2/1/2007 10:52 AM
posted awhile ago
Re: Most Memorable Uses of Pop Music
Hard to pick out a single song, so I had to go with movies that make memorable use of pop songs - because some movies have two or three memorable sequences involving songs 5. 'Apocalypse Now' - "The End" of course, both used memorably at the beginning and the end, I can't hear that song now without seeing slow-mo helicoptors or blossoming fireballs or water buffalo being slaughtered . . . but also in the same movie, "I Can't Get No Satisfaction" always puts that picture of Lawrence Fishburne dancing on the back of the boat and the water skier in my mind -- and "Suzie Q" with the dancing playboy bunnies and the ensuing riot. 4. 'Harold and Maude' - All Cat Stevens, and each one connected to a scene in the movie in my mind. "Don't Be Shy" (the opening 'hanging' sequence), "Trouble" (the ending suicide/hospital/crashing the car over the cliff sequence), and small bits of "On the Road to Find Out", "Miles From Nowhere", "Tea for the Tillerman", "If You Want to Sing Out Sing Out", "Where Do the Children Play" each instantly transport me back to the film. 3. 'Blue Velvet' - that incredibly spooky scene where Dean Stockwell lip-synchs to Roy Orbison's 'In Dreams' 2. 'Goodfellas' - Scorsese probably uses pop music more effectively than any other current director, and, while much has been made of his overuse of 'Gimme Shelter' by the Stones, there are numerous sequences in this movie which have been hard-wired to songs in my mind: the coda to 'Layla' I now cannot hear without seeing bodies tumbling out of a garbage truck, or that wonderful panicky jump cut paranoia scene near the end where Ray Liotta is sure he is being followed by helicoptors all day while he goes about his business where he mixes three or four songs together (Gimme Shelter among them - 'Mannish Boy' by Muddy Waters - others) - or 'Sunshine of Your Love' by Cream as the airport robbery begins to unravel -- 1. 'The Graduate' - who can hear "Mrs. Robinson" without seeing Dustin Hoffman in his Alpha Romeo driving those San Franscisco Highways, or hear "Sound of Silence", "April Come She Will" or "Scarborough Fair" and not picture the swimming pool/motel room sequence. Hard to pick just 5 - runners up: 'Born to be Wild' from 'Easy Rider' -- and while technically not 'pop songs' - 'Rhapsody in Blue' will always mean the opening to Woody Allen's 'Manhattan' -- or how about 'Ride of the Valkyries'? How many people picture the helicoptors in 'Apocalypse Now' and how many picture the spa sequence from Fellini's '8&1/2'? Someone else mentioned 'California Dreaming' from 'Chungking Express' as being 'overused'. Oddly enough, I didn't like the song much, UNTIL it was drummed into my head by that movie, and now I can't hear it without seeing Faye Wong dancing to it. And I never used to like ABBA until I saw 'Muriel's Wedding'...
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