I am away from my
desk. Here’s one of my favorite movie
scores.
I have showcased this one before. But its magnificence deserves repetition.
Without exaggeration, Local
Hero (1983), written and directed by Bill Forsyth, ranks as one of my “Top
Ten” favorite movies of all time.
Or “Top Five”, if you exclude westerns.
Summary: An
American oil company dispatches a representative to purchase an entire town in
the ineffably picturesque top tip of northern Scotland to build a refinery. The townspeople, rather than fighting to defend the pristine locality instead adamantly
pretend they don’t want to sell in
hopes of driving up the size of the offer.
(Stated Rationale: “You
can’t eat scenery.”)
You see? That’s different. (Americans would be like, “Oh! The Environment!”) And Local
Hero is brilliantly executed.
Accompanying the movie is an impeccablly complementing – and
enhancing – soundtrack, written by Mark
Knofler.
Give a listen, why don’t ya?
(Stay with it; it starts slow. Look at the pictures until it kicks into gear.)
(Stay with it; it starts slow. Look at the pictures until it kicks into gear.)
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