Well, it wasn't very effective marketing, clearly. It didn't seem to bring in the Rihanna fans
Actually, it is. Star Trek is perfection incarnate as created by Gene Roddenberry. To even think one can improve upon perfection is not only a crime, it's an obscenity.
Not to mention the unforgettable punk anthem from STIV.Star Trek has has pop-music tie-ins from the beginning. Gene Roddenberry infamously wrote clumsy lyrics for the TOS theme so that he could get half the profits from the sheet-music sales, which was the only way he expected to be able to make any money from the show. (The TOS theme was very much in the style of the popular dance music of the early '60s, a "Beyond the Blue Horizon" pastiche with a bossa nova rhythm.) Shaun Cassidy released a song based on "Ilia's Theme," "A Star Beyond Time," as a TMP tie-in. Both The Voyage Home and The Final Frontier had diegetic pop songs inserted into their scores and included on their soundtrack albums, "Market Street" for TVH and "The Moon's a Window to Heaven" for TFF. Enterprise, of course, had "Faith of the Heart" as its main title (and its pre-debut promos made heavy and effective use of the song "Wherever You Will Go"). And the 2009 movie, of course, had "Sabotage" and other contemporary music featured in the film.
Annoying you, apparently.What was the point of the Rhianna song?
It's been done at least since the 1950s.Its a movie. Attaching songs is more common now than the last time a Trek film came out.
It's been done at least since the 1950s.
And, before those, Disney's Silly Symphonies, in the making of which animator Ub Iwerks and composer/arranger Carl Stalling developed many of the techniques they would later use in the WB cartoons.That's why Warner Bros.' cartoon series were named Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies...
It's a publicity thing. The idea is not that it will lure Rhianna fans to the movie just to hear the song. The idea is to increase awareness of the movie among the general public, beyond the usual sci-fi crowd. People see the publicity about the Rhianna connection, they watch the music video, and they hear about the movie. It's advertising.
Plus, if you're lucky, you get a hit song, a hit soundtrack album, and maybe even a Best Song nomination. See TITANIC and "My Heart Will Go On."
And, honestly, it was worth a try. Remember, not too long ago people were complaining that Paramount wasn't doing enough to promote the movie. Now we have a big-name pop star promoting the movie and that's an issue?![]()
And, before those, Disney's Silly Symphonies, in the making of which animator Ub Iwerks and composer/arranger Carl Stalling developed many of the techniques they would later use in the WB cartoons.
True, of course, but I think those pretty much kept their musical focus throughout, while Looney Tunes and Merrie Melodies are mostly known today for being more comedy-focused, so the origin of their names has been obscured. Then again, I'm not much of a Disney fan, so I can't say for sure if the Silly Symphonies title went through the same kind of change.
I know movies have been associated with songs (even before sound movies) - what I meant was the idea of a cross-promotional song used for a film which is not a musical. I was thinking specifically of Doris Day, who would often record a single which would be released at the same time as the movie, but might only be heard in the opening credits of the actual film.It's been done since the beginning of sound film, and I mean that quite literally. The first "talkie" was a musical, The Jazz Singer. Many early comedies and romantic movies prominently featured songs that were highlighted by name in the opening credits. And most of the early sound cartoons were basically music videos
I know movies have been associated with songs (even before sound movies) - what I meant was the idea of a cross-promotional song used for a film which is not a musical.
I know movies have been associated with songs (even before sound movies) - what I meant was the idea of a cross-promotional song used for a film which is not a musical. I was thinking specifically of Doris Day, who would often record a single which would be released at the same time as the movie, but might only be heard in the opening credits of the actual film.
My wife had pet rat named Ben as a child. Named for the rat in the movie/song.Heck, many people don't remember any more that Michael Jackson's song "Ben" started out as the title song to a 1972 horror movie about a killer rat!![]()
My wife had pet rat named Ben as a child. Named for the rat in the movie/song.
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