I just saw it and I was thinking about how much I really enjoyed the music. The James Taylor - Walkin On A Country Road and Alanis Morrisette - I'm Sorry. At first I thought it was kid of weird, but when I asked myself why, I found myself enjoying it. Also the guitar music background was nice. I think if you actually saw this movie without that music it would have seemed longer, maybe too long, and not as flowing. The music was very good.
I love James Taylor's songs, especially "Ön A Country Road" however transporting this American sounding song to the Spanish countryside seemed a little incongruous. Perhaps just the guitar parts would have worked better.
Yes, I rolled my eyes a bit at the music choices, especially with the similarities to the Garden State soundtrack. The Shins? Check. Coldplay? Check. Nick Drake? Check. While I love Nick Drake, the similar combination was a but formulaic.
The Alanis Morisette song was annoying.
Loved the guitar soundtrack and James Taylor, although I agree with a previous poster that it was a bit out of place in Europe.
Can you spell "over-reaction", boys and girls?.... I knew you could. How in hell can music ruin a movie? It may detract from or lessen the effect of a movie, but ruin it? I think some people must have a tenuous grasp on the meaning of this film.
Ditto here. Yeah, it was superimposition of American music from time to time -- but the soundtrack in general was varied, and it included a lot of music that was from vaguely to very regional. Also, you had an American and a Canadian making the trip -- not to mention the fact that they _do_ listen to the Shins et al. in Ireland, and the Netherlands, and in Spain, too. I think if all the music had been strictly regional and/or specifically religious and contemplative, that would have resulted in a different complaint. I generally don't like the imposition of American culture into places where it doesn't belong (Disney movies drive me crazy with this -- Eddie Murphy as a Chinese dragon, complete with the occasional street talk? really?), but it didn't seem especially intrusive or off-point here.
To be fair, I guess I wouldn't have been bothered by a soundtrack that was entirely "foreign" to the surly American, to go along with the idea of a character needing to go meet reality as it was, rather than having it all come to him in his typical controlled and affluent American environment. Isn't that kind of what travel is about anyway? So I guess you could make the point that cutting the pop tunes might have resulted in a positive effect for the storyline. But "ruined the movie"? Nah. Some pretty good music in there, actually.
As for Morrisette's "Thank You," I continue to be amazed at how anybody could not absolutely love that song, especially anybody who understands the sense of it. Different strokes, I guess.
As for Morrisette's "Thank You," I continue to be amazed at how anybody could not absolutely love that song, especially anybody who understands the sense of it. Different strokes, I guess.
Great song, made me really choke up. I thought it fit well with this movie.
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Couldn't have said it better. I thought the music was beautiful, fitting and well-chosen. To each his own, I suppose. But I agree with you, jmin-1 and the others who enjoyed the music in this beautiful film. ______________________________________
I would normally agree about James Taylor, but the clip was a nice bit of comedic relief that played off the James Taylor reference a few minutes prior in the movie.