An Interview with Coraline Composer Bruno Coulais

An Interview with Coraline Composer Bruno Coulais

Acclaimed French composer Bruno Coulais, a veteran scorer of movies in his native country, talks to Scott Macaulay about working on Coraline, his first American film.

Composer Bruno Coulais’s love of film is wide and deep, but there is one thing he hates: flat lighting. He doesn’t dislike it because he’s some kind of hyper-aesthete but rather because he can’t figure out how to write for films that are too rooted in the everyday. Fortunately for Coulais, not all movies resemble an episode of Friends. In recent years, his ambitious movie music has scored films ranging from a steam-punk French detective film (Vidocq) to an eye-popping and violent documentary about the insect kingdom (Microcosmos).

Coraline is Coulais’s first American studio picture, and his idiosyncratic and transporting score is right up there in inventiveness with director Henry Selick’s rich, handcrafted world, writer Neil Gaiman’s complex characters, and the picture’s alternately subtle and startling 3D effects.  Mixing orchestra with a children’s choir, African instruments with toy percussion, and adding contrapuntal themes that tease additional meanings and emotions from a scene, Coulais has composed a spooky, seductive score that has excited audiences as well as critics. 

Born in Paris, Coulais studied piano and violin before he was invited to score a short documentary, 1977’s Mexico Magico, by director Francois Reichenbach. Much television work followed and then in 1996 he received international acclaim for his score to Microcosmos, winning won a Cesar Award (France’s Academy Award) for best score. He went on to win two more Cesars (for Himalaya, l’enfance d’un chef, and Les Choristes) as well as an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Song (for Les Choristes). Recent projects have included his Stabat Mater in Saint Denis Cathedral with the participation of English musician Robert Wyatt.

How did you wind up doing the score for Coraline, and what was the process like?

Henry tried [putting] a lot of [temp] music with his drawings, his animatics, and I don’t know why, but he tried the music I made for a movie called Microcosmos, and it worked! Then I met Henry in L.A., he sent me the animatics, and I started to create some themes and melodies. Then, little by little, I began to see construction of the film. It was good because I had the time to change my mind, to change the orchestrations. It’s great to work on an animated movie because you have that time -- the process is very long.

Did your ideas about the score change a lot during the years it took to make Coraline?

Not too much, but for me there is an important correspondence between the lighting and the tonalities of the orchestration. I need to see the real images [before I can finish the music]. But I don’t think I changed my mind too much. I would send Henry my demos, and immediately I’d have an answer from him. We were very far away in terms of distance, but very close [creatively]. It was strange.

Where did you record the music?

We recorded in Paris, the children’s choir in Nice, the orchestra in Budapest and then we mixed the film at Skywalker Sound.

What were some of the challenges of scoring Coraline? What were you trying to accomplish with your score in terms of its relation to the story and characters?

For me [when scoring a film], the story is not very important – it’s not so interesting to say the same thing with the music as the story. So, I think in Coraline the music is sometimes “behind the wall,” like ghosts that haunt the movie. It was very interesting to have the music evolve. In it beginning it sounds very quiet and realistic because it’s a realistic world. And little by little the music becomes quite scary by the end of the movie.

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