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  1. Elevator To The Gallows. Buy DVD/Blu-Ray. Listen To Soundtrack. Release Date: Jan 29, 1958. Soundtrack: Ascenseur Pour L’echafaud. With his French quintet of the day—Barney Wilen, tenor saxophone; Rene Urtreger, piano; Pierre Michelot, bass; Kenny Clarke, drumsMiles composed and in the late hours of December 4 and into the next day in a ...

  2. Aug 3, 2016 · August 3, 2016. Jeanne Moreau and Miles Davis during the recording of the music for Louis Malle’s film “Elevator to the Gallows,” in December, 1957. Photograph by AGIP / RDA / Everett....

  3. The improvised soundtrack by Miles Davis and the relationship the film establishes among music, image, and emotion were considered ground-breaking. Plot [ edit ] Lovers Florence Carala and Julien Tavernier make a plan to kill Florence's husband Simon, a wealthy French industrialist who is also Julien's boss.

  4. Elevator to the Gallows (1958) The second disintegration happened in Paris, before Davis even landed. Though Romano had promised “a three-week tour” and “had plans to produce a short film on jazz with Miles himself as the star,” neither eventuated. Romano’s idea is worth noting: film a session with musicians who had just met.

  5. Feb 7, 2018 · Miles Davis Improvises the Score for. Elevator to the Gallows. W ith his debut feature, the impeccably crafted crime thriller Elevator to the Gallows (1958), Louis Malle announced himself as one of France’s most dynamic young filmmakers and helped pave the way for the imminent French New Wave.

  6. Jan 29, 2018 · Instead, Malle performs another inversion, turning his characters inside out and using the means at his disposal to splay their moods across the screen. He does this in large part thanks to the legendary soundtrack by Miles Davis, improvised around sparse harmonic sketches the King of Cool made during a private screening.

  7. Elevator to the Gallows. For his feature debut, twenty-four-year-old Louis Malle brought together a mesmerizing performance by Jeanne Moreau, evocative cinematography by Henri Decaë, and a now legendary jazz score by Miles Davis. Taking place over the course of one restless Paris night, Malle’s richly atmospheric crime thriller stars Moreau ...

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