Listening In | Psychology and Music in Up @ListeningIn | Uploaded September 2019 | Updated October 2024, 3 hours ago.
Pre-order my new book! UK: https://shorturl.at/enn27 US: https://shorturl.at/4LIAP More info: barnabymartin.com/the-quiet
* Disney Pixar's 'Up' has been widely praised for its sensitive, and accurate, depiction of old age. It follows the life of Carl, who, having lost his wife Ellie, decides to go on the adventure they had always been planning. In this essay, I look at how the music in the film, written by composer Michael Giacchino, acts as an expression of Carl's emotional state, and how the film follows Carl's internal conflict between his integrity versus his despair. This conflict was suggested, by psychoanalyst Erik Erikson (1902-1994), as the key part of the last stage of his psychosocial theory of human development, where a person asks of themselves - 'Is it okay to have been me?'. Through the music in 'Up', I believe we find the answer to this question.
▶ Support my channel: patreon.com/listeningin
▶ Subscribe: bit.ly/2PlVaMS
____________________
▶ Website: barnabymartin.com
▶ Twitter: twitter.com/BarnabyMartin
Sam Buttler:
Website: sam-buttler.com
Twitter: twitter.com/SamButtler
Facebook: facebook.com/sambuttlercomposer
Instagram: http://https//instagram.com/samrbuttler
FURTHER READING/RESEARCH
Erik Erikson - Eight Ages of Man (Childhood and Society): http://local.psy.miami.edu/faculty/dmessinger/c_c/rsrcs/rdgs/attach/8agesofman.pdf
Sam Buttler - ‘Married Life’?: The Intra-diegetic, Thematic Transformation, and Disney Pixar’s Up (2009): static.wixstatic.com/ugd/376463_35ba873db49447149c5dd52a39eb0429.pdf
Ben Winters - The Non-diegetic Fallacy- Film, Music, And Narrative: scribd.com/document/151522518/Ben-Winters-The-Non-diegetic-Fallacy-Film-Music-And-Narrative
MUSIC
Up! Original Soundtrack (Michael Giacchino): open.spotify.com/album/4Pr2UBhHx1Y2Knzax4SS3l?si=nTGjCjoNQCSAvf_SK61JCA
Pre-order my new book! UK: https://shorturl.at/enn27 US: https://shorturl.at/4LIAP More info: barnabymartin.com/the-quiet
* Disney Pixar's 'Up' has been widely praised for its sensitive, and accurate, depiction of old age. It follows the life of Carl, who, having lost his wife Ellie, decides to go on the adventure they had always been planning. In this essay, I look at how the music in the film, written by composer Michael Giacchino, acts as an expression of Carl's emotional state, and how the film follows Carl's internal conflict between his integrity versus his despair. This conflict was suggested, by psychoanalyst Erik Erikson (1902-1994), as the key part of the last stage of his psychosocial theory of human development, where a person asks of themselves - 'Is it okay to have been me?'. Through the music in 'Up', I believe we find the answer to this question.
▶ Support my channel: patreon.com/listeningin
▶ Subscribe: bit.ly/2PlVaMS
____________________
▶ Website: barnabymartin.com
▶ Twitter: twitter.com/BarnabyMartin
Sam Buttler:
Website: sam-buttler.com
Twitter: twitter.com/SamButtler
Facebook: facebook.com/sambuttlercomposer
Instagram: http://https//instagram.com/samrbuttler
FURTHER READING/RESEARCH
Erik Erikson - Eight Ages of Man (Childhood and Society): http://local.psy.miami.edu/faculty/dmessinger/c_c/rsrcs/rdgs/attach/8agesofman.pdf
Sam Buttler - ‘Married Life’?: The Intra-diegetic, Thematic Transformation, and Disney Pixar’s Up (2009): static.wixstatic.com/ugd/376463_35ba873db49447149c5dd52a39eb0429.pdf
Ben Winters - The Non-diegetic Fallacy- Film, Music, And Narrative: scribd.com/document/151522518/Ben-Winters-The-Non-diegetic-Fallacy-Film-Music-And-Narrative
MUSIC
Up! Original Soundtrack (Michael Giacchino): open.spotify.com/album/4Pr2UBhHx1Y2Knzax4SS3l?si=nTGjCjoNQCSAvf_SK61JCA