For my final project of the year, I have decided to create a score to 5 minutes of a film. I’m doing this with a view towards what I want to be creating in my second year at LCC – I’m very interested in making soundscapes for other forms of media as I feel this often gives me the inspiration I need to bounce off of to create something I am proud of. In the past, I have usually written more conventional songs with particular paintings or books in mind. Because of this, I’m really keen to start making scores for films on the course and thought I might as well start with this project!
I have a couple of options for films that I am interested in scoring. The first is ‘The Seventh Seal’, directed by Ingmar Bergman and released in 1957. ‘The Seventh Seal’ has been one of my favourite films since I was around 15, and it focusses mainly on the concepts of death and questioning faith. It follows a medieval knight (Max Von Sydow) as he plays a game of chess in order to bargain with Death (Bengt Ekerot) for his life.
There are two scenes I would really be interested in scoring, however I’m not sure if they’re the right fit for this project. The first is when the knight meets Death for the first time:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f4yXBIigZbg
This is by far my favourite scene from the film, and the most famous. The imagery is powerful, and the idea of the knight challenging Death to a game of chess is so absurd yet the dialogue is really well written.
The other scene I have in mind is the Danse Macabre from the final scene of the film:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O4JgsWxFY2E
This scene shows Death leading the knight and a few other characters from the film along a hill, making them dance and hold lands as they walk to the “darklands”, as a travelling actor who is watching on describes it. The imagery in this scene is also quite striking, and the fact that the audience don’t really know where the characters are actually going makes it haunting in a way.
The reason I thought of these two scenes, although they have dialogue in them, is that they are subtitled. This means that they don’t necessarily need to have dialogue over them, as the viewer can understand what is being said from the bottom of the screen. However, the more I think about it, I’d rather create a score to a section of footage that has no dialogue in it whatsoever. That way, I don’t have to worry about compromising the scene in this manner.
A scene that may perhaps be more suitable to my project is the opening scene from ‘Persona’, again directed by Ingmar Bergman and released in 1966:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8TJ2d7-1e8
I think this scene is probably going to be better suited for the project as there is no dialogue and it is very abstract, which gives me a lot of creative freedom. It doesn’t have much to do with the rest of the film, and can be seen in its own right as a 5 minute piece of experimental cinema. There’s also the opportunity for lots of experimentation with foley, which I haven’t tried making before.
The scene is a bit graphic and I’m not fond at all of the shot of a lamb being killed, however I think it’s going to be difficult to find another abstract piece of film that is rich in imagery, that also has no dialogue and is the right length for this project. Because of this, the opening scene from Persona is most likely what I am going to score over the coming days.