The disparity between their characters’ natures is used to great effect in the film’s pop-star sequence, in which Moore, having requested that the Devil make him an adored figure, is transported to a Ready Steady Go–like studio set. Moore belts out a Tom Jones–esque song pleading for the audience to “Love Me”, and the audience duly screams for him in a perfect parody of Hard Day’s Night. Cook, again turning up to crush Moore’s fantasies, arrives on set after him as “Drimble Wedge and The Vegetations” and delivers “Bedazzled,” a bizarre tune that features Cook intoning “I’m callous … I’m dull … you bore me” in a monotone while undeterred backup singers sing “you drive me wild!” The challenge of “I’m not available” is too much for the studio audience, who forget all about Moore and swarm Cook.
The film’s soundtrack, composed by Moore, has some great pieces on it; besides the two songs above, the film’s main title is memorable. There’s some easy-listening filler, but it’s intended as schmaltz to underscore the vapidity of the characters in certain sequences. There’s some good strip-club music to showcase Raquel Welch (Cook wanted to call the film “Raquel Welch” so the posters could read “Peter Cook and Dudley Moore in Raquel Welch”), as the personification of the deadly sin Lust.
- Main Title
- Moon Time
- Strip Club
- Italy
- The Leaping Nun’s Chorus
- GPO Tower
- Love Me
- Bedazzled – link fixed
- The Millionaire
- Sweet Mouth
- Cornfield
- Goodbye George
- Lillian Lust
As an extra treat here’s Bongwater’s version of “Bedazzled” from their great 1990 LP Power of Pussy.
2 comments:
One of my favourite movies and CDs. Shame so many people know of the remake and not the original.
So very true, such a shame. I have fond memories of watching the original movie as a child, and it still remains one of my favourite films to this day. Thank you for your comment.
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