"The Last House on the Left" (1972)
Directed by Wes Craven
The songs and score of the films we watch usually compliment the
visuals that we are experiencing on the screen. Music can guide us
through a movie. Horror films are typically enhanced by scores and
themes that are scary and filled with tension. Generic horror flicks
seem to be married to cookie-cutter scores that either feel like they
were lifted from public domain collections or composed by some
uninspired, no-talent hack.
Where does this leave Wes
Craven's 1972 film, "The Last House on the Left"? This cult shocker has
one of the most unique soundtracks in horror history. Most of the songs
that you hear in this film have vocals. This sets it apart from other
horror soundtracks. With instrumental scores, the music serves to
re-enforce what you are seeing on the screen. During a spooky scene,
spooky music plays and your brain goes, "Totally spooky. If it weren't,
why would there be spooky music playing?"
Lyrics can tell a
story or describe an emotion. The songs in "Last House..." often do
both. What's so bizarre about the songs in this film, is that they
rarely match the visual. Some of the songs can be described as pretty,
while others seem comical. Pretty and comical do not spring to mind when
one thinks of "The Last House on the Left". It's reputation as one of
the most shocking horror films in history, stays in tact till this day.
More than 40 years later, the film is still uncomfortable to sit
through.
So why the unusual song choices? For the record,
I'm a fan of this soundtrack. I think the songs are well written and in a
strange way, match the scenes during which they play.
Let me explain:
Comical songs play during different types of moments in this film. One,
being scenes that involve two cops who are trying to save the day and
having a hell of a time getting to the crime scene. People feel that this
was Wes Craven's attempt to lighten the mood. After spending time with
the criminals performing heinous acts, the viewer is so traumatized that
by lightening the mood with wacky music and inept cops, gave them a
break.
Comical music also plays when the criminals are
driving. Is this wrong? They're bad guys, shouldn't they have "bad guy"
music? Not always. A theme should match how a person feels. These guys
are not driving down the road like violent killing machines, they're
having a good time. Their music matches how they feel at the moment.
Finally, this wacky song that keeps coming back during the film, plays
during the closing credits. After sitting through an intense film, with a
violent and emotional finale, shouldn't the closing music
also be
intense? Perhaps. I admit that if I made this film, this is not the
song that I would have chosen. It's the song that we are stuck with
though. Why? Here's my theory: What if this song suggests how Wes Craven
thinks the audience feels now that the film is over. On the one hand,
we may feel relief that we endured this violent epic and the song is
used to relieve us of that tension. On the other hand, if the audience
loves a good shock, wouldn't the film be an exhilarating experience?
Perhaps the song is meant to capture the child-like joy that we feel
after watching such a balls-out crazy film.
The other song
that plays a lot during disturbing scenes in the film, is very pretty
and contains the chilling line, "...and the road leads to nowhere."
Lyrically, it makes sense. Musically, we have reached a point in
cinematic history where the irony of beautiful music playing over
violent imagery has become commonplace.
2 comments:
I'm glad to see I'm not the only one who appreciates a good soundtrack to a movie or TV show.
I love soundtracks and scores. This one stuck out so much to me because it felt like the opposite of what was happening on the screen. Either way, good stuff!
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