: (Jonathan Sheffer/Danny Elfman) Among
the plethora of ridiculous Martin Short comedies emanating from the
1980's and 1990's, few are as dissatisfying as
. The
1991 movie is a remake of the popular French comedy
from ten years earlier, and it teams Short as a bumbling fool with a
tough and familiar detective played by Danny Glover. The two traverse
Mexico looking for a wealthy woman who has suffered a series of vacation
mishaps and has gone missing. While all the involvement of crime and
chasing and falls and all the other maladies in the story would suggest
some significant pain along the journey, you instead receive nothing but
absolute silliness. The characters, despite their constant bad luck, are
never really in any danger even when it literally looks like they about
to fall over a cliff, a balcony, or a waterfall to their untimely
demise. The whole concept of luck is twisted so that the bad luck
inherently caused by the woman and Short's character is countered by
equally good luck that ensures their unlikely survival. But the gags
aren't that good, and you eventually wish some of the characters a
grisly death. Glover and Australian director Nadia Tass were frustrated
by the end result of the picture, but despite critics and audiences both
laying waste to the movie, it somehow managed to become a fiscal
success. Among the hot young names involved in the project was composer
Danny Elfman, who was in coming off of a 1989 and 1990 that saw him
skyrocket to mainstream blockbuster success. His career was still
frequented by silly, non-Pee-wee Herman-related comedies, however, with
a stretch from
. In the case of the latter lightweight diversion
between his two
scores, Elfman provided only themes to the
score and handed it off to his primary assistant of the time, Jonathan
Sheffer, to flesh out the remainder.
Sheffer had a nascent composing career in the 1980's
but became better known in the film scoring industry for his conducting
work, first for Elfman and then for Elliot Goldenthal. (He was, in fact,
a rare crew holdover between the Elfman and Goldenthal
Batman
scores.) Having contributed a few episodic scores to "Pee-wee's
Playhouse," he found himself assisting Elfman in writing additional
material for 1990 and 1991 assignments for which Elfman was running out
of time. Notably, this work included a select action scene in
Darkman but was more substantial in the case of
Pure Luck.
Well experienced with Elfman's various styles of the era, Sheffer
adapted the composer's thematic and instrumental foundation for the film
and fleshed it out in his own arrangements. Elfman was keen to ensure
that Sheffer received composition credit if he was substantially
arranging the themes in new directions for various scenes, and such work
represents the vast majority of the cues here. Generally, the
contemporary pop and jazz sounds in
Pure Luck are at home with
Elfman's sound at the time, an orchestra joined by accordion and
saxophone for hints of the bluesy jazz that had laced his career to that
point. The demeanor is more in line with
Summer School and
Article 99, with some rather vague ethnic influences factoring at
times. None of it has the pure joy of
Back to School, however.
The music can be divided into two halves, the portions directly informed
by Elfman and the residual filler material supplied by Sheffer in
emulation of the same style. The score doesn't utilize just one main
theme but rather a series of three or four phrases that together
comprise the comedic and barely dramatic personality of the film. The
main phrase is a vaguely amusing, descending figure over upbeat rhythmic
flow, heard almost immediately on clarinet in "Pure Luck Theme." A
performance of this A phrase on accordion at 0:20 adds blurting brass
lines and a slightly noir feel. A subsequent B phrase at 0:45 helps
reset the main theme but isn't particularly memorable, and a C phrase at
1:24 adds traditional Elfman weight in the silliness. The main phrase
returns with pop drums at 1:45 and is adapted to a dramatic close.
Unfortunately, while each of the phrases of Elfman's
theme for
Pure Luck are adequate to the task at hand, none
achieves any memorable positioning compared to the others, leaving the
work as one defined by style over substance. Three of the phrases inform
"Valerie's Vacation," a cue that is essentially a direct extension of
Elfman's main summary of ideas as the premise of the story is
established. This material is adapted into a Latin flavor in "Kidnapped"
with castanets but returns to Elfman zaniness on winds and strings in
the latter half of that cue. Stomping action occupies the middle of "At
the Airport" with stylish saxophone outburst, and the main phrase takes
a faux-Latin, more Mediterranean sound during "In Mexico." (The ethnic
miss in this work is perhaps its biggest sin.) This idea becomes a
frantic action motif in "As the Bee Flies" and receives only minimal
thematic wrapping in "We Found Her" at the end despite one heroically
romantic moment. The portions credited primarily to Sheffer are still
saturated with the composer's mannerisms, and he seems to handle the
Short character with his own material. Slight fragments of the themes
inform the conversational humor of "Meet Eugene Proctor" while the fake
Latin elements from
Edward Scissorhands carry over to "From
Segoura to Fernando." Fluffy drama with slight jazz sentiment prevails
in "Proctor Crawls Home," this material carefully plucked and on piano
in rhythmic playfulness in "Roadtrip to Quicksand." Sheffer's breezy
comedy continues in "As the Bee Flies" with one Pee-wee-appropriate
outburst of energy, but an anonymous character resolution for soft
orchestral layers follows in "Getting Close." The tandem of composers
functions well enough to yield a likeable and effective score, but
there's nothing here that Elfman collectors won't be able to find in
better incarnations elsewhere. Too much of the score sounds perfunctory
in its execution. The only album for
Pure Luck is a standard,
30-minute Varèse Sarabande issue from 1991. The album's versions
of cues don't always match what's heard in the film, including most
prominently the finale in "We Found Her." While there's nothing
inherently wrong with any of this music, it's difficult to find truly
unique benefits for a pursuit of the long out-of-print product or any
digital alternative.
*** @Amazon.com: CD or
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