By Tom Service

Published: Sunday, 24 March 2024 at 05:00 AM


They call it ‘needle drop’: when directors use pre-existing music and drop the needle on a virtual record for an instant underscore. No need to hire a composer to write a new score, just drop the needle! And when film-makers drop their needles and feature classical music in their films, they release a special power that’s only latently realised when the same music is played in concert halls. These are often then translated into viral memes that travel around the internet and becoming inexplicably linked with the film’s identity in popular culture.

Creating moments of emotional intensity

It’s not only that they use Barber’s Adagio for Strings (which we named as one of the best works by Barber), say, for its ability to turn any image on screen into an acme of emotional intensity, as Oliver Stone does at the end of Platoon, when Willem Dafoe collapses to the ground and raises his arms to a pitiless heaven. The power of these moments changes the music itself, giving it new resonances and associations.