teaches you one thing about your next life, it's this:
When your wife kills you and you get reincarnated as a different man,
don't go back and have sex with your own daughter thirty years later.
Your ex-wife may just become enraged all over again and kill you a
second time. As shocking as that premise may be, it would seem that this
particular movie sought to make you feel bad about the death of one
Peter Proud, but in fairness to the poor dude, he was suffering from
terrible visions of his past life and couldn't help but investigate the
people and places he was seeing in his dreams. He travels across America
to pursue answers and confirms that he is indeed, for whatever reason,
the reincarnation of some asshole who was so demeaning to his wife that
she pounded the shit out his head in the middle of a lake. What's creepy
about
is the psychosis of the
scorned woman, her mind sufficiently crazed by the events of her past to
engage in the movie's most memorable scene: Margot Kidder masturbating
in a bathtub while recalling her dead husband raping her long ago.
Compared to that, the father-daughter action is merely a slightly
disturbing sideshow. The movie was the kind of supernatural and
psychological thriller typical to the middle of the 1970's, and stuff
like that had the peril of alienating audiences in the theatre while
being wholly unsuitable for television showings. Such was the dismal
path to obscurity for
, though
artsy filmmakers have planned unsuccessfully to remake the movie for
years. A common workhorse in this genre of the 1970's was composer Jerry
Goldsmith, who took this assignment as the culmination of his genre
efforts that included
in a short period of time. These projects
encouraged the composer to engage in a journey of experimentation that
yielded a heavy synthesizer presence in
Goldsmith's use of electronics in
The Reincarnation of
Peter Proud is highly targeted to represent the supernatural
weirdness of the whole story. Their placement in the mix and their tone
are the most intense in the dream sequences and diminish as Peter
Proud's previous life becomes his reality, eliminating his own visions.
The synthetics ultimately boomerang at the end of the movie for the
second killing scene, however, making one wonder if they are not somehow
connected to the menace of the troubled wife. Goldsmith personally
experimented with and performed these lines at home prior to adding them
to the orchestral layers. The Moog synthesizers of the era were limited
by standards set just a few years later, but they were already
sophisticated enough for the composer to generate some truly inventive
sounds for this work and
Logan's Run. On the flip side, he
utilizes a small but effective orchestra for the shifting relationships
and Proud's peace with the past. Goldsmith explicitly adds instrumental
layers to his ensemble as the story progresses, even going so far as to
replace muted brass with open brass towards the end. Piano and flute are
the core of the work, the former for suspense and latter for fleeting
love. The chamber-sized string ensemble is suitable for intimacy but can
generate some depth of drama when needed, highlighted during disturbing
orgasm scene. (Don't expect the ambient power to match that of
Basic
Instinct, but the thought process and general execution is much the
same.) An acoustic guitar attempts to supply some contemporary comfort
once the synthetics start to wane in their role. Specialty instruments
include a variety of unusual percussion and seemingly a sitar, though
the poor recording quality masks the origins of some of Goldsmith's more
unusual sounds. The headlining flute uses different performance
techniques and the composer's beloved echoplexing technique to reflect
the reincarnation effect. All of these pieces are assembled to convey
significant thematic development at almost every moment in the work, but
not all of it is accessible. In fact, most of the score is pretty
unpleasant by design, but even in the hopeful, albeit somewhat
uncomfortable searching sequences in the middle and the love story near
the end, Goldsmith doesn't shy away from reminding you of this film's
demented personality.
Thematically, the score for
The Reincarnation of
Peter Proud can be divided into three equal acts, with one theme
dominating each of the three sections. Although these ideas sometimes
cross over into the other portions of the narrative, they largely
flourish in their proper succession. Goldsmith's main theme is a very
long-lined identity primarily for flute, its figures cyclical and
unresolved for the reincarnation concept. It's adapted all over the
score, using both the orchestral and synthetic tones, and it's heard
immediately on flute at the outset of "Main Title" before shifting to
synths for suspense. The main theme is badly distorted in "Old Lovers"
but reforms in "Classic Cars" and is then slowed dramatically on synths
in "Short Changed" and "No Dreams." Urgently performed by piano at the
start of "Occult Academy," this theme struggles to retain its shape by
the troubled "Enough Suffering" and becomes displaced by other ideas as
the main character loses his Proud identity, barely alive by the first
half of "The Church Pt. 1." But it whimsically returns on deceptive
strings in "Home at Last" and has fleeting influences in the "More
Discoveries" cues aside from a nice flute rendition in "More Discoveries
Pt. B." It is almost completely supplanted by the love theme in the
third act, combining with that theme wonderfully for the full ensemble
performance in "The Lovers." The theme's character representations are
muddied by its emergence again in sensual string layers during the
masturbation scene in "Fantasy Pt. 2." For the film's conclusion,
though, the idea reprises its opening flute and piano demeanor at the
end of "Final Confrontation." The second theme of significance in
The
Reincarnation of Peter Proud is Goldsmith's searching motif
representing Proud's investigation into his prior life. This theme
contains a cyclical ascending and descending rhythmic formation
underneath descending melodic lines, and there's an obsessive quality to
its domination of the score's second act. Heard first on synthesizers at
0:42 into "Main Title," it vaguely guides the chords of the synthetic
"After Thoughts" but turns organically optimistic at 0:13 into "The
Search Begins" on plucked strings and unusual metallic tones, the
underlying rhythm carried by acoustic guitar as a warmer presence for
the melodic line on top. It guides the first half of "The Search
Continues" with synths carrying the melody, interrupts the main theme in
the middle of "The Church Pt. 1" and "Home at Last," becomes more
forceful in "The Statue," and influences the "More Discoveries"
cues.
For Goldsmith collectors more interested in the
composer's lyrical identities of the era,
The Reincarnation of Peter
Proud does offer a fairly engrossing love theme that is only present
in the score's third act. Its construct is a clever extension of the
descending searching motif, likely an intentionally incestuous choice by
Goldsmith, and the idea's secondary lines remind of his typical
character themes of the 1990's. This pretty but elusive theme builds
momentum and warmth orchestrally throughout "Ann & Tennis," turns tense
late in "How Did It Happen?," and is slowed for more intimacy from
keyboards, strings, and flute in "First Date." Its acoustic attraction
is interrupted by synthetic suspense in the middle of "The Picnic" and
reduced to quiet piano at the outset of "Where Have You Been?" Although
it's a bit timid at the start of "The Cottage" on flute, the love theme
enjoys its full romantic mode for piano and strings in the pretty "The
Lovers." Two lesser motifs round out the score, neither particularly
weighty but appreciable for those in tune with Goldsmith's finer
strategies. An identity motif consists of a rising figure without an
answer and can be expressed very briefly, previewed playfully on low
flute in "Occult Academy" and continuing on flutes at the end of "Who Am
I?" and opening of "Crystal Lake." This motif is littered in short
allusions throughout several later cues, worried in several renditions
during "Search for Mom," taking the forefront in "Who Are You?," and
underpinning the main theme's dramatic flailing at the climax of "Final
Confrontation." Finally, a rage motif for the killer wife is, not
surprisingly, a stabbing motion heard in eerie tones at 1:26 into "Main
Title" on twisted woodwinds and synthesizers but earning its violence
when it returns with a straight horror burst at 1:34 into "Fantasy Pt.
1" and opens "Final Confrontation" on muscular piano pounding. Overall,
The Reincarnation of Peter Proud can be a challenging score, and
its listening experience is frustrated by poor sound quality that
negates some of the remarkable creativity in the instrumentation. The
music was long bootlegged from awful mono sources, but Intrada Records
finally accomplished its best effort in providing a better presentation
officially in 2018. Unfortunately, though they secured even better mono
sources, Intrada could only obtain stereo mixes for the first half of
the score. For their album, they provide some faux-stereo techniques to
the second half, but that leaves many of the most impressive cues in
essentially mono sound. Casual listeners may want to wait in the hopes
that better sources can be located for these more engaging murder,
masturbation, incest, and fornication cues.
*** @Amazon.com: CD or
Download
Bias Check: |
For Jerry Goldsmith reviews at Filmtracks, the average editorial rating is 3.26
(in 128 reviews) and the average viewer rating is 3.28
(in 153,786 votes). The maximum rating is 5 stars.
|