ABSTRACT

Music is central to any film, creating a tone for the movie that is just as vital as the visual and narrative components. In recent years, racial and gender diversity in film has exploded, and the making of musical scores has changed drastically.

Hearing Film offers the first critical examination of music in the films of the 1980s and 1990s and looks at the burgeoning role of compiled scores in the shaping of a film . In the first section, "A Woman Scored," Kassabian analyzes desire and agency in the music of such films as Dangerous Liaisons, Desert Hearts, Bagdad Café, Dirty Dancing and Thelma and Louise. In "At the Twilight's Last Scoring," she looks at gender, race, sexuality and assimilation in the music of The Hunt for Red October, Lethal Weapon 2 and Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom. And finally, in "Opening Scores," she considers how films such as Dangerous Minds, The Substitute, Mississippi Masala and Corrina, Corrina bring together several different entry points of identification through their scores.

Kassabian ensures that modern film criticism has a new chapter written through this book. Her important and long-overdue analysis is not to be ignored. Also includes eleven musical examples.

chapter |14 pages

Listening for Identifications A Prologue

chapter 1|22 pages

How Film Music Works

chapter 2|11 pages

How Music Works in Film

chapter 3|1 pages

A Woman Scored

chapter |10 pages

Example 2 Bagdad Cafe: Rag

chapter |6 pages

Reconciling (?) Desire and Agency

chapter 4|4 pages

At the Twilight’s Last Scoring

chapter 5|3 pages

Opening Scores

chapter |6 pages

Opposites Rap

chapter |8 pages

Tracking Identifications An Epilogue

chapter |4 pages

Appendices

Four Tables of Data from Tagg and Clarida,

chapter |2 pages

Appendix B

Tove Ditlevsen, 1942

chapter |2 pages

Appendix C

Box Office Receipts (in millions) as of April 27, 1999, for Films Discussed

chapter |10 pages

Works Cited

chapter |6 pages

Videos Cited