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R.E.M.
Man on the Moon [Soundtrack]
(Warner Bros.)
First Appeared at The Music Box,
February 2000, Volume 7, #2
Written by Michael Karpinski

Pop soundtrack albums come in all shapes and sizes; all variations and varieties. Only a select
few serve as perfect sonic complements to their celluloid sources (The Big Chill, Dazed
and Confused, Trainspotting). Fewer still transcend those sources (Lost Highway,
Velvet Goldmine). Alas, the vast majority simply spin their wheels, desperately lacking the
traction that accrues from an inspired commingling of visual image and incidental music.
Regrettably, the soundtrack to Man on the Moon falls face-first and firmly into this last
category.
Named for (and, in many ways, inspired by) R.E.M.'s 1993 semi-hit single, Milos Forman's
courageously off-kilter Andy Kaufman biopic also taps the band from Athens for its orchestral score
and closing credits-accompanying single The Great Beyond -- a sort of sister-song to the
title track that, on repeated listenings, slowly but surely succeeds in insinuating itself into the
subconscious -- the litmus test for any pop song with designs on transcending the disposable.
However, beyond The Beyond, the pickings here are slim. R.E.M.'s six short orchestral
interludes are typically tasteful and tuneful (if a bit Ferrante and Teicher/Theme from Exodus"
familiar); Exile's gloriously giddy disco-pop confection Kiss You All Over gets rescued from
'70s obscurity (though Gary Wright's Dreamweaver was rescued to even better effect in
Foreman's The People vs. Larry Flynt); Jim Carrey (channeling both Kaufman and Kaufman's
constipated-ly cranky alter-ego Tony Clifton) talks and sings along with Stipe on the Fabian-fluffy
This Friendly World; and for any and all who have spent long hours agonizing over the absence
of the Sandpipers' "Mighty Mouse" Theme and Bob James' Theme from "Taxi" from their CD
assortments, you will find them both here -- clocking in at 1:22 and 1:06, respectively. Indeed,
only the most fanatically forgiving of R.E.M. followers is likely to overlook the disc's inexcusably
skimpy 37-minute running time.
Appropriately, Andy Kaufman is afforded two opportunities to crash his own posthumous party.
However, without the benefit of the man's wide-eyed, deceptively sweet deadpan delivery -- and
without the lightning-strike electricity that often accompanied the tightrope-traipsing prankster's
live-and-in-the-moment assaults upon befuddled, unsuspecting audiences -- these brief, disembodied
ditties have all the musical significance of a Weird Al Yankovic accordion solo and all the comedic
impact of a Richard Nixon-delivered knock-knock joke.
So take a bit of advice from a fanatically forgiving R.E.M. follower: skip the disc and see the
flick. Only then will you hear how the music was meant to be seen and see how the movie was meant to
be heard. 
½
Man on the Moon is available from Amazon.com.
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Ratings
1 Star: Pitiful
2 Stars: Listenable
3 Stars: Respectable
4 Stars: Excellent
5 Stars: Can't Live Without It!!

Copyright © 1999
The Music Box
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