
UPDATE, 12:38 PM: The Artist‘s distributor The Weinstein Company got blindsided this morning by the full-page ad that Kim Novak bought in a trade complaining about the Oscar-buzzed pic’s use of Bernard Herrmann’s score from Vertigo. Instead of commenting itself, TWC supplied a comment on the matter from The Artist writer-director-editor Michel Hazanavicius: “The Artist was made as a love letter to cinema, and grew out of my (and all of my cast and crew’s) admiration and respect for movies throughout history. It was inspired by the work of Hitchcock, Lang, Ford, Lubitsch, Murnau and Wilder. I love Bernard Herrmann and his music has been used in many different films and I’m very pleased to have it in mine. I respect Kim Novak greatly and I’m sorry to hear she disagrees.” Separately, I’m told by our Oscar expert Pete Hammond that the music branch of the Academy reviewed the eligibility of The Artist for Best Score, because the film employed Herrmann’s music. Because 80% of the music was original, and because the inclusion of Herrmann’s memorable music was meant as an homage in that rarity of rarities, an old-style silent film full of music, the film was deemed eligible. The Weinstein Company continues not to comment on the matter.
EARLIER EXCLUSIVE, 9:02 AM: Kim Novak has gone public with a press release and a trade ad to express her ire over The Artist‘s use of Bernard Herrmann’s music from Vertigo as backdrop for the silent film. I just spoke with Novak’s longtime manager Sue Cameron, and she told me that the actress is an Oscar voter. When the actress popped in a screener of the film to figure out her ballot, she recognized the music immediately and didn’t feel flattered that a signature song from one of her best-known films got an encore.
“She was sitting in her living room, she put the DVD in, and then went into an absolute state of shock and devastation,” Cameron said. “When you sit in a theater and familiar music comes on that engenders ready-made emotion from a past film, and they use that music to evoke those same emotions, it’s quite hurtful. We know that they had the legal right to use the music, but it’s the music that was the backdrop for classic scenes, like Kim and Jimmy Stewart kissing by the tree, driving along the coast in the car. She is very, very upset.”
This Oscar season has so far been tame in terms of bad-mouthing, and I don’t think I’ve heard a complaint quite like this one before. How many will recognize music from a film released in 1958? Cameron said Novak felt strongly enough to pay for the full-page trade ad, which isn’t cheap. One looming question is whether Novak has jeopardized her status as a voter, and violated the rules by publicly maligning a movie that is a frontrunner for Best Picture. I will provide updates as I get some clarity, and reaction from The Weinstein Company, which released The Artist. Here is Novak’s reaction, in her own words:
Los Angeles: “I want to report a rape,” said Kim Novak, the legendary star of “Vertigo,” “Picnic,” and many other revered classics. “My body of work has been violated by ‘The Artist.’ This film took the Love Theme music from “Vertigo” and used the emotions it engenders as its own. Alfred Hitchcock and Jimmy Stewart can’t speak for themselves, but I can. It was our work that unconsciously or consciously evoked the memories and feelings to the audience that were used for the climax of ‘The Artist.’”
Novak went on to say that “The Artist” could and should have been able to stand on its own. “There was no reason for them to depend on Bernard Herrmann’s score from ‘Vertigo’ to provide more drama. ‘Vertigo’s’ music was written during the filming. Hitchcock wanted the theme woven musically in the puzzle pieces of the storyline. Even though they did given Bernard Herrmann a small credit at the end, I believe this kind of filmmaking trick to be cheating. Shame on them!”
This kind of “borrowing” could portend a dangerous future for all artists in film. “It is morally wrong of people in our industry to use and abuse famous pieces of work to gain attention and applause for other than what the original work was intended. It is essential that all artists safeguard our special bodies of work for posterity, with their individual identities intact and protected.


Two things absolutely shock me about this:
1. The fact that Kim Novack is still alive;
2. -and knows how to operate a dvd player.
your an idiot and will be old before yo know it
oh who cares, she’s probably jealous that this movie the artist is getting a lot of award nominations and that her movie didn’t. what happens if the artist wins best picture is she gonna kill someone next, lol.
Kim Novak retired from acting two decades ago to live with her husband. She has no movie to promote and she was in a few Oscar winning pictures in her days.
Your kind of comments dismissing her as a no-name motivated by jealousy more or less proves her point: people forget who she was or what Vertigo is and could assume that the music piece was written for The Artist, no matter how famous the Vertigo score has been.
Sampling an excerpt to create something new isn’t cheating. When Tarantino uses obscure scores on the soundtrack of his movies, he isn’t cheating because everybody knows he uses preexisting material. Having an entirely original soundtrack (with the exception of a few songs from the era played on a record player) then using the entire five or six minutes of a piece from a 1958 movie that every serious movie buff knows by heart can be viewed as cheating if the guys who picked the piece had no intention to paying tribute to the movie, just to use some music that fitted the action in their mind.
Is she speaking as Madeleine or Judy?
LOL!
Interesting point, but comparing re-purposed music to rape is a bit much. Also, Novak might want to listen to Wagner’s “Tristan and Isolde” before getting too indignant about the sanctity of the “Vertigo” score. Bernard Herrmann obviously was very (ahem) “influenced” by that 19th-century work. (Also, “Herrmann” is misspelled in this story’s lead paragraph, but it is spelled correctly in Novak’s quoted text.)
If the score was lifted and employed legally, the only issues here are those of artistic intent and integrity – both of which are subjective fodder for unaffected parties to debate over cocktails. To equate the questionable decision to use Herrman’s score with the criminally violent act of rape has only served to bring Ms. Novak’s actions into question, unleashing a torrent of criticism and invective aimed at her – not at the use of the “Vertigo” score which prompted her public outcry. Regardless of what comes of it there is an object lesson here for everyone: words MATTER.
This is such an important controversy. Am glad it was brought to the fore by the ladies Novak and Cameron. I am afraid, however, that it is a no win situation. Talk about David v Goliath. Legally, the film maker had the right to pay for the use of the previously composed music (assuming the creating company did in fact control the rights to same). While not condoning this “sampling” or re-purposing in any way, I have run into sufficient examples of my own work being recycled, stolen, or othewise compromised that I can only say, I wish Ms. Novak’s position would be used as a starting point for conversation about “fair” use. However I suspect the studios will bury it. This is clearly controversial. How much does any one aspect of what the writer, actor, composer, director brings to the work of art is definable as theirs? The collective or ensemble vision is so engrained in Hollywood that each contributor believes that “only” their contribution made the experience what it was/is.
How is calling Vertigo “a film released in 1958″ bad? Sgt. Pepper is an album released in 1967, Great Gatsby is a book written in 1925. All are perfectly accurate descriptions. The goal of any reporter should be to find a way to put the topic in factual context.
As far as Ms. Novak using the word “rape,” I don’t even know what to say. There’s so much wrong there and she’s totally lost me on whatever else she has to say.
The Artist is a great movie for many reasons, not just the music. She was going to have a difficult time making this argument in the first place but using the word “rape,” it kinda kills the argument before it can even start.
Actually, for me, a politically correct dolt “kinda kills the argument before it can even start.” You choose to miss the forest for the trees due to your narrowmindedness. Kim Novak makes a valid point and I agree with her on this.
Kim Novak and the rest of you commenters above who are so upset about this need to realize it was an artistic decision. They got permission and they made a choice to use the music. Did they EVER claim it as their own?
For the commenter above who said they should’ve used “Herrmann sound alike” music… are you serious? Are you aware of all the plagiarism and copy-catting that goes on in so-called “original” material? We should all learn a lesson from The Artist: They got the rights instead of using “sound alike” music in which none of us would know that they cheaply “borrowed” the Vertigo score.
RAPE is more like: Making a movie called The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo despite a successful Swedish version that was released a couple years ago… OR like a scene in that movie where a girl is tied up and violently abused.
I can’t believe that anybody would consider this an issue in the slightest, provided no copyright infringement has occured. Dozens of films supplement their original scores with pre-existing music each year and some use nothing but pre-existing music to elicit specific emotional responses (perhaps Cameron Crowe and Martin Scorsese should be publically flogged). This smacks of a rival outfit’s attempt to slow “The Artist”‘s frontrunner status. I doubt that Kim Novak got up onto that high horse by herself…
I guess “violated” is code for “no one’s paid attention to me for a long time and I need some attention”.
So by Ms. Novak’s logic then 2001 A Space Odysey should have it’s music removed – since it’s not original?
I guess Giorgio Morodor feels raped, too, by the use of his CAT PEOPLE score in Quentin’s INGLORIOUS BASTERDS? And Harry Nillson by the use of his Olive Oyl song in P.T. Anderson’s PUNCH-DRUNK LOVE? And by (fill in the blanks, ad nauseum, to showcase how ridiculous Ms. Novak’s senility-fueled contention is … )
Why would you denigrate the lady with that nasty implied suggestion? Everybody ages – there’s no shame in that. You’re just being unkind.
Umm…”Most People” I suspect 99% of the audience for The Artist as well as the readers of deadline.com and for that matter real film fans in general know exactly who Kim Novak is. Your attempt to insinuate that she’s some kind of obscure “no-body” simply makes you look staggeringly uninformed…perhaps you should confine yourself to offering up opinions on Michael Bay films. Having said all this, Ms. Novak’s criticism is lame and her use of the word rape is totally unacceptable.
WHO CARES?!?
I recognized the cut right away and thought it was well done.
Dear Mike Fleming, I was born in 1975 and I recognized the music instantly. It’s ludicrous to call “Vertigo” just a “film made in 1958″ when it’s an incredibly famous movie–and its soundtrack is so well known! The use of Herrmann’s score made no sense (plot wise, time wise, homage wise) in “The Artist” anyway. I would just say that “The Artist” is a good movie that relies on a gimmick for attention (a silent pic in 2011! shocker!), and “Vertigo” is a brilliant film that will live forever. I am on Kim Novak’s side. The use of Herrmann’s score in “The Artist” is weak on many levels.
She’s talking about people trying get attention. Look at yourself, dear.
So an aging actress who, sitting in her living room, and couldn’t even drive over to a theater, is complaining about someone using song from a movie she played in 52 years ago?
I actually liked the use of that song in the climactic scene in The Artist. An appropriate homage to the great Vertigo/Bernard Hermann soundtrack. Which, of course, Kim Novak had nothing to do with since she was not the director, producer or musical conductor of Vertigo.
Kim Novack just blown her chances to win a life achievement award. Can anyone tell her the difference between “rape” and “a bit annoyed”.
Who’s Kim Novack?
Comment by Most People — Monday January 9, 2012 @ 12:49pm
Most People are Morons. At least spell the woman’s name right, for God’s sake.
The German tv movie DIE FREMDE FRAU actually uses almost the whole of Vertigo’s soundtrack as music!
It’s an interesting point though. Are you paying homage or transmogrifying one of the greatest films ever in order to focus attention on a lesser work? Rap music does it all of the time. Rap music not sampling? Often not a hell of a lot there in terms of stand-alone artistry.
Ms. Novak is clearly not doing her homework as Herrmann’s amazing Vertigo score has been used countless times, for countless projects.
Wouldn’t she rather be filling our consciousness with some gritty new role, in a hard-hitting, soul-stirring indie film, rather than bitching about what inspires other colleagues?
Isnt the movie replete with homages to other movies?
And the use of the word “rape” was overly dramatic and unnecessary. Yes, it’s not literal (d’uh) but using the word “rape” trivializes the actual crime.
Sounds like a DESPERATE cry for attention… This is not the first time that this has happened, nor will it be the last and they did it legally. Ms.Novak should be stripped from all voting privileges and sit back and watch “The Aritst” rake in the statues. Funny how nobody considers it a “rape” when you hear bits of Trent Reznor’s “Social Network” soundtrack in “Drive”… Can’t wait to hear Harvey’s response.
yes well put. vertigo is one of the most frequently used temp tracks in film and therefore commonly “aped”.
look at the score for traffic as an example.. at least there they had the decency to reinterpret it.
hopefully at least this will bring even more attention to the importance of Bernard Hermans work.
Yes, it’s the score of a very famous, fantastic movie. Yes, I recognized the music. But, seriously…the only people who are “outraged” about this are Novak, who’s probably looking for some attention since nobody has mentioned Kim Novak for quite a while, and the typical ridiculous “film-geek” types who consider such unimportant things sacred ground and get whipped into impotent fanboy rages over crap that doesn’t matter in the grand scheme of things. Pull the sticks out of your asses, folks, and get on with the real world.
And btw, the score from Vertigo has been used frequently on Saturday Night Live in various sketches over the years (the one where Alec Baldwin wound up kissing most of the female cast, Phil Hartman, and a dog hand-puppet comes to mind), but Novak only speaks up when its an Oscar-nominated film in the spotlight. Hmmmm…