HOW DOES THE FILM INDUSTRY INFLUENCE MUSIC
True Romance is a 1993 romantic thriller film about a man who accidentally ends up falling in love with a 'call girl.' The two then get married and end up with a suitcase full of drugs of which they take on the run and try to sell. The pair are then hunted down and killed by the person who originally owned the drugs and just happens to be part of the Sicilian Mafia.
In April 2014, The 1975 released the song 'Robbers.' This took huge influences from True Romance so much so that the entire video for the song was based solely on the film, focusing on the female character, Alabama Whitman. The video tells a similar story in the sense that it is two lovers who attempt to 'rob' a store in an effort to fuel their drug and alcohol addictions. As you follow the plot of the video, you almost see both characters experience the same fate as that of the characters in the film.
The video for Robbers was directed by a man called Tim Mattia who is a photographer and director who has seen much of work acknowledged by many of the major music companies and distributors in the world. He has worked with artists
including slipknot, Coldplay, Metallica, 30 seconds to Mars, queen and Amy Winehouse.
The above images make it obvious that the True Romance has had a huge influence on the filming of Robbers. Many of the shots, people/objects in shot are shot in similar ways and convey the same meanings.
Taking True Romance as an example, it is easy to see the ways in which film can influence music regardless of when the film and music are produced.
In this case, it's not necessarily evident in the song itself, but the video for Robbers takes many of the shots and characteristics of from True Romance to creates an incredibly similar text.
For example, looking at characteristics, both characters in the film and in the music videos share very similar traits. Not in just the obvious sense that they're two couples but the idea that they all have a careless attitude. The characters in film seem to become so distracted by their relationship that what's surrounding them becomes almost irrelevant and this is quite obviously repeated in the Robbers video in the sense that the characters are so heavily involved with each other that, regardless of what they're doing and where they are, they're still completely in ore of each other.
The props that appear in both films are not only the same but have significant meanings and connotations. For example, looking at the gun in both texts, it's obvious that they're the same item but they also have very similar roles in the story line. Both guns are used as a form of protection and as a weapon but not entirely with the intention to harm others. Both films show the gun as being used as a last resort which again is the director taking ideas from True Romance but using them in a flattering sense. This is done by almost objectifying the gun as a symbol of their relationship rather than making it seem like it is a weapon.