Great movie, horrible music!
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alotanor — 11 years ago(February 13, 2015 07:26 PM)
I don't think it's Grand Valse Brillante. I just listened to it.
From Wikipedia
"The Third Man Theme" (also known as "The Harry Lime Theme") is an instrumental written and performed by Anton Karas for the soundtrack to the film The Third Man (1949). -
manderstoke — 11 years ago(February 14, 2015 07:37 PM)
You may be right. I just found several passages that are so similar that I thought they had to be "lifted" from Mr. Chopin. Parenthetically, everyone raves about the music from THE THIRD MAN, but I don't hear any accolades for Addison's composition for THE MAN BETWEEN, which I think is superb. Sadly, the only available recording is about three minutes long. Pity.
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greenbudgie — 11 years ago(December 10, 2014 05:33 AM)
I liked the Caf Mozart sequence. There was nice zither music played at that point. But the instrument got a bit strident at times. It really jangled my nerves now and then. I don't if it was intentional to cause tension.
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sheezcrazy — 11 years ago(December 13, 2014 03:03 PM)
The absence of Anton Karas's zither would really flatten the movie for me. I think the music added to the tension, darkness and mystique. And the man was a gifted artist: the zither, I'm told, is very difficult to master.
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lubin-freddy — 11 years ago(December 18, 2014 08:18 AM)
The whole film shows the world at strange angles, both literally and figuratively. The music works on that level, and anything else more conventional would not have, at least in the same way.
Don't lend your hand to raise no flag atop no ship of fools. -
kalelabud — 9 years ago(December 01, 2016 11:41 PM)
every carol reed movie shows the world in strange angles. the fallen idol shows the world in strange angles, literally and figuratively, and it doesn't have a unfit song played till exhaustion to ruin the movie.
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Ioan_DuRacell — 11 years ago(December 19, 2014 07:09 PM)
Lol just going to post a thread about how this has the best theme song of all time SMH
https://vimeo.com/user27342627 -
jnathan — 11 years ago(February 12, 2015 08:12 PM)
Roger Ebert once said "Has there ever been a film where the music more perfectly suited the action than in Carol Reed's The Third Man?" I agree with his opinion, which bears far more merit than the OP.
My vote history:
http://us.imdb.com/mymovies/list?l=9354248 -
romefan123 — 11 years ago(February 20, 2015 09:23 AM)
Evidently he wrote that before
Assassination of Jesse James
. Or even
Memento
. Listen to those scoresthat's how you do it.
Found the music quirky and harsh at timesunbearable at other times. Does nothing to add to this story. In fact, it takes away from it. Could have maybe been a highlight of one scene, perhapsthat would have been a reasonable compromise.
"You know it" Snake Karate Kid III -
karnevilelp — 11 years ago(March 16, 2015 12:16 AM)
The music in a movie is a very important aspect for me, I totally agree with this:
Found the music quirky and harsh at timesunbearable at other times. Does nothing to add to this story. In fact, it takes away from it. Could have maybe been a highlight of one scene, perhapsthat would have been a reasonable compromise. -
degree7 — 10 years ago(May 12, 2015 02:07 AM)
The music was brilliant.
It adds to the eastern european mystique of post-war Vienna. In fact, the music and the film were made for each other. A bit like "tubular bells" and "The Exorcist."
~ That's much too vulgar a display of power, Karras. -
Jamesir_Bensonmum — 11 years ago(March 22, 2015 05:29 PM)
The zither music fits the intended mood of the film which is leaning toward the absurd.
Sure, the film has all of the trappings on a tense noir post-war drama, but part of the film's brilliance is that it was NOT those things (at least not for the most part) it only looked like that. People who expect this film to be a classic-style noir drama are either disappointed when it isn't, or (more frequently) totally miss the fact that it isn't.
If they miss that fact, and saw the film was supposed to be a noir drama, then they missed the best aspects of it,and probably were again disappointed.
The film's quirkiness is not only embodied by the seemingly out-of-place zither music, but also by the main characters, who seem to have the opposite personalities than they are "supposed" to have (if this was truly a dark noir drama)
Holly Martins is "supposed" to be the heroic protagonist, but he is actually a sand-sack loser of a man, and a lot more dim-witted than he thinks he is. Harry lime as the "antagonist villain" is actually a charming and likable chap. He's the kind of guy you'd like to have a few beers with and smoke cigars with well, except for the fact that he (for all intents and purposes) murdered innocent sick children with his watered-down penicillin.
Sad-sack Holly went through the film with a swagger as if he was one of the heroes from the poorly-written dime store novels that he writes, but that was all a false swagger, which came to a head when he fully assumed he was "going to get the girl", probably like the heroes in his books, but was ever-so-wrong about that.
The music fits that mood very, very well.