The Music of Wes Anderson Films: Rushmore
Continuing the series, Anderson's second film couples the story of a misfit teen with music of the British Invasion.
Touchstone Pictures' "Rushmore" -
Touchstone Pictures
One of the big misconceptions in the use of soundtracks is that the music should be a cue as to the time period in which the film takes place. If anything, Wes Anderson (like Scorsese, Tarantino, etc.) uses music from a certain era to instead transcend time, or bridge today with what reminds of a more innocent time. Anderson's first film, Bottle Rocket, did this to some extent, but it was his second film Rushmore, where he found the perfect context in which to break down time and space. While writing the screenplay, Anderson was researching and listening to British Invasion music, and even briefly toyed with the idea of an all Kinks soundtrack. Max Fischer (Jason Schwartzman) is like a misfit schoolboy character from a Ray Davies or Pete Townsend song, transported across the Atlantic and three decades of time, and in Anderson's hands: it's nearly impossible to separate the music from the character. In many cases, he had a song in mind for a scene before he even fully conceived it*. So Anderson had British Invasion songs in mind from The Kinks and The Who, along with the more obscure The Creation. Their song "Making Time" backs one of the greatest opening montages of a movie showing Max's extracurricular activities at Rushmore. It nearly works by itself as a music video (and contains a reference to photographer Jacques Henri Lartigue's famous photo of Zissou's bobsled, with the still of Max in a go-cart for the Yankee Racers club.) The next praiseworthy music scene comes to the backing of "Nothing In This World Can Stop Me From Worryin' Bout That Girl" from the Kinks, when we're introduced to the anguish of Herman (Bill Murray) and he cannonballs into the pool. The ending shot of him underwater is a reference to The Graduate, and underscoring that is the remarkable similarity between The Kinks' song and the opening lick to Simon & Garfunkel's "Mrs. Robinson" (they share the same rhythmic first five notes on an acoustic guitar). The musical highlight, though, might just have to be the revenge sequence, utilizing the final section "You Are Forgiven" from The Who's 9-minute mini-opera "A Quick One While He's Away" (see video). Interestingly enough Anderson/Post actually use a live version of the song in the film, from the live album Rolling Stones Rock And Roll Circus, but since that's on the Rolling Stones' stingy ABKO label, they instead use a version from Live at Leeds on the released soundtrack. Speaking of the Stones, there's always a song from them, and for Rushmore it's "I Am Waiting," another song that Anderson had picked before even coming up with the scene. It's a beautiful scene where Herman and Max call a truce, and in the end, all are left feeling miserable. The music of Rushmore follows it through the seasons, starting with the fall and slipping into a winter of discontent, marked by these last few songs. The next scene with song in the film uses Cat Stevens' "The Wind" while Max flies a kite (video). It starts chilly, but ends with some with some warmth as Max decides to put on a play, and now we're slipping into spring. Cue John Lennon's bouncy "Oh Yoko!" as Max and Herman devise a plan to build the aquarium for Miss Cross. Like the season, it's the start of something new. The film ends with Max's new play ("best play ever,") and the wrap party features "Ooh La La" from the Faces, a song providing a nostalgic look back with the line "I wish I knew then what I know now, when I was younger." And with Anderson's bending of time, you sort of can. Playlist: Rssmbld Sndtrck - Rushmore *For this film, and all that followed, Anderson and music supervisor Randall Poster began trying to secure the rights to the music before shooting, so the actors had a better feel for how the scene a going to be played. Previously: The Music of Bottle Rocket drake lelane Most Popular Stories
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