I like how Quentin Tarantino works vinyl into his movies (Pam Grier's soul record collection in Jackie Brown and Robert Forster remarking how she never got into the "CD revolution", Michael Madsen spinning a Johnny Cash record -- complete with pops and clicks on the soundtrack -- in the second Kill Bill).
There's Jason Biggs and Christina Ricci meeting in record stores in Woody Allen's Anything Else. They talk about how they both prefer records on vinyl, with Jason Biggs saying "CDs sterilize the sound".
Throwing LPs zombies in Shaun of the Dead ("Purple Rain?" "No." "Sign of the Times?". "No." "Batman?" "Toss it.")
I know there's more...
― Grandma Frank, Saturday, 15 January 2005 15:04 (nineteen years ago) link
― Snappy (sexyDancer), Saturday, 15 January 2005 15:19 (nineteen years ago) link
― Hurting (Hurting), Saturday, 15 January 2005 15:30 (nineteen years ago) link
― Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Saturday, 15 January 2005 15:38 (nineteen years ago) link
― Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Saturday, 15 January 2005 15:39 (nineteen years ago) link
I guess the props buyer didn't think to check the copyright year on the back of the sleeve.
― Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Saturday, 15 January 2005 15:42 (nineteen years ago) link
― Hurting (Hurting), Saturday, 15 January 2005 16:21 (nineteen years ago) link
― john'n'chicago, Saturday, 15 January 2005 16:33 (nineteen years ago) link
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 15 January 2005 16:35 (nineteen years ago) link
― noodle vague (noodle vague), Saturday, 15 January 2005 18:08 (nineteen years ago) link
― scott seward (scott seward), Saturday, 15 January 2005 18:15 (nineteen years ago) link
― Magic City (ano ano), Saturday, 15 January 2005 18:16 (nineteen years ago) link
― milton porker, Saturday, 15 January 2005 18:18 (nineteen years ago) link
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Saturday, 15 January 2005 18:24 (nineteen years ago) link
Bolding is fun!
― milton porker, Saturday, 15 January 2005 18:26 (nineteen years ago) link
vague recall: is this anything to do with ilx arthur?
― Masked Gazza, Saturday, 15 January 2005 18:30 (nineteen years ago) link
Don't they famously play two songs that aren't actually back-to-back on the album?
― Vic Funk, Saturday, 15 January 2005 19:08 (nineteen years ago) link
― eddie hurt (ddduncan), Saturday, 15 January 2005 19:08 (nineteen years ago) link
― martin m. (mushrush), Saturday, 15 January 2005 19:17 (nineteen years ago) link
― Joseph McCombs (Joseph McCombs), Saturday, 15 January 2005 19:28 (nineteen years ago) link
O yeah! I don't know what the first one is but the second is Ruby Tuesday and the first wasn't yesterday's papers.
― Magic City (ano ano), Saturday, 15 January 2005 19:59 (nineteen years ago) link
― j blount (papa la bas), Saturday, 15 January 2005 20:10 (nineteen years ago) link
― j blount (papa la bas), Saturday, 15 January 2005 20:11 (nineteen years ago) link
― reo, Saturday, 15 January 2005 23:49 (nineteen years ago) link
Talented Mr. Ripley -- that's good one! Nice jazz!
That Hannah and her Sisters scene is nice. See, Mrs. Edward Burns, this doesn't suck like your movies!
Crumb! and American Splendor!
Requiem for a Dream. Drum-n-Bass turntable scene. That movie isn't that good!
Zebrahead: Good one too! Nice hip hop flick w/record store.
A Clockwork Orange: Possibly the greatest scene of all-time for vinyl fetishism... I heard that the "record shoppe" is now a fast-food joint. I want that store!
― TYG the Tiger -- TOING!!!, Sunday, 16 January 2005 05:01 (nineteen years ago) link
― Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Sunday, 16 January 2005 20:51 (nineteen years ago) link
― j.lu (j.lu), Monday, 17 January 2005 00:53 (nineteen years ago) link
― mark grout (mark grout), Monday, 17 January 2005 11:52 (nineteen years ago) link
Scratch: http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0143861"A feature-length documentary film about hip-hop DJing, otherwise known as turntablism."
― koogs (koogs), Monday, 17 January 2005 13:13 (nineteen years ago) link
― koogs (koogs), Monday, 17 January 2005 13:17 (nineteen years ago) link
― mark grout (mark grout), Monday, 17 January 2005 13:30 (nineteen years ago) link
spoilers...
it does get played but it keeps skipping back on itself so that the girl hears the 'i love you' half of the sentence but doesn't get to hear the bile that he finishes the sentence off with. ah, http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0039220/ right there on the front page.
― koogs (koogs), Monday, 17 January 2005 17:18 (nineteen years ago) link
― Colonel Poo (Colonel Poo), Monday, 17 January 2005 17:22 (nineteen years ago) link
― The Mad Puffin (The Mad Puffin), Monday, 17 January 2005 17:41 (nineteen years ago) link
― Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Monday, 13 June 2005 01:56 (eighteen years ago) link
― Ned Raggett (Ned), Monday, 13 June 2005 01:59 (eighteen years ago) link
― Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Monday, 13 June 2005 02:01 (eighteen years ago) link
― k/l (Ken L), Monday, 13 June 2005 02:06 (eighteen years ago) link
A buncha shit in Diner.
― C0L1N B... (C0L1N B...), Monday, 13 June 2005 02:08 (eighteen years ago) link
― autovac (autovac), Monday, 13 June 2005 02:15 (eighteen years ago) link
A buncha shit in Diner.Those are good ones.
The Big Chill - Kevin Kline smooches the Temptations' Anthology (I think).This was annoying because the fact that the veteran-of-the-sixties character was listening to the song, what was it - "Ain't To Proud To Beg"? - on a greatest hits compilation from the seventies was a red flag that the movie itself was a repackaging of sixties nostalgia/boomer self-congratulation rather than a potentially more interesting reexamination.
― k/l (Ken L), Monday, 13 June 2005 02:16 (eighteen years ago) link
― The Good Dr. Bill (The Good Dr. Bill), Monday, 13 June 2005 02:18 (eighteen years ago) link
THE BLUES BROTHERS, where Dan Akroyd (Elwood Blues) sits in his flophouse apartment listening to a Louis Jordan 78 on Decca.
In the 70's B-movie THANK GOD IT'S FRIDAY, a coked-up disco DJ puts a Motown record in a Casablanca album cover (trivia note: the soundtrack was made up entirely of disco songs from Motown and Casablanca artists).
― Rev. Hoodoo (Rev. Hoodoo), Monday, 13 June 2005 03:44 (eighteen years ago) link
― Rickey Wright (Rrrickey), Monday, 13 June 2005 03:47 (eighteen years ago) link
― joseph cotten (joseph cotten), Monday, 13 June 2005 03:48 (eighteen years ago) link
― Rev. Hoodoo (Rev. Hoodoo), Monday, 13 June 2005 03:53 (eighteen years ago) link
― fortunate hazel (f. hazel), Monday, 13 June 2005 04:27 (eighteen years ago) link
― Billy Dods (Billy Dods), Monday, 13 June 2005 12:25 (eighteen years ago) link
― N_RQ, Monday, 13 June 2005 12:33 (eighteen years ago) link
― Daniel Peterson (polkaholic), Monday, 13 June 2005 12:53 (eighteen years ago) link
Looking back over this thread, I see I brought up Antoine and Collette a few years back. I was making my way through the Doinel cycle at the time, and if memory serves, there is a vinyl scene in each of the sequels. I think it goes:
Antoine and Collette-Doinel work in pressing plant, gives Collette the first record he pressed. Stolen Kisses-Doinel attempts to learn the english language via a set of instructional lps. Bed & Board-I forget. Maybe he gets a set of child birthing lps? Love on The Run-Doinel's girlfriend works in a record store. Final scene takes place in a listening booth in said store.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 8 May 2008 18:12 (fifteen years ago) link
And finally on the Leaud front (even though he isn't in the scene), there's that bit in Last Tango wherein Maria Schneider is trying to plug in a record player using a faulty socket and she gets zapped. There is an old Elektra lp (w/the butterfly logo) on the turntable.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 8 May 2008 18:18 (fifteen years ago) link
And of course the barn dance sequence in The Giant Gila Monster with the most ridiculous dj'ing ever.
― zaxxon25, Thursday, 8 May 2008 18:46 (fifteen years ago) link
In "Juice" there's a nice one with one of the characters - Q, maybe? - practicing his set before a DJ contest.
― Oilyrags, Thursday, 8 May 2008 19:19 (fifteen years ago) link
"Every one of my records means something! The label, the producer, the year it was made. Who was copying whose style... who's expanding on that, don't you understand? When I listen to my records they take me back to certain points in my life, OK? Just don't touch my records, ever! You! The first time I met you? Modell's sister's high school graduation party, right? 1955. And Ain't That A Shame was playing when I walked into the door!" And this: "I mean, you wouldn't put the Charlie Parker in with the rock and roll, would you?" "I don't know ... Who's Charlie Parker?"
― Jazzbo, Thursday, 8 May 2008 19:43 (fifteen years ago) link
There's a killer scene in Fassbinder's "Chinese Roulette" that involves a precocious and bitter crippled adolescent girl sitting in an empty room listening to Kraftwerk's "Radio-Activity" LP. And the film starts with her kind of punishing her parents by listening to a classical LP at blistering volume.
― Drew Daniel, Thursday, 8 May 2008 19:56 (fifteen years ago) link
Oh man, "Killer of Sheep" - little girl sings along to Earth Wind and Fire in a closet. Man.
― Oilyrags, Thursday, 8 May 2008 20:03 (fifteen years ago) link
There's the opening sequence of Almost Famous with the beautiful shot of the vinyl turning
and the studio version of the Who's "Sparks" morphs into the Live At Leeds version, which Lester Bangs snatches off a radio station's turntable...except the live version wasn't released until 1995, and the scene was set in 1973. But whatever, it works.
― Sara Sara Sara, Thursday, 8 May 2008 20:09 (fifteen years ago) link
That Killer of Sheep scene is so good. Charles Burnett did a short called Only When It Rains in the 90s that has a major plot point about a guy and his collection of jazz lps.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 8 May 2008 23:16 (fifteen years ago) link
Diane Lane was on Conan the other night, promoting that Nick Sparks movie she did w/Richard Gere. The clip they played featured Lane's character putting on some 60s faux-Spector thing on her turntable and dancing around a bit before deciding to have drink.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Thursday, 25 September 2008 16:30 (fifteen years ago) link
Fitzcarraldo playing Caruso records as his riverboats hurtles down the river
― Tom D Gives You the Big Reassure (Tom D.), Thursday, 25 September 2008 16:33 (fifteen years ago) link
the film, I referenced earlier (with the scene of the high school teacher's beloved jazz records getting destroyed by his rowdy students) is actually The Blackboard Jungle...still sends shivers down me spine...
― henry s, Thursday, 25 September 2008 17:05 (fifteen years ago) link
Also from Almost Famous, there's an eight minute silent outtake of the family gathered round the turntable (not) listening to Stairway to Heaven, because they couldn't get permission to use it. It's pretty cool that they recorded it anyway
― Ismael Klata, Thursday, 25 September 2008 17:34 (fifteen years ago) link
I love Carole King and Todd Rundgren (and who don't?), but that scene in Virgin Suicides where the guys are playing their records over the phone to the gals is pretty cringe-worthy...
― henry s, Thursday, 25 September 2008 18:47 (fifteen years ago) link
documentary movie on record collectors:
Vinyl
― sleeve, Thursday, 25 September 2008 19:02 (fifteen years ago) link
In Copland, Stallone's desperate late-in-the-career bid for respect, his character (a half-deaf New Jersey cop) listens to Bruce Springsteen (Nebraska, I believe, but not sure) on scratchy vinyl. His love interest gives him the same album on CD later on.
It's actually the song "Stolen Car" from The River. And if I remember correctly, Stallone drops the needle in the wrong spot.
― QuantumNoise, Thursday, 25 September 2008 19:03 (fifteen years ago) link
In Copland, Stallone's desperate late-in-the-career bid for respect
For about 20 seconds, I was like, "They made a movie about the life of Aaron Copland...starring SYLVESTER STALLONE?!" before properly recognizing the title of the film in question (which I didn't see.)
― Myonga Vön Bontee, Thursday, 25 September 2008 20:45 (fifteen years ago) link
Seems like Fassbinder films often have people playing records, A Merchant of Four Seasons being another.
Ana Torrent in Cria Cuervos plays Jeanette's "Porque te Vas" repeatedly on her portable record player.
Scanners and The Hidden both have memorably destructive record store scenes. It does seem though that in movies with record stores they sometimes just get a bunch of copies — overstocked? — of the same one and cover the walls/shelves with them, without putting too much focus on the records themselves (in Scanners the store had loads of copies of Frank Zappa's Sheik Yerbouti, and I wondered if that was a big album in Canada at the time).
Ever since I saw the trailer on a DVD called Grindhouse Universe I have very much wanted to see Record City, which looks like a sublimely trashy piece of late seventies end-of-civilization Americana. No home video release, though.
― eatandoph, Friday, 26 September 2008 01:00 (fifteen years ago) link
Detectives Stabler & Benson were just interviewing someone in a record store on this episode of SVU. Stabler is looking at a Jelly Roll Morton LP. The episode with Jill from Home Improvement in it. Where the guy has panties stuffed down his throat.
― ian, Friday, 26 September 2008 04:00 (fifteen years ago) link
I saw some of Record City on Spanish TV once. It's kinda like Car Wash, but in a record store. Kinky Friedman has a small role.
On that same tip, there's another 70s flick called Outlaw Blues, which has Peter Fonda playing a (literally) outlaw country singer and includes a couple scenes set in record stores. Here are two TV ADs.
― C. Grisso/McCain, Friday, 26 September 2008 15:56 (fifteen years ago) link
And if I remember correctly, Stallone drops the needle in the wrong spot.
In the recent horror movie The Strangers, Liv Tyler keeps putting on LPs in this deserted house owned by her boyfriend's grandparents. It kept bugging me, because it would be, like, Joanna Newsom's "Sprout and the Bean," made to sound all old and crackly-like, and I was thinking "why would the guy's grandparents have this on vinyl? And that song's not the first song on either side." I felt lame.
― Savannah Smiles, Friday, 26 September 2008 16:30 (fifteen years ago) link
That reminds me in roundabout way about replacement show NBC ran in the early 90s. I don't rember the title, but it was a serialized single-camera sitcom about a detective in Frisco(or maybe LA) who had his office inside a used record store he ran with his secretary. The main plotline concerned the dectective getting hired by a celebrity to investigate his wife, who happened to be having an affair with the detective. The main thing I remember was that in one ep there was a running gag about a guy who was looking at every single record in the store. The detective told his secretary to leave the guy alone, that he wasn't going to buy anything. And of course, right after the detective leaves, the guy goes up to the secretary with like 200 albums and tells her, "I'll take these."
― C. Grisso/McCain, Friday, 26 September 2008 16:47 (fifteen years ago) link
Crumb & American Splendor - Crumb and Pekar's mutual fetish for old blues 45s
Twin Peaks ... Leland Palmer gets deep with his jazz collection― Snappy (sexyDancer), Saturday, January 15, 2005 10:19 AM (3 years ago) Bookmark
Yes, but the most memorable scene involving a record is the hissing/skipping turntable during the sequence in which the killer is revealed. One example of Lynch's talent for making picturesque domesticity seem creepy as hell.
― Pillbox, Friday, 26 September 2008 18:10 (fifteen years ago) link
I caught The Mother and The Whore in rep this past weekend. I'd forgotten how much vinyl stuff was in the film. And its not just like, "Oh, they've got some records lying around," but really knowing, keenly observed stuff about listening and responding to music. That unbroken sequence w/Bernadette Lafont listening to Edith Piaf (on a scratchy 78!) is justifiably famous, but there's so much more.
Some other great scenes:
― The Wild Shirtless Lyrics of Mark Farner (C. Grisso/McCain), Tuesday, 21 October 2008 00:13 (fifteen years ago) link
Finally saw A Serious Man the other day. Lots of vinyl stuff in it, but just wanted to cite the scene w/the phone conversation about the Columbia Record Club ("I don't want Santana Abraxis!") as deserving special recognition.
― Roomful of Moogs (C. Grisso/McCain), Wednesday, 14 April 2010 19:13 (fourteen years ago) link
Oblivion -- 2013The Weight by The BandRamble On by Led ZeppelinA Whiter Shade Of Pale by Procol Harum
American Hustle -- 2013Jeep's Blues by Duke Ellington
Virgin Suicides where the boys-n-girls are sending tracks over the phone,,, had to look these upHello It's Me by Todd RundgrenAlone Again, Naturally by Gilbert O'SullivanRun To Me by Bee GeesSo Far Away by Carole King
Shawshank Redemption -- Andy alone in the Warden's office over the P.A. -- Marriage of Figaro
Good Morning, Vietnam -- many
Iron Man (?) -- he had to have a turntable in one of those
Lost -- lots of records in the shelter, 10 Cloverfield Lane had the jukebox in that shelter; actually jukeboxes would open a whole new group of options.
One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest -- 45s in the nurses station during medication time
Both Mad Men and Suits have some records/turntables
― bodacious ignoramus, Monday, 28 January 2019 14:41 (five years ago) link
DJ AM was using a laptop in Iron Man 2
― peace, man, Monday, 28 January 2019 14:44 (five years ago) link
There's that scene in Seeking A Friend for the End of the World where Steve Carell's character cues up Scott Walker's 1967 debut LP - first track "Mathilde" (which is the name of the meteor about to end life on earth), but instead we hear "The Sun Ain't Gonna Shine Anymore". The last track on side A is "My Death", also appropriate, but as that visibly plays, dubbed in instead is "Stay With Me Baby". Damn those post-prod decisions!
― Michael Jones, Monday, 28 January 2019 15:28 (five years ago) link
During a party scene in Quadrophenia, Jimmy takes off whatever record is playing and puts on "My Generation," to the delight of the partygoers. Only, the sleeve he takes the record out of is The Who Sell Out/A Quick One twofer issued in 1974. The film is set in 1964, "My Generation" wasn't released until late 1965, and "My Generation" isn't on the album shown in the film.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 28 January 2019 15:36 (five years ago) link
The record Jimmy takes off was "Rhythm of The Rain" by the Cascades, which is about as far from "My Generation" as possible.
― a large tuna called “Justice” (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 28 January 2019 16:04 (five years ago) link
It was really weird seeing For Your Pleasure prominently placed in Hailee Steinfeld's dead dad's record collection in Bumblebee. (There's a lot of cassette fetishism in the film as well, but that's another thread...)
― a large tuna called “Justice” (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 28 January 2019 16:08 (five years ago) link
Ha, yeah, just watched the scene again. Turns out he puts on a 45, and doesn't take an LP out of the Sell Out/A Quick One sleeve (though it's still prominently placed).
It might've been more accurate if he'd put on "Green Onions" (which I think is somewhere else in the film? I haven't seen it in years), but "My Generation" works better for the scene.
xp
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 28 January 2019 16:11 (five years ago) link
Some Fassbinder movies:
1. Hanna Schygulla playing Pearls Before Swine's "Morning Song" on a record player at the start of "Rio das Mortes", the sleeve is on the wall of her bedroom.
2. Various characters playing various Leonard Cohen songs on a jukebox throughout "Warnung vor einer heiligen Nutte".
3. Margit Carstensen listening to Leonard Cohen in "Angst vor der Angst"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R6pVoK7rXJU
4. Macha Meril 'dancing' to Kraftwerk's "Radioactivity" in "Chinese Roulette"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eoyuHQnE2Zw
5. (this the weirdest one) Folke Rabe's "Was" in a drunken wedding party scene in "Eight Hours Don't Make a Day" - sadly not actually being played though.
― Wee boats wobble but they don't fall down (Tom D.), Monday, 28 January 2019 16:49 (five years ago) link
The Wes Anderson movie about the kids who go camping has some record player scenes.
― brotherlovesdub, Monday, 28 January 2019 19:53 (five years ago) link
Posted this in the other thread
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bcxOc9D4dr0
― Elvis Telecom, Monday, 28 January 2019 20:04 (five years ago) link
Also U & K from 20th Century Women:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Up0pJ4Otvkk
― a large tuna called “Justice” (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 28 January 2019 20:50 (five years ago) link
...and of course they cue up the wrong spot on More Songs...
― a large tuna called “Justice” (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 28 January 2019 20:53 (five years ago) link
The Black Flag thing reminds me of several from Freaks and Geeks:
--Daniel 'going punk' and listening to "Rise Above" alone in his room.
--Ken questioning his sexuality, and tests himself by buying a Bowie album (Scary Monsters?) and looking intensely at David's photo while he listens.
--Mr. Weir dissing Neil Peart and then introducing Nick to Jazz drumming.
--Lindsay playing "Squeeze Box" for her parents, and their horror when they realize what the song is about.
--Mr. Rosso loaning Lindsay American Beauty, leading to...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRHZr3VlpgE
― a large tuna called “Justice” (C. Grisso/McCain), Monday, 28 January 2019 21:03 (five years ago) link
ha, I was always slightly annoyed that Mr. Weir wasn't into something hipper than Buddy Rich (he didn't have anything with Max Roach on it?), but whaddya gonna do. It's still a great scene.
― Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Monday, 28 January 2019 21:51 (five years ago) link
https://www.digitalmediaworld.tv/images/stories/June-13/Iron-man-3-trixter-10.jpg
― bodacious ignoramus, Monday, 28 January 2019 22:55 (five years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dM89diBydOo
― bodacious ignoramus, Monday, 28 January 2019 22:56 (five years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rvlCZ2PTN3M
― by the light of the burning Citroën, Tuesday, 21 May 2019 02:25 (four years ago) link
Good stuff in Last Night In SoHo with main character Eloise's Dansette and suitcase of vintage '60s Brit wax, plus landlady Diana Rigg getting her own collection out later on.
Shame then about all of it going up in flames.
― Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 16 April 2022 02:44 (two years ago) link
I'm sure it was stunt vinyl
― Mark G, Saturday, 16 April 2022 15:05 (two years ago) link
Or perhaps it's all CGI.
It's just in the reality of the film, it's sad to see such a sweet set of LPs bite the dust in such a manner (even though you only actually see a Dusty Springfield and the Dansette burning onscreen).
― Precious, Grace, Hill & Beard LTD. (C. Grisso/McCain), Saturday, 16 April 2022 19:09 (two years ago) link
Dusty would have been 83 today
― Josefa, Saturday, 16 April 2022 19:50 (two years ago) link
My local PBS affiliate has started showing Inspector Morse again. The first ep involves the possible murder of a woman who used to work at a audiophile turntable company. Morse naturally owns one of the company's decks, and at one point attends a lecture on HI-FI given by her ex-boss, one of the suspects.
― an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Sunday, 5 February 2023 00:49 (one year ago) link
lots of records seen/heard being played in fassbinder's work, but delighted to spot this prominently displayed next to the turntable in the penultimate episode of eight hours don't make a day.
― no lime tangier, Wednesday, 19 July 2023 11:05 (nine months ago) link
Two bits in Tar: The collection of Mahler vinyl on the floor in the opening montage, and a later scene where Lydia and her assistant Francesca talk about getting Deutsche Grammophon to reconsider not giving her upcoming box set a vinyl release.
― an icon of a worried-looking, long-haired, bespectacled man (C. Grisso/McCain), Friday, 25 August 2023 18:55 (seven months ago) link
this is one of the best thread titles. lol
― budo jeru, Friday, 25 August 2023 19:27 (seven months ago) link