9/19/2007
Watch Your Back Wes Anderson & Zach Braff: 'Juno' Soundtrack Tries To One Up "Hip" Soundtracks; Ex-Moldy Peaches Singer Kimya Dawson Featured

OK, someone gave
Jason Reitman ("
Thank You For Smoking," son of comedy director
Ivan Reitman) just a little bit of extra dough for soundtrack clearances for his upcoming new dark comedy, "
Juno," which recently debuted to strong reviews at the
Toronto International Film Festival (the film won the People's Choice
runner-up prize at TIFF -
Eastern Promises took the top honors)
And so, attention Wes Anderson, Zach Braff, Sofia Coppola and filmmakers with tastefully chosen "hipster" soundtracks (in Braff's case, emo-ly chosen nu-ish indie rock soundtracks to accompany your cranberry juice order), Jason Reitman might be gunning for you.

The "Juno" movie features Ex-
Moldy Peaches singer
Kimya Dawson who contributes a bunch of pre-existing songs to the comedy about a teenage girl (
'X-Men 3''s
Ellen Paige) who gets pregnant (by
Michael Cera) and finds her unborn child a “perfect” set of parents: an affluent suburban couple, (
Jason Bateman and
Jennifer Garner), longing to adopt (hello, small-"Arrested Development" reunion).
The movie also features existing songs by
the Kinks,
the Velvet Underground (a self-titled 3rd album B-side),
Buddy Holly,
Cat Power,
Hole,
Belle & Sebastian,
Sonic Youth (an
excellent B-side
Carpenters cover) and Ellen Page and Michael Cera singing together in the film; singing the
Moldy Peaches song, "Anyone Else But You."

Director
Jason Reitman explained in the film's press notes that actress Ellen Paige actually informed some of the musical choices.
“At one point, I asked Ellen Page before we started shooting, ‘what do you think Juno listens to?’ And she said ‘The Moldy Peaches’. She went on my computer, played the songs, and I fell in love with it. [Screenwriter] Diablo [Cody] and I discussed putting a Moldy Peaches song in it where the characters would sing to each other. I got in touch with Kimya Dawson of The Moldy Peaches and she started sending me her work, which was beautiful, and that became a lot of the soundtrack.”
In the same press notes, Screenwriter Diablo Cody said, "I love the music. I think that Ellen Page as a person informed a lot about the movie. She’s just an interesting personality and such an amazing person, that you couldn’t help but put her stamp on things.” Kimya Dawson wrote rather self-deprecatingly on her
livejournal about the songs used in the film, noting she didn't really write anything original for the film.
“Some of those songs were recorded in my bed in Bedford Hills, under the covers, on the 4-track. And when people were coming up to me telling me I did a great job it felt weird because I didn’t do a job. I wrote a bunch of crap when my heart was hurting. Everyone else had to do a job. The songs were already there. Just floating around in space. I didn’t do anything specifically FOR the movie. Except record some instrumental versions of a couple songs that only have two chords. That was easy. so, yeah...”
Kimya also contributed tracks with her kid-folk band
Antsy Pants, that features 12-year old Leo from the kid one-man-band
Bear Creek.
As we've noted before, our Raison d'être might
seem like we live for pop music in movies, but au contraire. We've said it before: pop music in films can easily act as a cheap emotional shortcut to dial up feelings that the actual scene and film aren't executing themselves and in the worst scenarios they seem forced, lazy and gratuitous (see a lot of comedies). With that said, Filmwad has a pretty good rant and plea to "
Stop Ruining Comedies With "Cool" Soundtracks," and we definitely think this is a salient concern to raise or at least think about.
Juno is due December 14th and there's no word on a soundtrack release yet. The trailer (below) features the Moldy Peaches' "Anyone Else But You" and
Mott the Hooples' "All The Young Dudes."