Turkish Bond and Indian Potter

Published: Nov. 28, 2020, 3:55 p.m.

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As part of a weekend profiling Radio 3\'s New Generation Thinkers, Matthew Sweet is joined by film historian Iain Smith, a past member of scheme, for a look at one of his pet interests - how popular English speaking film titles and their music often appear adapted and remade in other countries of the world.

Virtually every major franchise has its equivalent local version in some part of the world. It could be a Turkish or Filipino interpretation of James Bond or an Indian take on Harry Potter. Sometimes the music bares a strong resemblance to the original as well. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the many different takes on the James Bond franchise and Matthew and Iain give particular attention to the "Eurospy" phenomenon of the 60s and 70s.

This sharing of ideas also works the other way round, and Matthew and Iain look at how Hollywood has taken inspiration from French cinema, Bollywood and Japan. The programme includes music from \'True Lies\', \'Sommersby\', \'UpperSeven - The Spy with Ten Faces\', \'OK Connery\', \'Kung Fu Hustle\', \'Dastak\', \'Pearl Harbor\', and \'Battle beyond the Stars\'. The Classic Scores of the week are Fumio Hayasaka\'s \'The Seven Samurai\' and Elmer Bernstein\'s \'The Magnificent seven\'.

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