Roland consults his warriors, who jokingly tell him to get the love potion to woo Marianne, and encounters Sunny, who has an unrequited love for Dawn, tricking him into returning to the Dark Forest to convince the Sugar Plum Fairy, who was captured years ago by the Bog King, to make the love potion. At the Spring Ball, Roland tries to win back Marianne, who angrily drives him away. After falling through the border and into the Dark Forest, Sunny finds a primrose petal. Sometime later, Marianne's sister Dawn and her elf friend Sunny are nearly devoured by a giant lizard before Marianne rescues them. In the Dark Forest, the Bog King has the same view on love, despite his caring mother Griselda's protests. After Marianne, a fairy princess, sees her fiancé Roland, a knight, kissing another fairy on their wedding day, she vows never to fall in love again. Primrose flowers, which are used to make love potions, mark the border between the two lands. To date, it is the only Lucasfilm Animation production that is not part of the Star Wars franchise.Ī magical realm is divided between the Fairy Kingdom and the Dark Forest. The film was panned by most critics, who criticised its script, humor and songs but praised its animation, and was a box-office bomb, grossing $13.6 million worldwide and losing around $40–50 million. The film was released in the United States on Januby Touchstone Pictures, making it the first Lucasfilm production to be distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, following their parent company's acquisition of the studio on December 21, 2012. It was his first writing credit since the 1994 film Radioland Murders that is not associated with the Star Wars or Indiana Jones franchises. Lucas had been working on developing the project for 15 years before production began. The score was composed by Marius de Vries and includes contemporary songs, such as " Love Is Strange" and " Strange Magic". The film stars Alan Cumming, Evan Rachel Wood, Kristin Chenoweth, Maya Rudolph, Sam Palladio, and Alfred Molina. The film's screenplay was written by Rydstrom, David Berenbaum and Irene Mecchi, from a story by George Lucas inspired by William Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
It remains a favorite with pop fans today and recently was used to powerful effect during a school dance sequence in The Virgin Suicides.Strange Magic is a 2015 American computer-animated jukebox musical fantasy film directed by Gary Rydstrom and produced by Lucasfilm, with feature animation by Lucasfilm Animation and Industrial Light & Magic. "Strange Magic" did quite well as a follow-up single to "Evil Woman," peaking in the pop chart top-20 and becoming a radio staple for the group. The end result was lush enough to make a good slow dance song but dense enough with hooks to hold up to repeated listens.
#Strange magic songs full
Electric Light Orchestra’s recording of "Strange Magic" plays up the hooks in this melody and adds even more with its crafty arrangement, including a stunning intro full of swirling strings, some George Harrison-styled slide guitar riffs, and a complex backing vocal arrangement that layers on piles on a vast array of counter-harmonies as the song progresses.
The lyrics of "Strange Magic" have a psychedelic tinge as its narrator describes the woman who has bewitched him in otherworldly terms: "You’re sailing softly through the sun/In a broken stone age dawn/You fly so high/I get a strange magic." The music lives up to the fanciful style of the lyrics with a gorgeous melody that blends mellow ascending verse melodies with an airy chorus that builds to a stirring peak on its final lines.
This lovely Electric Light Orchestra song, one of the best tracks on their breakthrough album Face The Music, is a fine example of songwriter Jeff Lynne’s skill at creating ballads that are as memorably hook-laden as his uptempo pop tunes.