Showing posts with label films in concert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label films in concert. Show all posts

Sunday, February 11, 2024

Casablanca in Concert

Getting to see Casablanca on the big screen is always very special (it is one of my favorite movies of all time) but, when you add the score by Max Steiner played live by the Utah Symphony, it is an epic experience!  This film in concert happened at Abravanel Hall last night and I loved it!  Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart) is a hard-drinking club owner in Casablanca who sticks his neck out for nobody even though the city is filled with desperate refugees looking for exit visas to escape the Nazis during World War II.  He successfully navigates the world of black marketeers, corrupt officials, and German officers until Ilsa Lund (Ingrid Bergman) walks into his club with her husband Victor Laszlo (Paul Henreid), a hero of the resistance who is in need of safe passage.  Ilsa was once Rick's lover in Paris but she abandoned him without explanation and, even though he has letters of transit that will ensure their safety, he is bitter and refuses to help.  Ilsa eventually confides to Rick that she still loves him but she also admires and respects Victor and will do anything to ensure that his work with the resistance continues, even sacrifice her own happiness, but will Rick sacrifice his happiness to save them?  When an orchestra plays the score live it is such an immersive experience and it really brings the action to life.  I particularly enjoyed the dramatic use of percussion during the opening scene displaying a map of Africa, the poignant use of strings whenever the plight of the refugees is described, and the menacing use of the brass when the Nazis occupy Paris.  I also loved how elements from the song "As Time Goes By" by Herman Hupfeld are incorporated as a leitmotif for Rick and Ilsa's doomed relationship and how elements from the French national anthem, "La Marseillaise" (which is sung during my favorite moment in the movie to drown out the singing of a German drinking song), are used as another leitmotif for all of the political intrigue.  This didn't have the same audience participation as some of the other films in this series but it was so much fun!  The final film for the 2023-2024 season is How to Train Your Dragon (go here for tickets).

Sunday, December 24, 2023

Frozen in Concert

I have been hyping the Utah Symphony's films in concert series to anyone who would listen to me for the past few years.  I was finally able to take Kristine and Trent to see Love Actually last Tuesday and I have definitely converted them.  Last night I hoped to do the same with Marilyn at Frozen and I think I was successful because we both had a lot of fun.  The animated classic, based on "The Snow Queen" by Hans Christian Andersen, was shown on the big screen while the orchestra played the songs by Robert Lopez and Kristen Anderson-Lopez and the score by Christophe Beck.  Princess Elsa (Eva Bella) accidentally freezes her sister Princess Anna (Livvy Stubenrauch) with her mysterious powers when they build a snowman together.  The King (Maurice LaMarche) and Queen (Jennifer Lee) tell her that she must hide herself away from Anna and the rest of Arendelle but, when they are lost at sea, she must open the doors of the castle once again for her coronation.  Elsa (Idina Menzel) loses control of herself, with devastating consequences, when Anna (Kristen Bell) requests permission to marry Hans of the Southern Isles (Santino Fontana) and she flees Arendelle.  Anna follows her, hoping to save Arendelle from the endless winter, and is aided by an ice harvester named Kristoff (Jonathan Groff), his reindeer Sven, and Olaf (Josh Gad), the snowman built by Elsa and Anna as girls.  Elsa fears that she is a monster but it is her ability to love that saves Anna and Arendelle.  I loved hearing the orchestra play the music for all of the iconic songs, especially "For the First Time in Forever," "Love Is an Open Door," and "Let It Go" but I was really impressed by the score.  I particularly enjoyed the percussion mimicking the sounds of the ice cracking during the opening, the tuba as the visiting dignitaries are introduced to Elsa, the dramatic strings as the snow monster attacks Kristoff and Anna, and the harp as Elsa's hug thaws Anna.  The audience participation was a lot of fun because there were cheers and applause when each character appeared on screen for the first time and lots of very energetic boos every time Hans appeared (the crowd was very committed to booing Hans).  I loved both of the films in concert this week and I hope my sisters will want to go with me again!  The next films are Casablanca and How to Train Your Dragon (go here for tickets).

Wednesday, December 20, 2023

Love Actually in Concert

I was back at Abravanel Hall again last night with my sister Kristine and my brother-in-law Trent to see the movie Love Actually on the big screen while the Utah Symphony performed the score by Craig Armstrong live.  I love the films in concert series but I think this one is my favorite because I love this movie (it is one of my favorite Christmas movies) and it was so much fun to for me to see Kristine and Trent (this was their first film in concert) enjoying it!  This movie involves a series of love stories involving many different characters (played by an all-star cast) at Christmas time.  My favorite involves Sam (Thomas Sangster), an eleven-year-old boy mourning the recent loss of his mother, who turns to his step-father Daniel (Liam Neeson) to help him get the attention of his crush Joanna (Olivia Olson).  When Sam's plan, which involves playing drums during Joanna's song at the school Christmas concert, doesn't work, he runs through the airport on Christmas Eve to catch her before she returns home to America (after saying my favorite line in the movie, "Let's go get the shit kicked out of us by love.").  There are so many hilarious moments in this movie that made the audience laugh out loud, especially when the Prime Minister (Hugh Grant) dances, when aging rock star Billy Mack (Bill Nighy) records a Christmas version of "Love is All Around," when the shy actors John (Martin Freeman) and Judy (Joanna Page) act as stand-ins for a sex scene (these scenes got the loudest response), when the socially awkward Colin (Kris Marshall) thinks he can can get more attention from American girls, and when a salesman (Rowan Atkinson) elaborately wraps a Christmas present surreptitiously purchased by Harry (Alan Rickman) for another woman (another highlight for the audience).  The score has a pop sound and prominently features the piano and keyboard, drums, and guitars but there is also a lovely and plaintive theme played by the strings with variations that appear throughout the movie.  I loved the trumpets and trombones in "All You Need is Love" at the wedding of Peter (Chiwetel Ejiofor) and Juliet (Keira Knightley) and the clarinet solo when Sarah (Laura Linney) confirms that she is in love with Karl (Rodrigo Santoro).  The three of us had such a great time last night and I think I may have turned Kristine and Trent into fans of the films in concert series.  I definitely recommend getting a ticket to one of the remaining concerts (go here) this season.

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Live in Concert

Last night I got to see Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse while the score was played live by an orchestra and a DJ with a turntable.  It was awesome!  Seeing it on the big screen again reminded me of how much I love this movie and the soundtrack!  A Brooklyn teenager named Miles Morales (Shemeik Moore) is bitten by a radioactive spider and, after waking up with superpowers which disrupt his life, he returns to the alley where he was bitten.  He finds a secret lab with a supercollider created by Kingpin (Liev Schrieber) to access parallel universes in order to bring back alternate versions of his wife and son who died during an altercation with Spider-Man (Chris Pine).  Spider-Man is ultimately killed while trying to destroy the collider but not before several incarnations of Spider-Man from parallel universes appear.  These include a down-and-out Peter B. Parker/ Spider-Man (Jake Johnson), spunky Gwen Stacy/ Spider-Woman (Hailee Steinfeld), the cartoon Peter Porker/ Spider-Ham (John Mulaney), a monochromatic Spider-Noir (Nicolas Cage), and Peni Parker (Kimiko Glenn) a young Japanese girl who pilots a biomechanical spider.  They help Miles discover his powers and find the motivation to fight Kingpin as well as other familiar villains.  The animation in this movie is absolutely dazzling and the music by David Pemberton is just as exciting.  The score was performed by Broadway Sinfonietta, an orchestra composed of women (mostly WOC) conducted by Emily Marshall, and they were a lot of fun to watch because the music features lots of percussion (the percussion section took up half the stage).  I really loved all of the dramatic and exciting themes punctuated by the percussion, especially "Security Guard" as Miles runs away from school after discovering his powers, "Are You Ready to Swing?" as Spider-Man and Miles swing through the trees at Alchemax, and "Miles Morales Returns" when Miles joins the fight against Kingpin, but I also enjoyed the more poignant themes, such as "Destiny" (I loved the trombone) when Spider-Man asks Miles to destroy the collider before he dies, "On Your Way" when Miles learns the truth about the Prowler, "This Spark in You," when Miles' dad talks to him through his door, and "Saying Goodbye" when all of the Spider-People return to their own universes.  Another really cool element of the score is the use of unusual sounds recreated on a turntable, such as the scratching in "Into the Spider-Verse," the howls in "Green Goblin Fight," an elephant trumpeting in "The Prowler," and the clicking of a pen in "Kingpin Clicks," and DJ Damage was on hand to provide these effects (he was also really fun to watch because was so animated).  It is really cool when the songs featured in the soundtrack blend seamlessly into the score, particularly when Miles sings along to "Sunflower" by Post Malone and Swae Lee and when "What's Up Danger" by Blackway and Black Caviar (I love this song so much and I am not alone because the audience applauded for it) fades into "Miles Morales Returns."  I love seeing films in concert but I think this one just might be my favorite because the sights and sounds were so dynamic!  I hope Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse will be next!

Sunday, October 29, 2023

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 in Concert

Yesterday I saw Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 on the big screen at Abravanel Hall as the Utah Symphony played the score by Alexandre Desplat, one of my favorite movie composers, live.  This was so much fun for me because I have seen all of the previous movies in the franchise in this format and I have loved experiencing them all in such an immersive way!  As with all of the other concerts, many members of the audience came in costume (I was representing House Ravensclaw) and cheered out loud when all of the characters made their first appearance on screen.  There was thunderous applause when Professor McGonagall protects Harry from Snape and then fights a duel with him (my favorite scene in the movie) and when Neville kills Nagini.  In this final installment Harry must face Voldemort in the Battle of Hogwarts and it has the darkest tone with the highest stakes in the franchise and the score reflects this with lots of powerful themes featuring the brass and timpani.  I especially love "Dragon Flight" as Harry, Ron, and Hermione escape from Gringotts on the back of the dragon guarding the vaults, "Panic Inside Hogwarts" when McGonagall fights the epic duel with Snape, "Statues" when the professors cast spells of protection over Hogwarts, "Broomsticks and Fire" as Harry, Ron, and Hermione escape from the Room of Requirement, "Courtyard Apocalypse" when Voldemort and his minions attack Hogwarts, and "Showdown" when Harry finally confronts Voldemort.  There are also some really beautiful and haunting themes played by the strings, such as "Severus and Lily" when Harry looks into the pensieve and learns from Snape's memories that he has been protecting him all these years and "The Resurrection Stone" when Harry asks James, Lily, Sirius, and Remus to be with him when he surrenders to Voldemort (this scene made me cry the first time I saw it because it is such an emotional moment).  I also really loved that a variation of "Hedwig's Theme," originally composed by John Williams, is used multiple times because it is so iconic and reminds us of everything Harry, Ron, and Hermione have been through during their years at Hogwarts!  I have loved every performance in Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series but the Harry Potter concerts have been my favorite because I love these movies so much!  If you have not attended one I highly recommend it (go here for the remaining concerts in the series).

Saturday, September 9, 2023

Black Panther in Concert

Last night I was so happy to be back at Abravanel Hall for this season's first Utah Symphony concert.  The movie Black Panther was shown on the big screen while the orchestra performed the dramatic score by Ludwig Goransson.  I love this movie (it is one of my favorites from the MCU) and it was so much more immersive hearing the music performed live as I watched T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman) return to Wakanda after the death of his father to become king only to have Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan) challenge him for the throne in order to use vibranium-enhanced weapons to fight oppression around the world.  The score features the West African instrument known as the tama, or "talking drum," so the orchestra was joined by soloist Massamba Diop who actually played the tama on the original recording.  It was so interesting to watch Diop because the tama is an hour-glass shaped drum with two drumheads connected by leather tension cords and it was held between his arm and body which he would use to squeeze these cords to control the pitch as he hit the drumheads with his hands.  I would sometimes pay more attention to him than to the images on the screen!  The sound of the tama represents T'Challa/Black Panther and I loved hearing it in conjunction with a dramatic fanfare by the horns during key moments, such as the coronation, the car chase in Busan, the challenge, and the final battle with Killmonger.  I also loved the theme for Killmonger (one of the best villains in the MCU) which incorporates a mysterious piano melody accompanied by a harp and I was particularly moved by the variation played in the scene where Killmonger finally sees the sunset in Wakanda.  The most emotional moments are when T'Challa visits his father on the Ancestral Plane and the themes played by the strings, especially the cellos, during these scenes are beautiful and a bit mournful.  I really enjoy these films in concert and Black Panther is now my favorite because the score is one of the most exhilarating I've heard the Utah Symphony play in this series.  I highly recommend getting a ticket for tonight's performance (go here).

Note:  The other films in the series are Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, Frozen, and Casablanca with special performances of Love Actually and How to Train Your Dragon.  I'm looking forward to all of them (go here for more information and tickets).

Sunday, June 25, 2023

The Force Awakens in Concert

Last night I got to see The Force Awakens while the Utah Symphony played the score by John Williams live and it was so much fun!  Seeing this on the big screen again brought back memories of the excitement I felt when it was first released and hearing the music performed by the orchestra was such an immersive experience!  The First Order has risen from the ashes of the Empire and a new group of Resistance fighters emerges to defeat them, including Finn, a stormtrooper with a conscience, Poe Dameron, a daring pilot, and Rey, a scavenger who gets drawn into an adventure when she meets a droid carrying a secret.  They are helped by Han Solo, Chewbacca, and General Leia Organa but their actions are thwarted by Kylo Ren, a former Jedi apprentice struggling between the forces of good and evil.  The near capacity crowd at Abravanel Hall exploded in cheers and applause when the first dramatic note of the instantly recognizable fanfare played during the opening crawl and the applause continued when Finn, Poe, Rey, Han Solo, Chewbacca, and Leia (and the Millennium Falcon) appeared on screen for the first time.  I may or may not have screamed in an embarrassingly loud voice when Kylo Ren removed his helmet!  I really love the music in this movie because it incorporates a lot of the well-known themes from the previous movies, including the ones for Luke, Han, and Leia, but also includes new themes for Kylo Ren, Rey, and Snoke.  I especially love it when the score transitions back and forth between Kylo Ren's theme and Rey's theme during their light saber duel on Starkiller Base.  I also really like the thrilling themes when Rey and Finn escape from Jakku in the Millennium Falcon, when the Resistance arrives on Takodana, and when the Resistance attacks Starkiller Base.  I enjoyed every minute of watching the movie and listening to the music and, if you have never attended a film in concert with the Utah Symphony, I highly recommend it.  The movies for next season are Black Panther, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2, Frozen, and Casablanca.  Go here for information on subscribing to the Films in Concert series.

Sunday, February 26, 2023

An American in Paris in Concert

I love the movie An American in Paris so I was positively giddy with excitement to see it on the big screen while the Utah Symphony performed the score by George and Ira Gershwin last night!  Who could ask for anything more?  Jerry Mulligan (Gene Kelly) is an American ex-GI who decides to stay in Paris after the war to study painting.  One day he meets a lovely Parisian shopgirl named Lise Bouvier (Leslie Caron) and they immediately fall in love while dancing along the Seine.  However, Lise is engaged to Henri Baurel (Georges Guetary) and feels that she can't break her engagement because he kept her safe during the war.  Jerry also feels indebted to his sponsor, an American heiress (Nina Foch) who is in love with him, because she is helping him sell his paintings.  It takes an incredible dream sequence with Jerry and Lise dancing through Jerry's paintings of Paris for them to realize that they belong together.  I loved hearing the orchestra play all of those wonderful Gershwin songs, including "Embraceable You," "Nice Work If You Can Get It," "I Got Rhythm," "Love Is Here to Stay," "I'll Build a Stairway to Paradise," and "'S Wonderful."  However, my favorite moments from the score were Concerto in F for Piano and Orchestra and the American in Paris ballet.  The former is a piece that Adam (Oscar Levant), a composer living in the same building as Jerry, daydreams that he is performing and it is hilarious because he is also the conductor, several musicians, and members of the audience but I was too busy watching the same musicians in the Utah Symphony mimic him (especially the gong and the timpani) in those moments.  The latter is the music used during the extraordinary 17-minute ballet which is said to represent George Gershwin's impressions as an American visitor walking the streets of Paris and I especially loved the themes played by the oboe and horns.  I say this after every performance in the films in concert series but this was so immersive and I loved that the audience applauded after every number!  It was wonderful!

Note:  I had so much fun at this concert but I honestly cannot wait for the next one, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, because I get to hear "Kylo Ren Arrives at the Battle" performed live!  Go here for tickets.

Saturday, December 24, 2022

The Nightmare Before Christmas in Concert

Last night I got to see the movie The Nightmare Before Christmas while the Utah Symphony played the score by Danny Elfman live and it was so much fun!  I usually think of this as a Halloween movie (it is one of my favorites and I watch it at Halloween every year) but it also works really well for Christmas and this concert was a great way to start the holiday weekend!  Jack Skellington, the Pumpkin King and leader of Halloween Town, is getting bored with scaring everyone with the same old tricks every year so, when he accidentally discovers Christmas Town while wandering through the woods, he decides that Christmas is a more appealing holiday and that he should take it over this year.  He has the best trick-or-treaters in Halloween Town, Lock, Shock, and Barrel, kidnap Santa Claus, assigns the rest of the residents the job of making toys, which are terrifying, and delivers them with a disastrous result.  Will Santa Claus be able to escape from the Oogie Boogie and save Christmas in time?  Only Tim Burton could dream up such a macabre, yet strangely enchanting, world filled with quirky characters brought to life with brilliant stop-motion animation.  The sold-out crowd at Abravanel Hall was in a really festive mood and there were cheers and applause when each character first appeared on the screen (the Mayor of Halloween Town got the loudest applause), when Jack first visits Christmas Town, when Sally escapes from Dr. Finkelstein, and when Jack rescues Santa and Sally from Oogie!  Hearing the Utah Symphony play Danny Elfman's iconic score was such an immersive experience!  I especially enjoyed the chimes in "This is Halloween" (the people around me sang this song out loud), the themes played by the brass in "What's This?" and "Kidnap the Sandy Claws," the themes played by the woodwinds in "Making Christmas" and "Oogie Boogie's Song," and the plaintive melody played by the strings in "Sally's Song."  I thoroughly enjoyed all of it!  I don't think I will ever tire of Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series because attending these performances has become one of my favorite things to do!  The next Film in Concert will be An American in Paris (go here for tickets) and I can't wait!

Sunday, October 30, 2022

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 in Concert

The very first Film in Concert that I saw with the Utah Symphony was Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone and I absolutely loved it!  I have since seen the next five movies in the franchise on the big screen with the orchestra playing the score live and was thrilled to see the penultimate movie, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1, yesterday afternoon.  One of the things I love about these concerts is all of the audience participation!  There was the usual house roll call (three cheers for Ravenclaw) and lots of applause (or boos as the case may be) for all of the characters when they appeared on screen for the first time (the loudest was for, rather appropriately, Hagrid after the recent passing of Robbie Coltrane).  These movies have been getting progressively darker in tone with higher stakes and this one finds Harry (Daniel Radcliffe), Ron (Rupert Grint), and Hermione (Emma Watson) on the run in search of the Horcruxes that will enable them to defeat Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes).  The score for this movie, composed by Alexandre Desplat (who is one of my favorite film composers), is incredibly moody and atmospheric.  All of the music for the action sequences, including "Sky Battle" when Harry and his friends are attacked by Voldemort as he is moved by members of the Order of the Phoenix, "The Ministry of Magic" when they are attacked by Death Eaters, "Bathilda Bagshot" when Harry and Hermione are attacked in Godric's Hollow, "Captured and Tortured" when Harry and his friends are chased by the Snatchers through the forest, and "Rescuing Hermione" when they escape from Malfoy Manor, are menacing and intense.  There are also some incredibly plaintive themes, including "Oblivion" when Hermione erases all trace of herself from her parents' memories, "Godric's Hollow Graveyard" when Harry finds his parents' graves, and "Farewell to Dobby" when they bury their friend after he saves them (this always brings a tear to my eyes).  My favorites are "Destroying the Locket" with beautiful themes played by the woodwinds when the Patronus appears in the woods and "The Elder Wand" with dramatic timpani and brass when Voldemort opens Dumbledore's tomb.  This was so much fun, especially during Halloween weekend, and I am now eagerly anticipating the final movie in the franchise.

Note:  If you have never attended a Film in Concert with the Utah Symphony, I highly recommend it because it is so immersive!  The remaining concerts include The Nightmare Before Christmas, An American in Paris, and The Force Awakens.  Go here for more information.

Sunday, September 25, 2022

The Goonies in Concert

Last night's Utah Symphony concert featured The Goonies on the big screen while the orchestra played the score by Dave Grusin live.  This movie is such a nostalgic favorite of mine so it was really fun!  The Walsh family is facing a foreclosure on their house so it can be bulldozed to make room for a golf course.  Mikey Walsh (Sean Astin) is spending a final night with his friends, a group of quirky misfits known as the Goonies, including Chunk (Jeff Cohen), Mouth (Corey Feldman), and Data (Ke Huy Quan).  They end up exploring in the attic and find a 1632 doubloon and a map which they believe will lead to a long lost treasure hidden by the pirate One-Eye Willy.  Mikey convinces his friends to use the map to find the treasure because that will enable his family to stop the foreclosure and they are eventually joined by Mikey's older brother Brand (Josh Brolin), Brand's crush Andy (Kerri Green), and Andy's friend Stef (Martha Plimpton).  The map takes them to a series of tunnels leading to a grotto where they find One-Eye Willy's ship, the Inferno.  All they have to do is elude all of the booby traps as well as the Fratelli crime family, made up of Ma (Anne Ramsey), Jake (Robert Davi), Francis (Joe Pantoliano), and Sloth (John Matuszak), who are in hot pursuit.  This movie features a lot of really exhilarating action sequences and the score complements them so well.  I loved the main theme, "Fratelli Chase," because it is so stirring and the brass is featured very heavily with a fun fanfare by the trumpets.  It is first heard during the police chase after the Fratellis break Jake out of jail and it is repeated throughout as the Goonies travel through the tunnels and when they fight the Fratellis on the Inferno.  I also enjoyed the use of the Bond theme and the Superman theme.  As always, hearing the score played live was such an immersive experience and I loved all of the audience participation!  People cheered enthusiastically for all of the iconic lines (especially "Hey You Guys!" and "Goonies Never Say Die!").  I had such a great time last night and, if you haven't attended a film in concert with the Utah Symphony, I highly recommend doing so.  Next in the series is Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part One in October (go here for tickets).

Saturday, August 13, 2022

Jurassic World in Concert

Watching a movie on the big screen while a symphony orchestra plays the score live is so much fun because it is such an immersive experience.  It is one of my favorite activities because it combines my love of film and my love of symphonic music!  Last night I was so happy to be back at Abravanel Hall for Jurassic World while the Utah Symphony played the score by Michael Giacchino (who is becoming one of my favorite movie composers).  This is my favorite movie in the Jurassic World trilogy and my second favorite in the franchise (after Jurassic Park) so I really enjoyed seeing it again.  Twenty years after the incident on Isla Nublar, the new and improved Jurassic World theme park is a success but profits are slowing down because the public is no longer awe-struck by the dinosaurs.  The owner of the park (Irrfan Khan) wants a dinosaur that is bigger, faster, and scarier to impress the public so Dr. Wu (BD Wong) genetically engineers the Indominus Rex.  Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), the director of operations at the park, invites her nephews Zach (Nick Robinson) and Gray (Ty Simkins) for a weekend at the park but doesn't have time for them and they eventually take off on their own.  The owner of the park is concerned about the safety of the Indominus Rex enclosure and asks Owen Grady (Chris Pratt), a Velociraptor expert, to inspect it.  Grady is horrified because the genetically modified dinosaur is an unknown factor and its behavior cannot be predicted.  Eventually, the Indominus Rex escapes from its enclosure and threatens Zach and Gray.  The head of security (Vincent D'Onofrio), who wants to weaponize the Velociraptors, releases them into the park to attack the Indominus Rex and an epic battle ensues.  The themes played by the percussion (I loved the timpani and the gong) and the horns are ominous and menacing during the many chase scenes and there is a particularly affecting theme played by the piano and strings when Claire and Grady watch one of the dinosaurs die.  I also really enjoyed the callbacks to the original score by John Williams when Zach and Gray discover the abandoned remains of the visitor's center from the old Jurassic Park.  The entire score is incredibly thrilling and, as if often the case, I found myself watching the orchestra rather than the screen (especially all of the percussion).  I loved it!  This concert is being performed again tonight (go here for tickets) and I recommend it for the whole family (it is a great way to introduce kids to the symphony).

Note:  The Films in Concert for the 2022-2023 season are The Goonies, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1, The Nightmare Before Christmas, An American in Paris, and Star Wars: The Force Awakens (squeal).  They all sound like so much fun (go here for tickets).

Sunday, February 27, 2022

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince in Concert

Last night the Utah Symphony performed Nicholas Hooper's score for Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince while showing the movie as part of its Films in Concert Series and it was so much fun!  It was such an immersive experience with lots of audience participation.  There was a house roll call (three cheers for Ravenclaw) before the show and then boisterous applause when every main character appeared on the screen (the loudest was, rather unexpectedly, for Professor McGonagall).  This particular movie is one of my favorites in the franchise because the tone is much darker and the stakes are higher for every character.  As Harry (Daniel Radcliffe), Ron (Rupert Grint), and Hermione (Emma Watson) begin year six at Hogwarts, Professor Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) convinces a former potions professor named Horace Slughorn (Jim Broadbent) to return to the school.  He enlists Harry's help to get Slughorn to reveal a secret about Tom Riddle which could help them stop Voldemort's reign of terror. Meanwhile, Draco (Tom Felton) is also given a dangerous assignment which eventually brings tragedy to Hogwarts and suspicion upon Snape (Alan Rickman).  The ominous score reflects this darker tone, particularly in "Snape & the Unbreakable Vow," "Into the Pensieve," "Malfoy's Mission," "The Drink of Despair," and "Inferi in the Firestorm."  There are also some some really fun and exuberant themes, such as "Wizard Wheezes" and "Ron's Victory," which provide some comic relief.  I really loved the harp in "Harry & Hermione" because it is such a poignant moment in the movie since, even though the relationship woes are meant to be lighthearted, this is when the characters admit that they have feelings for Ginny and Ron, respectively.  I also loved the cello in "Dumbledore's Farewell" because it is so mournful as the students raise their wands in tribute (this scene always gives me goosebumps).  The music really provides so much of the tension and emotion in this movie so hearing it performed live added much to the experience of watching it.  If you have never attended one of these concerts, I highly recommend doing so!  Conductor Conner Covington teased that the final two movies in the franchise might be coming next season!  I can't wait until the 2022-2023 season announcement to see what the films will be!

Saturday, October 30, 2021

Back to the Future in Concert

I think it is common knowledge by now that I am a huge fan of Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series!  I am pretty sure that I have been to all of them starting with the very first one, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, and last night I went to the latest, Back to the Future.  It has been a really long time since I watched this movie and I had forgotten how funny it is (I laughed out loud at Huey Lewis as a judge for the Battle of the Bands).  I was also surprised by how well it holds up after more than thirty years since its release!  Needless to say, I had a great time seeing it again on the big screen while the orchestra played the score by Alan Silvestri live.  Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) meets his eccentric friend Emmett "Doc" Brown (Christopher Lloyd) to test his latest invention, a time machine made out of a DeLorean powered by plutonium.  When they are surprised by Libyan terrorists, who are not happy about having their plutonium stolen, Marty flees in the DeLorean and travels back to 1955.  He eventually finds Doc but he also inadvertently disrupts the meeting between his parents, Lorraine (Lea Thompson) and George (Crispin Glover), which puts his own existence in jeopardy.  Will he get his parents back together?  Will Doc be able to get him back to the future?  Silvestri's score adds so much excitement to the movie and I especially enjoyed the themes played when Marty is being chased by the Libyans before he travels to 1955 and when he is chased by Biff (Thomas F. Wilson) through the town square on an improvised skateboard.  The score also creates an almost unbearable feeling of tension and suspense (especially with all of the brass) when Marty and Doc face obstacle after obstacle as they try to harness the lightning from a storm to power the DeLorean and it is surprisingly poignant when Marty is reunited with Doc in 1985.  Another fun element to these concerts is the audience participation, which is encouraged.  There was lots of cheering and applause, especially when George punches Biff and when he kisses Lorraine at the Enchantment Under the Sea dance!  Seeing a film in concert is such a fun and immersive experience so I highly recommend getting a ticket for Back to the Future tonight or for one of the other films in concert later this season (go here for information and tickets).

Saturday, September 11, 2021

Return of the Jedi in Concert

Last night I saw Star Wars: Return of the Jedi on the big screen while the Utah Symphony performed the iconic score by John Williams live (I also saw Star Wars: A New Hope and Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back in this format so it was fun to complete the original trilogy).  I really love the Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series (I subscribed this season) because hearing the music performed live while watching the movie is such an immersive experience!  In this installment, Luke Skywalker, Princess Leia, Lando Calrissian, Chewbacca, C-3PO, and R2-D2 rescue Han Solo from the clutches of Jabba the Hut before joining once again with the Rebel Alliance to stop the Emperor from rebuilding the Death Star.  There is an epic battle on Endor (with some adorable Ewoks) and a thrilling final confrontation between Luke and Darth Vader!  The music during these scenes, "The Forest Battle" and "The Return of the Jedi," is incredibly stirring filled with lots of brass and percussion and these were my favorite themes.  I also got goosebumps every time "The Imperial March" played because it reminded me of how scared I was of Darth Vader when I first saw these movies!  It was so fun to see this with a large and rowdy crowd (it was the biggest crowd I've seen at Abravanel Hall since the pandemic started).  There was a lot of enthusiastic audience participation and the applause was especially loud when the the "Main Theme" played during the opening crawl, when Princess Leia defeated Jabba the Hut, when Luke reunited with Yoda on Dagobah, when the Ewoks defeated all of the stormtroopers, when Han Solo told Leia that he loved her, when Darth Vader rescued Luke from the Emperor, and when Anakin, Obi-Wan, and Yoda appeared as force ghosts at the celebration.  I really enjoyed this performance and I highly recommend seeing one of the films in concert coming up this season (Back to the Future, Home Alone, and Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince).

Saturday, February 29, 2020

Singin' in the Rain in Concert

I am such a big fan of Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series and going to these concerts has become one of my favorite things to do!  Having the orchestra play the score while the movie is shown on the screen above them adds so much to the experience because it makes the music come alive!  I have especially enjoyed the movies in the Harry Potter and Star Wars series (they are continuing next season) but I have been giddy with anticipation ever since Singin' in the Rain was announced because I really love this movie and I think it is perfect for this format!  It is filled with big song and dance numbers, including "Fit as a Fiddle (And Ready for Love)," "Make 'Em Laugh," "You Were Meant for Me," "Beautiful Girl," "Moses Supposes," "Good Morning," "Singin' in the Rain," "Would You?," "Broadway Melody," and "You Are My Lucky Star," and hearing the orchestra play these songs live was amazing (I would sometimes catch myself watching the musicians instead of the action on the screen)!  The audience applauded after each number as if it was traditional concert and it was so much fun!  I had a huge smile on my face as soon as Gene Kelly, Donald O'Connor, and Debbie Reynolds appeared on the screen with rain coats and umbrellas.  That smile stayed on my face as silent film stars Don Lockwood (Kelly) and Lina Lamont (Jean Hagen) have a hard time transitioning to talking pictures and must use an aspiring actress named Kathy Seldon (Reynolds) to dub all of Lina's lines.  This movie is filled with comedy, romance, and wonderful performances from Hollywood legends (and the Utah Symphony).  It was just delightful and, whether you are a fan of the movie or a fan of the Utah Symphony (or both if you are like me), I highly recommend getting a ticket to tonight's concert (go here for tickets if there are any to be had).

Note:  I would sometimes see the musicians looking up at the screen to watch the movie when they weren’t playing.  This made me smile even wider!

Saturday, December 21, 2019

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix in Concert

I am so happy that I am finally on winter break (it has been a rough week) and it was really nice to begin it with such a fun concert last night!  The Utah Symphony continued its Films in Concert series with Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix shown on the big screen while the orchestra performed the score by Nicholas Hooper (with variations on themes composed by John Williams) live.  In Year Five at Hogwarts School for Witchcraft and Wizardry, Voldemort (Ralph Finnes) is back with a strange connection to Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) but there are many, including the Minister for Magic Cornelius Fudge (Robert Hardy) and several of Harry's classmates, who do not believe it is true.  Fudge places Dolores Umbridge (Imelda Staunton) at Hogwarts as the new Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher in order to stop the students from preparing for an attack.  In response, Harry gathers a group of his friends, including Ron (Rupert Grint), Hermione (Emma Watson), Neville (Matthew Lewis), Luna (Evanna Lynch), Ginny (Bonnie Wright), and Cho (Katie Leung), to train with him in secret as Dumbledore's Army.  Eventually, Dumbledore's Army travels to the Ministry of Magic to fight the Death Eaters who are trying to retrieve a prophesy about Harry from the Department of Mysteries.  This leads to a confrontation in which Voldemort tries to possess Harry (I like how Harry mimics Voldemort's mannerisms throughout).  This movie is much darker than the ones preceding it so there are two really sinister themes, one for Dolores Umbridge and one for Voldemort's invasion of Harry's mind, which are introduced and feature lots of deep percussion (it was really cool to watch all of the drummers in unison).  There are also some more lighthearted themes, such as when Mad-Eye Moody (Brendan Gleeson) and other members of the Order of the Phoenix fly with Harry through London to get to Grimmauld Place and when Fred (James Phelps) and George (Oliver Phelps) disrupt the OWLs with their homemade fireworks, that are really whimsical and fun.  My favorite aspect of these concerts (especially the Harry Potter movies) is that audience participation is encouraged!  There is always a House roll call before the concert begins (I am Ravenclaw, obviously) and there are cheers (the loudest was for Dumbledore) and boos (the loudest was for Umbridge) for the various characters when they appear on screen (people booed every time Umbridge appeared on screen).  This concert was so much fun and I highly encourage getting a ticket to tonight's concert (go here for any remaining tickets).

Saturday, November 2, 2019

Coco in Concert

Last night I celebrated the Day of the Dead by watching the movie Coco while the Utah Symphony played the score by Michael Giacchino live.  It was so much fun because I think Coco is such a magical movie!  It is about the importance of family as a twelve year old boy named Miguel travels to the Land of the Dead on Dia de los Meurtos to uncover a mystery about his ancestors.  I loved seeing this on the big screen again because the images are so vibrant and colorful, especially the marigold petals that are used to guide family members to their loved ones and the spirit animals.  The music in this movie is absolutely wonderful and features some incredibly beautiful themes that incorporate Spanish guitars, a festive mariachi band, and the full orchestra.  The Utah Symphony, under the baton of Associate Conductor Conor Covington, performed it beautifully and I often found myself watching the two guitar players rather than the screen.  My favorite parts of the score are "Crossing the Marigold Bridge," "Cave Dwelling on the Past," and "Reunion Familiar de Rivera" because I find the story to be so moving in these scenes and the music really adds to the pathos.  I also really enjoyed the many version of the song "Remember Me," particularly the version by Miguel and Mama Coco (I may or may not have been crying at that point).  The crowd, many of whom were in costumes with sugar skull makeup, was so much fun because they cheered out loud multiple times.  I really love the Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series and this was such a fun movie to include.  I enjoyed it so much and I recommend getting a ticket for tonight's performance (go here).

Note:  There was a fantastic mariachi band performing before the show and there was an ofrenda in the lobby featuring pictures of famous composers (so clever).

Saturday, September 7, 2019

The Empire Strikes Back in Concert

I am such a fan of the Utah Symphony Films in Concert so I try to attend every concert in the series each season.  Last night Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back was shown on the big screen while the orchestra played the amazing score by John Williams live.  This movie begins after the Rebels destroy the Death Star.  Darth Vader searches the galaxy for Luke Skywalker, who begins his Jedi training with Yoda, leading to an epic confrontation between the two of them.  I love this movie so much and the experience of watching it with a really rowdy crowd, many dressed in costume, was so much fun!  The score is iconic and the orchestra played it brilliantly.  I was positively giddy when the instantly recognizable "Star Wars (Main Theme)" played during the opening crawl and so was the crowd because the cheering was very enthusiastic!  I particularly loved all of the brass during "The Imperial March (Darth Vader's Theme)."  This gave me chills every time it was repeated because I was so terrified of Darth Vader when I saw this movie for the first time.  I also really enjoyed "Han Solo and the Princess," especially when Han and Leia kissed each other!  The crowd was amazing and there were massive cheers when Luke, Leia, Han Solo, Chewbacca, Darth Vader, C-3PO, R2-D2, and Lando Calrissian appeared on the screen for the first time but the character that got the loudest applause was Yoda!  My favorite scenes were during the Battle of Hoth when Luke brings down the AT-AT walkers, when Yoda lifts Luke's X-wing fighter out of the swamp using the Force, when Leia tells Han that she loves him before he is frozen in carbonite, and when Darth Vader tells Luke that he is his father after their lightsaber duel.  It has been a long time since I've seen this movie on the big screen and I certainly enjoyed it last night.  This concert will be repeated again tonight and I highly recommend getting a ticket (go here).

Note:  Abravanel Hall was visited by Emperor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) and Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) who were attending Fan-X next door!  It was quite exciting!

Friday, June 21, 2019

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire in Concert

Last night was so much fun because I got to go to another performance in the Utah Symphony's Films in Concert series.  The movie Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, which chronicles Harry's fourth year at Hogwarts as he competes in the Triwizard Tournament, was shown on the big screen while the orchestra played Patrick Doyle's dynamic score live.  The themes of this movie are much darker than those of the previous movies in the series so the score is a bit more sinister and mournful, particularly "Voldemort" and "The Death of Cedric."  The orchestra played it beautifully and I especially enjoyed all of the brass and percussion!  Conductor Conner Gray Covington encouraged audience participation and he took a roll call of the four Houses of Hogwarts before the concert began (I, of course, belong to Ravenclaw).  The audience cheered boisterously when all of the main characters first appeared on screen, when Viktor Krum was introduced in the Quidditch World Cup Final, when the students from Beauxbatons and Durmstrang entered the Great Hall, when Harry defeated the Hungarian Horntail dragon in the first challenge, when Neville Longbottom danced at the Yule Ball, when Hermione told Ron off for not asking her to the dance, when Harry saved both Ron and Fleur's sister in the second challenge, and when Harry escaped from Voldemort.  I loved watching this movie with such an enthusiastic crowd, many of whom were in costume, and I highly recommend getting a ticket for the concerts tonight or tomorrow night (go here).

Note:  I'm looking forward to Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix and Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince next season.
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