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Pleasantville (Randy Newman) (1998)
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Average: 3.3 Stars
***** 193 5 Stars
**** 230 4 Stars
*** 267 3 Stars
** 166 2 Stars
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Very moving...
J. Alán Blankenship - November 2, 2006, at 7:39 a.m.
1 comment  (2190 views)
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Composed, Co-Orchestrated, Conducted, and Co-Produced by:

Co-Orchestrated by:
Don Davis

Co-Produced by:
Bruno Coon
Audio Samples   ▼
1998 Varèse Album Tracks   ▼
2023 Varèse Album Tracks   ▼
1998 Varèse Album Cover Art
2023 Varèse Album 2 Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(November 17th, 1998)

Varèse Sarabande
(December 15th, 2023)
The 1998 Varèse Sarabande album was a regular U.S. release. A song compilation had been released a month earlier. The 2023 Varèse album is limited to 2,000 copies and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $20. That expansion was also released digitally.
Nominated for an Academy Award.
The insert of the 1998 album contains no information about the score. The text font on the back of the its packaging is extremely difficult to read. The 2023 album features notes about both the score and film, including a list of performers.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #603
Written 2/19/99, Revised 1/31/24
Buy it... if you appreciate Randy Newman's more serious, dramatic efforts of the 1990's, even if they're spiked with a few of his trademark jazz and comedy cues.

Avoid it... on the original 1998 album if you value the careful narrative Newman developed for the score, the 2023 expansion loyally conveying that musical awakening.

Newman
Newman
Pleasantville: (Randy Newman) Writer and director Gary Ross wrote several films of the 1990's that dealt with people adapting to life in the wrong place, whether it be a kid as an adult in Big, an ordinary man as a president in Dave, or two teens stuck in an old television show in Pleasantville. Both the premise and technology of Pleasantville were thought-provoking and entertaining in a way that could deliver a socio-political message while also yielding to a sappy, Hollywood-style storybook ending. In the plot, two 1990's teens live in a dysfunctional household, and when a television repairman gives them a special remote for their TV, the two are transported back to the favorite show of the male teen. That show is "Pleasantville," a black-and-white sitcom of the 1950's in which everything's perfect and sterile, wholesome and neat. As the characters begin to adapt to their new environment, living each day in the show itself, they begin to help the make-believe community evolve into independent thinkers. In so doing, the film reveals its technical marvel: the special effect machine that slowly turns elements of the old show from black-and-white into color. As people, animals, and things make the transition, each with a specific reason, the film displays brilliant colors and cinematography worthy of awards. Ross turned to veteran composer Randy Newman for Pleasantville, and although the songwriter had just come off of scores like Toy Story and A Bug's Life that had reaffirmed his stereotypical role in Hollywood children's music, fewer people recall that many of the composer's best dramatic scores had already come by 1998. To a degree, Pleasantville was a holdover from the days of The Natural and Avalon, serious scores that still resonated long after. Newman's straight dramatic writing in the later years of his career did not frequently capture the same level of pure Americana and, more importantly, convincing tones of darkness. What's interesting about Pleasantville is that it bridges the two worlds within Randy Newman's digital age production, with Ross calling upon the composer with both the 1950's music and more restrained drama in mind. In the end, Newman succeeded as well as could be expected at addressing those disparate sides of the film.

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