Considering all of the pop icon appeal that the studio
was attempting to inject into the project, perhaps Sting himself would
have been a better match for the soundtrack for
The Bride. Jarre
took the film in the opposite direction, returning to the vintage, black
and white days when Frankenstein was at his scariest, but without the
terror. He provided a score straight from Hollywood's Golden Age, with
all the thematic rapture as Elmer Bernstein's great, dramatically
sweeping themes emulating the same era. The parallels to Bernstein's
style in
The Bride are aplenty, with the use of the ondes
martinot instrument at the forefront. Both Jarre and Bernstein were
wearing out the eerie tones of that instrument in the mid-1980's, with
Bernstein's use of it in
Ghostbusters remaining the best known in
modern times. But Jarre's employment is a clear tribute to Franz
Waxman's similar treatment in
Bride of Frankenstein several
decades earlier. Waxman would have been proud of Jarre's score for
The Bride, for it has all the same string-quivering, brass
layered, slowly paced themes of grandeur that once conveyed high
romance. A solo violin performs a Waxman-like subtheme of passion in the
midsection of the score as well, though the plentiful full ensemble
statements of the title theme (summed nicely in the concert arrangement,
"The Bride") are the undeniable highlight. As beautiful as Jarre's score
is (and it will please
any Golden Age film music collector), you
can't help but wonder about its disjointed marriage with the goal of the
film. Jarre's work thus functions as an independent tribute to a
different time, with deep, dramatic sensibilities that translate better
onto album than on screen. Its first ever album presentation is short by
the standards of the Varèse Sarabande Club products of the early
2000's, but
The Bride, the thirteenth of the second generation of
Club titles, was the first of that newer group of limited releases to
sell out (in May of 2003). With only 1,000 pressings of the score,
The Bride would become a significant catch at online auction
houses for several years, with Golden Age film score fans desperately
gobbling up what few copies remained at specialty outlets. The album may
not be worth the hunt for every soundtrack enthusiast, but Bernstein and
Waxman collectors will lament letting it slip through their fingers.
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