998. DVD.
Logan’s Run (1976), directed by Michael Anderson, music by Jerry Goldsmith. Warner
Home Video, 2000. DVD.
Discography
Herrmann, Bernard. Fahrenheit 451: The Complete Bernard Herrmann Motion Picture
Score. Moscow Symphony Orchestra, cond. William Stromberg. Tribute Film
Classics TFC – 1002, 2007. Compact Disc.
Schickele, Peter. Silent Running: The Original Soundtrack Album. Varese Sarabande
STV 81072, 1978. LP.
A Clockwork Orange: Music from the Soundtrack. Warner Bros. 2573-2, 1972.
Compact Disc.
Goldsmith, Jerry. Logan’s Run: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. FSM Vol 5 No. 2,
2002. Compact Disc.
Goldsmith, Jerry. Planet of the Apes: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. Varese
Sarabande VSD 5848, 1997. Compact Disc.
North, Alex. Alex North’s 2001. National Philharmonic Orchestra, cond. Jerry
Goldsmith. Varese Sarabande VSD-5400, 1993. Compact Disc.
Carlos, Wendy. Clockwork Orange: Complete Original Score. East Side Digital
ESD 81362, 1998. Compact Disc.
Schifrin, Lalo. THX-1138: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. FSM Vol 6 No. 4,
1970. Compact Disc.
Myrow, Fred. Soylent Green: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. FSM Vol 6 No. 8,
1973. Compact Disc.
2001: A Space Odyssey – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. Rhino Movie Music
R2 72562, 1996. Compact Disc.
Williams, John. Star Wars: A New Hope – Original Motion Picture Soundtrack. RCA
Victor, 09026-68772-2. Compact Disc
Williams, John. Star Wars. 20th Century Records, 2T541 0898, 1977. LP.
221