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The Public Eye (Jerry Goldsmith/Mark Isham) (1992)
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Average: 3.46 Stars
***** 18 5 Stars
**** 31 4 Stars
*** 25 3 Stars
** 12 2 Stars
* 6 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:

Orchestrated and Conducted by:
Ken Kugler

Rejected Score Composed and Conducted by:
1992 Varèse (Isham) Album Tracks   ▼
2021 Intrada (Goldsmith) Album Tracks   ▼
1992 Varèse (Isham) Album Cover Art
2021 Intrada (Goldsmith) Album 2 Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande (Isham)
(October, 1992)

Intrada Records (Goldsmith)
(June 14th, 2021)
The 1992 Varèse Sarabande album with the Isham score was a regular U.S. release that remained readily available after going out of print. The 2021 Intrada album with the Goldsmith score was limited to an unknown quantity and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $22. It remained in print into 2025.
The insert of the 1992 Varèse album contains no extra information about the score or film. That of the 2021 Intrada album includes details about both.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,310
Written 6/30/24
Buy it... on the 2021 Intrada album for a pleasurable extension of Jerry Goldsmith's suspenseful noir methods and his stubborn refusal to give up on adapting his style from The Russia House into other works.

Avoid it... on the album featuring Mark Isham's serviceable and workmanlike replacement score, its style and tone far less vibrant and its themes inferior versions of Goldsmith's rejected ideas.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
Isham
Isham
The Public Eye: (Jerry Goldsmith/Mark Isham) After failing to secure the rights to the story of famed New York crime photographer Arthur "Weegee" Fellig of the 1940's, writer and director Howard Franklin instead created his own stand-in concoction to tell a dramatized story of similar early tabloid sensationalism. With the lead photographer played by Joe Pesci, The Public Eye conveys the seedy and not always legal methods of obtaining grisly crime photos before the police could show up at a scene. As in real life, a radio tuned into police frequencies was the key to the protagonist's success, and his photos inspired others to seek the same glory for years. The 1992 film takes the character into the underworld of the mob, a widow hiring him to investigate her late husband's dealings; because the photographer falls in love with her, he complies, but before long he finds himself in a situation where his life is in danger and, not by coincidence, snapping photos of one of the city's biggest mob hits in history. The movie failed to generate enough positive reaction to recoup more than just a small fraction of its budget, a fair amount of which was spent on a fruitless expedition to find the best music for the picture. Franklin, an inexperienced director whose career was largely killed by the failure of The Public Eye, was thrilled to hire veteran composer Jerry Goldsmith for the assignment, and he approved of the initial thematic ideas that were presented to him. By the recording sessions, however, Franklin became displeased with the repetition he perceived to hear in Goldsmith's music. The composer, who had written two themes for the picture and based the full score off of them, declined to write additional ideas for Franklin. Having used Mark Isham's score for Reversal of Fortune as a temp track, the director approached then Isham directly for a quick replacement score that accomplished pretty much the same result but with less of the distinctive style Goldsmith brought to the table. The rejection of Goldsmith's music represents a senseless decision by the novice director, as that original score was a model of efficiency and expert adaptation of motifs that Franklin declined in favor of more brooding atmospheres.

While there is nothing really wrong with Isham's take on The Public Eye, his approach is far less engaging and memorable than Goldsmith's. (Some may simply argue that Goldsmith was a significantly better composer than Isham, especially at that time, and there would be merit to such a proposition.) For Goldsmith, the late 1980's and early 1990's represented a disturbing period in which his work was rejected with alarming frequency. Fascinatingly, he countered this circumstance with a stubborn refusal to abandon material he had written for his unused film scores. Foremost in this admirable tendency was the thematic core of his classic espionage score for The Russia House in 1991. That work was clearly an itch that the composer needed to scratch repeatedly both before and after its immense success in that picture. He had first written the main theme for The Russia House in 1987 for Oliver Stone's Wall Street, and after his departure from that project, he finally recorded it for 1988's Alien Nation, which itself was rejected. Even after the maturation of that idea in The Russia House, Goldsmith took the same jazzy style and adapted its core progressions to form a character theme for 1992's Gladiator, where it never really fit well with the otherwise abrasive and synthetic nature of that substandard soundtrack. Upon that fully recorded score's rejection, he inserted an almost identical adaptation of that theme from The Russia House into The Public Eye the same year, a setting perfect for the noir mannerisms of the idea's performance. The composer still refused to abandon the idea even after recording and then losing the assignment for The Public Eye as well, and an almost identical version of the theme and its jazzy inflection oddly but satisfyingly graced The Vanishing in 1993, letting rip with its uninhibited form over that movie's end credits. For the many diehard enthusiasts of The Russia House, the history of its main theme and this subsequent offshoot is as bizarre as it is complimentary of Goldsmith's taste and resilience. Fortunately, The Public Eye represents the best fully mature revisitation of that material, conveyed with much the same personality as the suspense portions of the classic 1991 score.

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