Posts Tagged Carter Burwell

Carter Burwell on True Grit

Today I discovered that film score composer (and frequent Coen Brothers collaborator) Carter Burwell has his own website. And much to my delight, he briefly writes about his work on the new True Grit.

Here’s just a snippet of what he wrote:

“Many Hollywood Westerns sanctify myths about the origins of the United States. A typical example is to turn a cattle drive into a crusade. Brass, strings and timpani magnify the act of herding livestock across a river until it has the gravitas of crossing the Red Sea. Mattie is part of this tradition, and a parody of it, treating her quest and all its participants with a piety that blinds her to the absurdities that surround her. This is the source of much of the book’s considerable humor.”

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Film Criticism: Museum of the Moving Image

In wandering the Internet, I discovered Moving Image Source, the website for the Museum of the Moving Image. The site is ” devoted to the history of film, television, and digital media. It features original articles by leading critics, authors, and scholars; a calendar that highlights major retrospectives, festivals, and gallery exhibitions at venues around the world; and a regularly updated guide to online research resources.”

Any site that interviews Carter Burwell is a great resource to me. Check it out.

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