A new song, written and performed by Paul McCartney, appears on the soundtrack for the Raymond Briggs adaptation Ethel and Ernest.The animated film, based on Briggs's moving 1998 storybook about the lives of his parents, premieres this afternoon at the London Film Festival.
Jim Broadbent voices Briggs's
father, milkman Ernest, while Brenda Blethyn plays his mother Ethel, who
worked as a lady's maid before meeting her future husband in 1928. The
film tells the story of the couple, from their marriage to the birth of
their son (Briggs, played by Luke Treadaway), to their experiences
during the Second World War and post-war years.
Getting one of the most famous names in pop music to write a track
for your film might sound like a bit of a daunting challenge but Ethel
and Ernest director Roger Mainwood says he had an advantage: Paul
was already a fan of Briggs's work.
"I knew that Paul McCartney was a big animation fan and I knew that
Raymond Briggs's book Fungus the Bogeyman had influenced Paul's 1980s
track Bogey Music," he explained. "So I asked Raymond if he might write a
letter to Paul to see if he was interested in composing a track for
Ethel and Ernest, which he did on Fungus the Bogeyman headed paper!"
"It obviously worked and we were thrilled when Paul said he was
interested," he continued. "We met up and he produced a CD which
included a track called Mum and Dad theme. This eventually became In
the Blink of An Eye which we have used in the film."
Composer and conductor Carl
Davis, who worked with Paul on the star's 1991 Liverpool Oratorio
(McCartney's first venture into classical territory), provided
an original score for the film, and also contributed to In The Blink of
An Eye.
"The song was recorded with Paul performing the lyrics and many of
the instrument and string arrangements were conducted by Carl Davis and
performed by the Chamber of Orchestra of London," said Mainwood. "It is
an incredibly moving and fitting ending to our film and we were very
honoured to have both Paul and Carl on board."
Briggs himself has said that he is pleased with the film, particularly with the casting.
"Brenda Blethyn and Jim Broadbent got my parents absolutely spot
on," said the 82-year-old author and illustrator, whose best-known book
is the tear-jerking 1978 Christmas tale The Snowman (which became a
universally-adored short film in 1982).
"When their voices came over, it was like my Mum and Dad were in the
room. I thought there they were, I kept almost looking round to
see...'Hello Dad are you there?’ They did the voices so beautifully. It
couldn't be better."
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