Steven Spielberg & John Williams: The Divine Union of Film and Music

Steven Spielberg & John Williams: The Divine Union of Film and Music

Published: January 17, 2012 @ 12:47 pm
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By Guy Magar



Forty years. Twenty-five films. Thirteen Oscar nominations for original score.


In honor of my alma mater, The American Film Institute and its “Master Class” celebrating the glorious collaboration between Steven Spielberg and John Williams, I salute them as the greatest and most productive divine union between a director and a composer in the history of motion pictures.

In their honor, and with utmost admiration, I offer this excerpt from my memoir, “Kiss Me Quick Before I Shoot: A Filmmaker’s Journey into the Lights of Hollywood and True Love.”




I believe the marriage of film and music is one of the most gloriously natural, most cosmically intended unions in the human experience. Think about how many movies you could identify if you heard just a few chords of their theme music: "Rocky," "E.T.," "Star Wars," "The Godfather," "Gone with the Wind," "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly" are the easy ones.

Wouldn’t you instantly recognize the five notes used for alien communication in "Close Encounters of the Third Kind?" And these two deep base notes: “DAAA DUMMM.” Anything come to mind? "Jaws," maybe? Since he composed four of the above along with so many others, for me and for most filmmakers, Williams is the reigning lord of composers.

I’ve literally had dreams while making my movies that somehow I met John through my buddy Steven S. (Hey, I was dreamin’) and was watching him score my movie. It sounded awesome! But then I had to wake up!

In fairness to the talented composers I have worked with, I am deeply proud of all my movie scores, and very grateful for their dedicated work.

Italian maestro Ennio Morricone’s beautifully haunting flutes and clarinets in "The Mission" (one of De Niro’s few miscasts) makes it one of the most glorious soundtracks of all time. Ennio also composed all the masterful Sergio Leone Westerns, the ones that launched Clint Eastwood’s career with his infamous character: “The Man With No Name.”

One of my special career thrills was working with Tuco, the “Ugly” in "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly."

The brilliant actor Eli Wallach was cast in the "Family Honor" series I directed. When I called him Tuco on the set, he would give me that evil, cold-blooded “I will eat your heart out for breakfast!” look with that killer smile.

Eli is a class-act professional. I was privileged to meet him and to work with him. Eli received an Honorary Oscar in 2010 at the Academy’s Governors Awards. His latest film role is in Oliver Stone’s "Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps." Eli is 95 years of age. A salute, Eli.

I had the great Bill Conti, who did the music for "Rocky," at my home, trying to talk him into working for a poor indie filmmaker for the measly salary budgeted on my ultra-low-budget film "Lookin’ Italian."

Tags: American Film Institute, Gone with the Wind, John Williams, Movies, music, Steven Spielberg
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Guy Magar is a director/writer/producer in film and TV with over 100 production credits from "La Femme Nikita" to "Dark Avenger" to "Lookin’ Italian" to "Premier Chefs." He has taught creative filmmaking to thousands of attendees of his Action/Cut Filmmaking Seminars and discovers new young talent through his annual Action/Cut Short Film Competition. He is the author of his just-published memoir “Kiss Me Quick Before I Shoot: A Filmmaker’s Journey into the Lights of Hollywood and True Love. He blogs at www.kissmequickbeforeishoot.com.

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