The birds of Hollywood: An unnatural history

Movie producers spend countless millions to make the details convincing. So why can't they figure out that blue jays are asleep at night and thrushes go south for the winter?

Jun 13, 2002 | The wizards of Hollywood can duplicate a city street on a studio back lot, create convincing jungle warfare on a soundstage in Culver City, dazzle you with special effects. Technical advisors -- scientists, soldiers, doctors, lawyers, computer gurus -- ensure that what happens on-screen is plausible. And yet, one small but significant aspect of moviemaking is consistently overlooked. Hollywood is tone deaf to the songs of birds.

On movie and television soundtracks, bird songs are often inserted without regard to whether the birds would ordinarily occur in the locale, season and habitat depicted in the film. When a bird sings in the background of the film you are watching, it is liable to be ornithological fantasy.

Although bird songs might be picked up by sound recordists as a movie is shot, they are usually added during the post-production phase to give outdoor scenes "atmosphere." To do the job right, you wouldn't simply cue up "Bird Songs of North America" and record onto the movie's soundtrack whatever songs strike your fancy. You would choose only songs one could expect to hear in that tiny piece of the world shown in the segment of the film you are editing.

Hollywood sound editors usually are not so particular. A movie set in America containing all the right bird songs is as rare as a Kirtland's warbler. No one seems to have told the moviemakers that birds have geographic ranges (Carolina wrens can be found singing in New Jersey but are absent from Southern California); that birds migrate (the yellow warbler pouring out its heart in May departs in fall); and that birds live in certain surroundings (meadowlarks don't vocalize in towering forests).

Hollywood's recklessness in adding bird songs to movie soundtracks is puzzling, considering its obsessive attention to detail in other areas. Special effects teams can spend days shooting complex sequences that look true to life but will last only seconds in the finished film. In period pieces the architecture, furnishings, costumes, props and customs of the day are painstakingly researched. Sets constructed to mirror actual places are so accurate we believe they are real. Is it any wonder that even modest films cost tens of millions of dollars to produce?

For those of us who watch birds and have learned their songs, however, movies can be maddening, no matter how big their budgets. It's hard for us to concentrate on a story when ornithological incongruities assault our ears. Compounding our frustration is that other people usually don't notice. Either they're not conversant with bird language or they fall under the hypnotic spell of drama and screen out any incidental sounds.

Moviegoers would not believe a film that showed the streets of New York lined with palm trees. Misplaced bird songs, the aural equivalent of this, fall into seven main categories:

East Is East and West Is West, Except in Hollywood On movie soundtracks, I've heard eastern screech owls and eastern bluebirds in California settings. The eastern screech owl's call added mystery to the opening scene of "E.T.," but in the movie's suburban California setting, this bird would be no less an alien than Steven Spielberg's lovable space traveler.

The award for the biggest geographic gaffe, however -- one that transcended continental boundaries -- could go to the last film adaptation of "Lord of the Flies." Watching this desert-island film, presumably set in the South Pacific, I kept hearing the scream of a red-tailed hawk. The moviemakers were particularly fond of this sound, using it repeatedly to symbolize the isolation and vulnerability of a group of schoolboys, marooned survivors of a plane crash. Yet the red-tailed hawk occurs only in North America and the Caribbean, so either the castaways weren't lost or the bird was.

Day for Night For some moviemakers, there is no distinction between diurnal and nocturnal birds. In their films, a robin may burst into song at midnight; an owl may hoot at high noon. If it seems to suit the mood, they let the whippoorwill call in bright sun, though it raises its voice chiefly to the moon. In "Eyes Wide Shut," it's the dead of night as Tom Cruise walks up to the gates of a Long Island mansion, the scene of an orgiastic costume ball. Inexplicably, a blue jay -- by no means a bird of the night -- calls three times. Defenders of Stanley Kubrick's moviemaking may invoke artistic license, but is this just an excuse for biological illiteracy?

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