After the initial shock, during the opening credits, I kept thinking the camera would locate a radio being played, with the soundtrack coming over the radio, or some such device. Once accepted that the jazzed up score was part of the makeup of the film, it actually in parts worked quite well.
I remember as a kid, and having seen "The Blob" walking past the theater where 4-D Man was playing, I looked at the poster and thought, I want to see this. I never did get to see it, not until fifty years later. Funny thing is, it's not a "kid's" sci-fi at all. The adult aspects would have bored me to death, as a kid.
The movie, "Shrinking Man" had a jazzy score, of sorts, a mix of orchestral, with Jazz horn interludes. It was not uncommon for the "B films" of the time to have a jazzy score, It lent a grittyness to the tone of the film, this however was not the domain of the Science Fiction movie.The great scores of Bernard Herremman fit the tone of what one would expect from Science Fiction. Jazz was more hardnosed, and street savy, it fit so many "noir" films of the time. In this way, I consider 4-D Man a "noir" Sci-Fi.
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