Movie Analysis:
"Music
of the Heart"
Review by Katharine
E. Monahan Huntley
The hard and fast
rules of any horror movie are outlined in director Wes Craven and writer
Kevin Williamson's Scream (see review www.Dramatica.com). In Music
of the Heart, Wes Craven's first directing effort outside of the
horror genre, he is adhering to the basic rules of the: "Based
on a True Story" movie. In this case, the true to life film is
of the "Inspirational Teacher" kind-checklisted as follows:
1) Protagonist
has an ability that is unique and will ultimately achieve
the objective story goal, e.g., gifted teacher.
2) Protagonist
must contain a critical flaw that undermines efforts to achieve
story goal, e.g., negative feelings of value; lack of experience.
3) Protagonist's
personality further undermines efforts, e.g., acerbic; strident; general
bossiness.
4) Under
inflexible exterior, protagonist has a heart, e.g., exhibits sympathy
for vulnerable children.
5) Various
objective characters lack faith in the protagonist, e.g., jealous
faculty, narrow-minded parents, overbearing mother, disruptive students.
6) Various
objective characters have faith in the protagonist, e.g., supportive
faculty, grateful parents, youngest child, talented students.
7) Actions
in the objective story will impede the goal, e.g., Board of Trustees
cuts funding for arts program.
8) Actions
in the objective story accelerate progress toward achieving the goal,
e.g., Benefit Concert to reinstate program.
9) Audience
has a damn good idea goal will be achieved by final crescendo of a
scene, e.g., inner city school children perform in Carnegie Hall.
(With Isaac Stern no less!)
10) Author's
denouement scrolls on screen before credits, informing audience of
what has happened since final scene, e.g., music program reinstated.
Without question,
Wes Craven has an important story to tell, which he does in two parts.
The first part is
main character Roberta Guaspari facing the reality of a husband
who has run off with her best friend, leaving her to raise two young
sons with little money and less resume ready work experience. Convincing
the principle of an inner city alternative school to hire her and create
a successful violin program is the objective story.
In part two, "Ten
Years Later," main character Roberta is facing adolescent sons
who wish she'd get a love life. Taking on the Board of Trustees after
they cut funding from the now prestigious grade school violin program
is the objective story.
The often unwieldy
details are relayed from almost a purely objective point of view (see
above checklist). This is what keeps Music of the Heart apart
from a Dramatica grand argument story-its underdeveloped main
character throughline, and lack of consistent obstacle character
and subjective story throughlines. These perspectives are vital
to providing an emotionally compelling, fully rationalized argument
to the audience-one that will tell a story with context.
Just as I am predisposed
to scream in a scary movie, I am always ready to well up in a "Based
on a True Story." With only the facts of the matter given in Music
of the Heart, I am impassively watching the factual report of a
remarkable woman captured on film and (naturally) played to perfection
by Meryl Streep. No tears, no fears, no story from the heart.
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