Tonight is the Razzies (More Tomorrow). Here are Louis Virtel's 10 favorite tunes specifically produced for the
soundtracks of wretched movies.
10. Michelle Pfeiffer, "Cool Rider" from Grease 2
Grease 2 is a confounding mess from start
to finish, but it's a complete blast if you're into campy singalong
experiences. The movie's best tune is undoubtedly the brassy, kicky
"Cool Rider" where The Greatest Catwoman croons like Benatar over a
rip-roaring pop hook. It's damn replayable, which is something not often
said about Grease 2.
9. Alanis Morissette, "Uninvited" from City of Angels
City of Angels is one of those infuriating movies that dares to take its ridiculous melodrama seriously. It's a feature-length Creed video. Thankfully its soundtrack was a rightful blockbuster featuring original tracks by U2 and -- perhaps most famously -- the Goo Goo Dolls,
who took over the world with their breakout hit "Iris." For me, the
sentiment of "Iris" is slightly too schlocky for inclusion here, but Alanis Morissette's
wailing, Grammy-winning "Uninvited" is perfect: a booming, atmospheric
opus with intriguing lyrics and cinematic grandeur. It was the perfect
segue between the caustic, catharsis-needy Alanis of Jagged Little Pill and the contemplative, Far Eastern-tinged Alanis of Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie.
8. Madonna, "Causing a Commotion" from Who's That Girl?
Madonna has had multiple great songs in terrible movies -- "Beautiful Stranger" in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me (HATE those movies), "Crazy for You" in Vision Quest, and the watery, wonderful "I'll Remember" from the so-so film With Honors. But no movie was worse than Who's That Girl?,
which featured four great Madonna tracks including the zesty,
effervescent "Causing a Commotion." Among Madonna fans it's generally
hailed as the obscurest of her masterpiece singles, and it contains the definitive Madonna lyric: "Quit wasting time / Make up your mind / And get into the groove."
7. Eric Clapton, "Tears in Heaven" from Rush
"Tears in Heaven" is a heavy, droopy ballad, but it's a killer.
Clapton's painful elegy finds the guitar legend grappling with the death
of his son Conor, and its lyrics and music make for an unbearably
moving experience -- as opposed to the movie Rush, which is just unbearable. The song would become the signature tune from Clapton's MTV Unplugged disc, which would go on to win the Grammy for Album of the Year.
6. Janet Jackson, "Doesn't Really Matter" from The Nutty Professor 2: The Klumps
Frankly, pop music rarely gets better than this: Janet Jackson's sprightly, blippy "Doesn't Really Matter" is the only lovable thing related to The Nutty Professor 2. Jackson's Watley-lite vocal is perfect for the trippy little gem, and it was the perfect antidote to the self-imposed heaviness of the Velvet Rope album.
5. Olivia Newton-John, "Magic" from Xanadu
To be honest, I had a really difficult time picking the best song from the Xanadu
soundtrack. The movie is a noted disaster, but its major problem is it
doesn't spend enough time AT Xanadu, the mythological roller disco that
finally manifests in the film's final reel. Olivia Newton-John -- who is
still an underrated vocalist -- sounds crisp and ethereal on the ELO
soundtrack contributions, including "Xanadu," the gorgeous "Suspended in
Time," and the ABBA-level heavenliness of "Magic." Like Cyndi Lauper's
"All Through the Night," it defies categorization because it's a ballad
with bursts of sonic toughness. A masterwork worthy of only the
fairest-haired Fate.
4. Donna Summer, "Last Dance" from Thank God It's Friday
An unthinkably awful movie paired with an Oscar-winning, career-defining song, Donna Summer's "Last Dance' is so ubiquitous that we forget to associate it with the '79 film Thank God It's Friday. As Leonard Maltin
once noted, it may be the single worst film ever to garner an Academy
Award, but I'm sure songwriter Paul Jabara didn't mind picking up the
hardware anyway.
3. Dionne Warwick, "(Theme from) Valley of the Dolls" from Valley of the Dolls
World-class vocalist Dionne Warwick sells the hell
out of this gorgeous ballad, which is lovelier and more restrained than
just about anything in the insane adaptation of Jacqueline Susann's novel. (Though Lee Grant's
delivery of "I'm gonna heat up the lasagna" is pretty divine.)
Warwick's clear, yet melancholy trill is perfect, and you can thank Dory and Andre Previn (the former Mr. Mia Farrow, mais bien sur) for its classic lushness.
2. Prince, "Kiss" from Parade: Music from the Motion Picture Under the Cherry Moon
I was tempted to include "When Doves Cry" or "Let's Go Crazy" on this list, but there can be no denying that Under the Cherry Moon is a far inferior film to Purple Rain --
and that "Kiss" may be a superior jam to both aforementioned hits.
"Kiss" is the sexiest, nerviest, kinkiest little dance classic ever, and
its spareness is just as addicting as Prince's precise coo. Along with
"Erotic City," it's the most tantalizingly naughty dancefloor-filler in
Prince's catalog.
1. Aaliyah, "Are You That Somebody?" from Dr. Dolittle
Satan thanks me for even daring to mention Dr. Dolittle, but
its soundtrack features not only a stellar R&B dance jam and a bona
fide radio hit in "Are You That Somebody?", but a decade-defining
single that combined beat-driven emotionality with flawless production.
It's a thumping, undeniable earworm, and Aaliyah's classy, yet energized vocal is simply unforgettable. Eddie Murphy, here's your real dreamgirl.
Your turn: What's the best music of the worst cinema?
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