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Recent Releases:
 (2007-2008)

SW: The Clone Wars
WALL·E
Hancock
Hellboy II
X-Files: Want to Believe
Kung Fu Panda
The Incredible Hulk
Indy: Crystal Skull
The Happening
Iron Man
Narnia: Prince Caspian
Speed Racer
Horton Hears a Who!
Nim's Island
The Life Before Her Eyes
Leatherheads
Spiderwick Chronicles
Atonement
The Golden Compass
Enchanted
The Water Horse
Beowulf
The Bee Movie
Michael Clayton
The Kite Runner
3:10 to Yuma
We Own the Night
The Kingdom
The Brave One
Rush Hour 3
Eastern Promises
Transformers
The Bourne Ultimatum
The Simpsons Movie
Harry Potter: Phoenix
Ratatouille
Live Free or Die Hard
Shrek the Third
Evan Almighty

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Filmtracks: 1,453

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Week of November 14th, 2008
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On the Scoreboard: (View All)

What's your favorite cues for comedy movies?
  S.Venkatnarayanan
  11/18/08 (9:21 p.m.)
Substitute Topic
  Will
  11/18/08 (8:06 p.m.)
"Engaging" music
  Cap Stewart
  11/18/08 (7:46 p.m.)
Early thoughts on potential award nominees
  Christian Kühn
  11/18/08 (6:42 p.m.)
What's some of your favorite new tracks from t...
  dts
  11/18/08 (3:26 p.m.)


Site Update: (View All)

Major re-write phase done
  10/2/08 (2:44 p.m.)


Customer Favorites:
 (at Amazon.com)

1. Indiana Jones: Crystal Skull
2. The Incredible Hulk (2008)
3. Varèse Sarabande 30th Ann.
4. Last of the Mohicans
5. The Prince of Egypt
6. LOTR: Return of the King (Set)
7. The Dark Knight
8. The Spiderwick Chronicles
9. LOTR: Fellowship of the Ring (Set)
10. Varèse Sarabande 25th Ann.
11. Hellboy II: The Golden Army
12. Glory


Top 12 Review Clicks:
 (updated monthly)

1. Gladiator
2. Moulin Rouge
3. Titanic
4. SW: A New Hope
5. Schindler's List
6. Batman
7. Edward Scissorhands
8. POTC: Curse/Black Pearl
9. Braveheart
10. Batman Begins
11. Last of the Mohicans
12. Jurassic Park


The Best of 2007:

Angel
Nomad: The Warrior
Island of Lost Souls
Partition
3:10 to Yuma
The Golden Compass


The Best of 2006:

Lady in the Water
The Nativity Story
The Promise
Curse of the Golden Flower
Superman Returns
The Shaggy Dog



Currently On Cue:

11/18/08Far and Away: (John Williams) - Expanded Review
Buy it... if you're passionate about highly lyrical and gorgeously melodic scores, especially if they can make a splash with some boldly orchestral adventure along the way.
Avoid it... if other composers' incorporation of uilleann pipes, pan flutes, penny whistles, and The Chieftains into less applicable settings has poisoned you to even the best that John Williams can muster with those elements.
Rating:*****   Read the entire review


11/17/08Christopher Columbus: The Discovery: (Cliff Eidelman) - Expanded Review
Buy it... if you own and enjoy Cliff Eidelman's Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country and seek his largest symphonic follow-up to that score.
Avoid it... if you expect either a robust recording size or an unpredictable, non-traditional musical representation for the historical event.
Rating:****   Read the entire review


11/15/08Batman Returns: (Danny Elfman) - Expanded Review
Buy it... if you prefer your Batman score to better reflect the morbidly tragic sensibilities of Danny Elfman's dominant style in his early career.
Avoid it... if you expect the same heroic power and resonance of the vastly superior orchestral performances (and their recording) you heard in Batman.
Rating:**   Read the entire review


11/13/081492: Conquest of Paradise: (Vangelis) - Expanded Review
Buy it... if, obviously, you consider yourself any basic kind of Vangelis enthusiast or if you're a fan of new age albums in the style of the group Engima's early 1990's material.
Avoid it... if you expect to be convinced in any way that Vangelis' style is true to the settings of the 15th Century.
Rating:****   Read the entire review


11/11/08Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves: (Michael Kamen) - Expanded Review
Buy it... if you seek 5+ minutes of fine orchestral adaptation of the famous Bryan Adams song for the film, or if you enjoyed one of your inevitably many local performances of the score's overture.
Avoid it... if you expect the whole of Michael Kamen's music to soar with any sense of swashbuckling spirit or, quite frankly, if you expect a decent performance and recording mix.
Rating:***   Read the entire review


11/9/08The Rocketeer: (James Horner) - Expanded Review
Buy it... if you're tired of James Horner's more recent, seriously weighty dramatic scores and prefer the unrestrained enthusiasm of his early adventure works, among which The Rocketeer is one of the best.
Avoid it... if the overly-consistent innocence of Horner's soaring themes only serves to remind you of a composer rolling shamelessly in a bed of his own favorite musical constructs.
Rating:****   Read the entire review


11/2/08Filmtracks Endorses Barack Obama for President
Every four years, a fair quantity of Filmtracks readers e-mail me or post to the Scoreboard to declare that they are abandoning the site for other venues of film music opinion. They protest the merging of hobbies and politics, citing a lack of logical connection between the two. Veterans of the site know, however, that conservative (and dominantly religious) interest groups have attacked Filmtracks since 1997 not because of its occasional, politically motivated zinger, but because the site has given high ratings to soundtracks from films deemed offensive by the far right of the American political spectrum. From Basic Instinct and Cruel Intentions to Moulin Rouge and The Mists of Avalon, films deemed morally questionable to such groups are treated equally by Filmtracks, causing the site to be placed on "hit lists" that determine a regular schedule of posted and e-mailed attacks to be maintained against it.

What you see in public, such as the ridiculous evangelical protests that have existed recently on the Scoreboard, is only the tip of the iceberg. Starting with a bible that arrived in the mail in early 1997, I have been personally targeted offline as well. Endless literature in snail mail and phone calls in the middle of the night are among the most common of their tactics. Amusing at first, such perpetual nuisance has proven that the periodic fanboy showing up at my front door is nothing compared to the machine that exists in the frightful fringe of America's evangelical movement. Destined to never extricate this site from these hit lists, I began allowing my personal, moderately liberal political beliefs to bleed into the site, highlighted by prominent endorsements in the country's presidential elections.

The irony in the assumptions that are made by those who attack this site exists in the fact that I'm not the blindly progressive liberal that most expect to come from an upbringing in the San Francisco Bay Area and promote music from films that exhibit poor morality. I strongly believe in capital punishment, oppose legalizing marijuana, and support an expensive, Israeli-style wall around our borders, among other things. My friends (and even family members) admonish me for living the kind of lifestyle that has never included a drop of alcohol or a pinch of drugs. It's only coincidental that my wife and I live next to a large Mormon center, though we appreciate the fact that they make respectful, quiet neighbors.

This site has, with the exception of two years, been developed and maintained from the state of Montana. It's a land dominated by white men who enjoy a healthy arsenal of weapons, a lower level of education, and a distaste for taxes. Being a white male in this environment leads to assumptions that, when shattered, cause acquaintances to approach and ask me why on earth I would support a Muslim, un-American, non-citizen, or even "negro" for president when his opponent is such a well known, branded patriot. I don't try to correct their factual inaccuracies. These men don't read The National Review or The Weekly Standard, much less the online or left-leaning equivalents like Politico or The New Yorker. They gain most of their information from viral e-mails, of course.

What I do tell those acquaintances who wish to convert me is that I always vote against the candidate supported by the majority of uneducated white men. Instead, I vote with the plurality of women, minorities, homosexuals, urbanites, college educated, multi-lingual, youthfully hopeful, and religiously moderate (or non-religious) people who don't discriminate against others because of any of the above attributes. Hate and division are dangerous political tools wielded once again by a conservative base desperate to hold power. The prospect that others in Montana, of all places, recognize the potential for the hope and change that a young, black president could bring is astounding. It is with cautious optimism that I, and thus Filmtracks, endorse Illinois Senator Barack Obama for president. Remember to vote, Americans!

-- Christian Clemmensen, Filmtracks owner and editor


10/30/08Composer Danny Elfman's Worst Nightmare: Sarah Palin
Filmtracks has never been a site to shun American politics. Partly because Filmtracks has endorsed every Democratic presidential candidate since Bill Clinton in 1996 and partly because of positive reviews for music from "amoral films," the site has long been the target of anger from conservative interest groups (mostly the fundamentally religious variety). Veterans of the Scoreboard Forum have seen robotic and predictable retaliatory posts for years. With these facts in mind, the following piece of news is particularly intriguing.

Danny Elfman, one of Hollywood's most popular and successful current composers, has contributed to the formation of a PAC organization called OurGreatestFear.org. Frustrated by the political landscape of America's government during the 2000's, Elfman was specifically driven to action by Republican candidate John McCain's selection of novice Sarah Palin as his running mate. As he states, "Sarah Palin was my worst nightmare."

The composer today posted a fascinating entry in his new blog at The Huffington Post, explaining the circumstances behind his decision to become more involved. He received over a hundred comments on that site within hours, almost all in support of both his music and his political efforts. His entry is entitled "Battling Our Greatest Fear". If you decide to read OurGreatestFear.org, be sure to enjoy the apocalypse cartoon on the "Facts" page.

Filmtracks strongly supports Elfman and his organization. Such initiative warrants both praise and admiration.

[Addendum: the aforementioned apocalypse cartoon seems to have been removed from the site]


10/29/08Backdraft: (Hans Zimmer) - Expanded Review
Buy it... if you own several scores from later in Hans Zimmer's career and seek his first, highly successful and enjoyable large-scale merging of an orchestra and choir with his electronics.
Avoid it... if no variant on the extremely masculine tones and simplistic themes consistent to Zimmer's style (from any era in his career) will fit with your preference for subtlety and delicacy.
Rating:****   Read the entire review


(On Cue Archives & Info)
"There are soundtracks. Then there are scores. Executive record producers of the '90s feed consumers with 'soundtracks' that consist of irrelevant song compilations. You won't find those marketing scams here. At Filmtracks, you get the score... the true, orchestral magic of film music."


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