Posted on 11/01/2017 9:06:15 PM PDT by nickcarraway
As he prepares to perform his movie music at the Catalyst, the legendary director and composer discusses his lifes work
Pop culture is having a John Carpenter moment. Earlier this year, reviews for Jeremy Gillespies horror film The Void excitedly described it as Carpenteresque, the same phrase that writer-director Jeff Nichols used to describe his acclaimed science fiction thriller from last year, Midnight Special. Sci-fi and horror films are suddenly awash in the steely light-blue shroud that was the trademark look of Carpenters early films four decades ago.
Normally, it wouldnt be surprising to see a director with a filmography like Carpenters acknowledged as hugely influential. But for some reason, its always taken a long time for Hollywood to catch up with him. Even his 1978 breakthrough film Halloweenthe low-budget tale of mysterious killer Michael Myers that changed the industry forever by becoming the first megahit indie moviewas dismissed by most critics. Today, of course, its considered one of the best horror films of all time, and it has lost none of the power that enthralled its first audiences. If anything, Carpenters empathetic and realistic depiction of the teenage girls who face off against Myers (including, most famously, Jamie Lee Curtis) has made it stand out even more over the years from the hundreds of imitators that have come in its wake.
The same pattern of initial critical hostility overcome by appreciative audiencesfollowed, eventually, by a full-on cultural lovefestemerged with most of Carpenters best films, from his 1974 debut Dark Star (originally his student film at USC) to his 1976 pioneering siege movie Assault on Precinct 13, through 1980s The Fog, 1982s The Thing, 1983s Stephen King adaptation Christine, 1986s Big Trouble in Little China, 1987s Prince of Darkness, 1988s They Live and 1995s In the Mouth of Madness. Incredibly, all of these films recovered from their initial critical write-offs to find cult followings and go on to be considered classics. (Only his two warmest and most immediately accessible movies, 1981s Escape From New York and 1984s Starman, truly got their due right out of the gate.)
At the same time, thanks to the fact that Carpenter composed the pioneering electronic scores for most of his own movies, Carpenteresque has also become a popular adjective in the music world. Music journalist Aaron Vehling described it earlier this year as the go-to descriptor for dark-tinged, arpeggiator-heavy synth scores. Just this month, Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails and Atticus Ross released a cover version of Carpenters famous theme for Halloween, becoming the umpteenth musicians to do so over the years. While it is most often covered by goth-type bands like Electric Hellfire Club and Celldweller, its also been tackled by artists as eclectic as cellist Tina Guo and German classical guitarist Leif M. Schaffland.
In the last few years, Carpenter has embraced his musical legacy, releasing his non-soundtrack debut album Lost Themes in 2015, which he recorded with his son Cody Carpenter and his godson Daniel Davies. Lost Themes II followed the next year, and remarkably, critics didnt have to take their time coming around to either record; both received positive reviews for staying true toand building onthe electronic sound of Carpenters movie music.
This year, Carpenter is revisiting his original scores with the release of the Anthology: Movie Themes 1974-1998 album and the subsequent tour that comes to the Catalyst on Sunday, Nov. 5. (In a well-timed Carpenter tie-in, the Midnights at the Del Mar series will be presenting The Thing on Friday, Nov. 3, and Escape From New York on Saturday, Nov. 4.) He even directed a music video for Christine that recaptures the atmospherics of the movie, with the sinister steel of the iconic car set against chilly, dreamlike streets.
John Carpenter, Cody Carpenter, Daniel Davies John Carpenter is backed on his current tour by his son, Cody Carpenter (left), and his godson, Daniel Davies (right). PHOTO: SOPHIE GRANDSARD
I spoke to the 69-year-old Carpenter last week by phone about his current tour (on which he is backed by his son and godson), and discovered that pretty much the only person who doesnt put much stock in John Carpenters immense cultural influence is John Carpenter. Self-effacing and seemingly somewhat ambivalent about his own work, he was, for instance, skeptical about my insistence that Carpenteresque is really a word that people use. Put in the somewhat odd but very entertaining position of having to prove to one of my favorite directors that his stock is at an all-time high, I pulled out my ace in the hole, reading to him from the transcript of a recent interview I did with Matt and Ross Duffer, the creators of the Netflix show Stranger Thingswhich is certainly one of the hottest zeitgeist properties out right now. The Duffer brothers love of all things John Carpenter is fairly well known, but in particular I read him what Matt told me about why the character of Mike has the movie poster for The Thing in his basement on the show: Even though it would be pretty much impossible for that poster to be in the boys basement, we put it in there anyway. You can see it when theyre playing D&D. Oh man, we were obsessed with that movie when we were in high school. Theres something about the creature design. I dont think anyones been able to pull it off as successfully since. Thats the scariest creature design. The fact that they did that in camera is incredible. We did strive to do as much as we could in camera, and we couldnt get close to achieving what they achieved. It really makes you respect those guys and what they were able to pull off.
I know that The Thing got a lot of flak when it came out. Does it feel like a vindication to hear a quote like that from the makers of one of the biggest pop culture phenomena of the last couple years?
JOHN CARPENTER: Thats very, very nice. It feels great. I cant think of one thing thats wrong with that. (Laughs.) Look, I took a lot of shit for that movie. But I kind of know why, I think. Because what I did not put in that movie was any hope. And audiences and critics, thats what they needed back then. They needed hope, and I just cheated them of it. So Im a bad guy.
I dont think Ive ever seen popular opinion of a movie do a complete 180-degree shift the way it did with your version of The Thing. Reviewers were so hostile at the time, and now its revered almost universally as one of the best movies of the 80s.
I dont understand why it did that turn. Do you know?
Well, its a great movie. Maybe pop culture just had to catch up with it. And now it has a huge fan base, as do most of your films that a lot people didnt seem to get when they were released. One of my favorites from that time is They Live, which I think is one of the best political films of the 80s.
Well, thank you. That one was a lot of fun, we had a good time.
I remember someone asking you around that time if the fascist aliens were a metaphor and you said something like, No, theyre Republicans.
Yeah, well its true! I mean, come on now! I was enraged at the time, I had to make this political statement. So I did it under cover of a teen science fiction movie. Plus, we got to have this big fight.
Oh man, yeah, that fight. And now the line Ive come here to kick ass and chew bubblegum, and Im all out of bubblegum is quoted all the time.
I know! It worked out alright for us.
Did an awareness that these films have found big cult followings have anything to do with the timing of the Anthology album and tour?
My son and godson and I, we realized last year when we were playing concerts around the world that what audiences really loved was the movie music. So I thought, why dont we do an album of movie music? I mean, why not? And here we are. Anthology is an album that encompasses my movie career from the 70s to the 90s. Its scenes from my films that were chosen for various reasons. We also re-recorded music from Jack Nitzsche and from Ennio Morricone. So its not just me as a composer, but others, too. So were going to play that liveattempt to play it live.
Are you going to show the scenes from the film while youre playing it?
Yes, we are.
Whats the difference for you between playing these themes live and recording them in the studio?
Well, theyre both great, but I get to work with my son and godson on this. And Im telling you, theres nothing like it. I didnt ever think Id have the chance to do this. Daniel, my godson, is a guitar virtuoso, and my son is a keyboard virtuoso. So Im just in the middle, playing really simple stuff and dancing around and being happy. Thats my job.
You did once say, I can play just about any keyboard, but I cant read or write a note.
Thats the way it is. Its true. I know my own worth as a musicianI have limited chops.
Does that have anything to do with why your music sounds different than other composers work?
I dont think so. It just means I have my limitations, and theyre very obvious to most people.
You feel more confident as a director?
Confident? Ehhh, well, its all kind of equal to me. In other words, what I do as a director and what I do as a musician are very similar. Im just the luckiest human being on the earth. Because Ive been directing for many years, and I do love cinema, but I get to have kind of a different careerlate in my life. And its fabulous.
You have music videos now!
Oh stop, ha ha. Yes, I do. I directed one. Its true.
I enjoyed how the video for Christine was clearly done not just for people who might be discovering your music, but also for your movie fans who will recognize a lot from the film.
Well thank you. I had a great time making it. It was really fun. Although I had to stay up all night, which is a little tough. Several months ago, we were talking to someone in advertising or something, and they said, You know what you ought to do is make a video. Not a music video where youre performing, but a story video. And I thought, Wow, OK. So we talked about it, and the first thought we had was, Lets do Christine stalking somebody. And it just worked from there.
When you were putting together Anthology and going back and listening to soundtracks of yours that you maybe hadnt listened to for a while, what surprised you the most?
Well, I now knowand dont ask me what it is, because Im not going to tell youwhat my musical signature is. I discovered it, and I went Oh really? Thats it? Really! How disappointing. But I now know what it is that I relied on to get me through when I was doing this music. So that was interesting. But I really truly enjoy a lot of the music that we play. Its fun. Some of its scary. The theme from Starman is much more hopeful and sweet, and we did one of those. A lot of it rocks out, I have to be frank with you. The rhythm section of the group Im playing with is Tenacious Ds rhythm section. They are unbelievably great.
Howd you hook up with the guys from Tenacious D?
Daniel knew them, and hung out with them a bit. He loved how they sounded and the kind of stuff they did, so we all got together. Were having a blast.
The soundtrack to Halloween was really what put you on the map as a composer. Ive read about what the initial response to the movie was like, but Ive never heard anything about the early reaction to the music. Did anyone realize that it was going to go down as one of the most famous horror movie themes of all time?
No. God, no. They didnt pay any attention to it. It was just on the movie, and everybody accepted it. Nobody said anything to me about it, necessarily, so I thought, OK, as long as they dont throw shit at the screen, Im happy.
That was an era when composers were doing a lot of epic, sweeping scoresJohn Williams Star Wars and Superman, Jerry Goldsmiths Star Trek: The Motion Picture. Of course, Halloween was a very different movie, but was the intimacy and rawness of the theme a reaction to that at all?
No, it was absolutely functional. Because I came from student films, and this was a low-budget movie. Low-budget movies and student films, they dont have any money. They dont have enough money to get an orchestra or a composer. So somebody who is cheap and fast has to do the music. And thats me. Halloween took three days for the score. I did five or six pieces, and then cut them in at various places in the movie. We didnt have any more money than that.
Now all of these darker goth-type bands love to cover your music, especially the Halloween theme. Has that surprised you? Did you ever expect to be a goth icon?
Ha, well, I dont know about that. But it always surprises me when something of mine shows up. Im just delighted by it, its great.
There are a lot of those covers now. Im sure you know that.
No, not particularly. Thats something else you have to realize about my career: no one tells me anything.
When you did the Lost Themes albums, was it to get a little bit of freedom to compose without having to base the music on the visuals of a film?
Well, you know what, I should say yes. Or I can tell you the truth.
Oh, I definitely pick the truth!
OK, well, the truth is that Lost Themes is an extended improvisation with my son and I playing. Wed play video games, wed go down to the music room and improvise a little music, come back and play video games, go back and improvise a little music. This went on and on for a while, so I had a whole bunch of music. He went off to Japan, and I was hanging around here, and I got a new music attorney. And she said, You got anything new? I thought, Well, I have this stuff here, so I sent it to her. A couple of months later, I had a record deal! What the hell is that? Thats what happened. I didnt plan it.
Whats it like to see your work and influence rise and fall over the years, and then all of a sudden have it rise sharply like this?
Its bewildering. I mean, I dont know why. But Im trying not to ask. Just go with it. Just go with the flow, thats all I do.
JOHN CARPENTER performs at 9 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 5, at the Catalyst, 1011 Pacific Ave. in Santa Cruz. The show is 16 and over; tickets are $39.50 and up. Catalystclub.com.
Mr. Carpenter never could see the forests for the trees.
“The Republicans” may have been his intended target of They Live but look at who beats the daily drum of media? Look at who runs corporations now and does all of the cultural messaging? Look at who ran an “OBEY” poster campaign AND used that to elect a damned Marxist red diaper doper baby president.
Never knew that was his movie.
I saw that movie on HBO back in the early 80s and laughed myself silly.
I havent seen it again anywhere. I dont know why that movie isnt on TV regularly.
I thought Starman sucked.
Horrible dragging script. A message movie with no message worth reading.
Dark Star - John Carpenter (1hr, 22min)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tbYQL-OLzZU
The making of Dark Star (1hr, 56min)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N8arhlWdTpg
Thank you.
Meh. Just ripping off Tangerine Dream. Listen to TD's score for Sorcerer (1977/William Friedkin - remake of The Wages of Fear). Or pretty much anything else by TD.
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