This recording has never officially been released and it is the absolute total and proper music soundtrack to the film.
There was some version of the Vangelis soundtrack relased on cassette tape at one point. I owned it. I wish I still had it, but this news makes me very happy.
Saw Harold And Kumar tonight which I found delightful. Funny, and smarter than I thought it would be.
Then snuck into Collateral, which was underwhelming. Some scenes were amazing, and others just seemd forced and laughable. It's a beautifully composed and shot film, though.
Some scenes were amazing, and others just seemd forced and laughable. It's a beautifully composed and shot film, though.
Yep, that was pretty much my reaction. I think if I'd left before about the last 20 minutes, I would have liked it much more. Because it's not so much that it falls apart, it's that it falls apart in such a bland clichéd way, and up until that point, it had been tense and atmospheric enough for me to forgive most of the plot holes. (Like,
why didn't he just kill the lawyer first?)
The Vangelis soundtrack is on the
Blade Runner
Director's Cut DVD. I'm guessing that's the original source material for the bit-torrent.
Anybody know anything about the remake of
Zatoichi?
It's playing in DC; should I make the effort to see it?
I've got the Blade Runner soundtrack right here.
It's a bit stretchy from over playing but...
I've got the Blade Runner soundtrack right here.
Is it the Vangelis version? The much more common one is the soundtrack as performed by the Boston Pops (I believe), or perhaps the London Symphony. I disremember.
I finally watched
An American In Paris
all the way through.
Well, almost. Was there narrative in that interminable dance scene? Because I saw conflict; dance/costumes; no conflict.
I mean, was everyone else really just that goodhearted?
Is it the Vangelis version? The much more common one is the soundtrack as performed by the Boston Pops (I believe), or perhaps the London Symphony. I disremember.
Actually, it's something like the New England American Orchestra.
Not true - the Vangelis soundtrack was finally released several years ago.
Yes true. The Vangelis version was a re-recording in '94. It may be
some
of the music from the movie, as performed
occasionally
by Vangelis but it isn't the soundtrack.
The torrent I linked to is the full music soundtrack from the movie. It's all there and the quality is A++
Disc1:
01. Prologue and Main Titles
02. Leon's Voight Kampff Test
03. Sushi Bar - Damask Rose
04. Spinner Ascent
05. Blush Response
06. Wait FOr Me
07. Deckard Meets Rachael
08. Rachael's Song
09. Tales of the Future
10. Bicycle Riders
11. Chew's Eye Lab
12. Memories of Green
13. Blade Runner Blues
14. Pris Meets J.F. Sebastian
15. One More Kiss, Dear
Disc2:
01. Deckard Dream
02. Thinking of Rachael (Love Theme Different Take)
03. Esper Analysis
04. Animoid Row
05. Taffey Lewis Night Club
06. Salome's Dance
07. Zhora's Retirement
08. I Am The Business
09. Love Theme
10. I Dreamt Music
11. Morning At The Bradbury
12. The Prodigal Son Brings Death
13. Deckard Enters the Bradbury
14. Dangerous Days
15. Wounded Animals
16. Tears In Rain
17. Rachael Sleeps
18. End Titles
What you get on the Official Re-Recording is (according to Amazon.com):
1. Main Titles
2. Blush Response
3. Wait For Me
4. Rachel's Song
5. Love Theme
6. One More Kiss, Dear
7. Blade Runner Blues
8. Memories Of Green
9. Tales Of The Future
10. Damask Rose
11. Blade Runner (End Titles)
12. Tears In Rain
I love An American in Paris even more than Singin' in the Rain (although I know almost nobody else feels this way). For me, the whole movie is worth it just for the 'I've Got Rythym' number when Gene Kelly does the aeroplane.
The torrent I linked to is the full music soundtrack from the movie.
What's the source?
For me, the whole movie is worth it just for the 'I've Got Rythym' number when Gene Kelly does the aeroplane.
I admit I did like the airplane.
I know I'm a bit tired, but I fell asleep twice during that dance number, which I'd rather have had replaced with actual plot-related interaction between characters. I'm not saying it had to be replaced with
dialogue
-- they could have danced or sung the interaction. But it felt so gratuitous to me -- just an "Oh, dear, we have all these ideas and are almost at the end of the movie!"
I also recently saw
Network.
In my head, before I watched it, it was a mix between
Videodrome
and
Broadcast News.
Having seen it, I kinda still think so. Except it's much much bleaker than I'd have expected.