Jump to content

Andy

Members
  • Posts

    5,219
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    22

Posts posted by Andy

  1.  

    27 minutes ago, Tallguy said:

     

    I still love Always. The movie. The score? It's an all time classic and I have nothing to apologize for. It's in my "The Black Hole" category of expanded scores that I bought and years later I still listen to CONSTANTLY.


    I don’t know about Always as a film but, The Black Hole (movie and score) will always live rent free in my head. 

  2. This theme (which I agree with the YT comments, sounds like an adapted version of the 90s animated theme) is dominated by that wonderful driving ostinato, like Robin Hood Prince of Thieves.  Starts at 1:42 and appears again at 10:23. 


     

     

     

     

    But I think it’s great, and it certainly qualifies for a darker style Superman type theme as rumors suggest for Kamen’s early ideas.  I don’t have the disc, but I’ve heard the liner notes aren’t too helpful either. 

     

    This may be a dumb question, because grant you, I only listened to the first disc and skimmed the second, but does this ostinato and theme appear elsewhere in the score? Again, my lack of familiarity may have caused me to miss it. 


     

  3. On 20/4/2024 at 2:51 PM, crocodile said:

    Fortunately for any casual listeners, the LLL album features the film construct of the finale/end credits that contains all the best material in one neatly flowing suite. For the sheer majority, this is all you need.

     

    Okay, so I keep coming back to this score, because the End Credits are so damn cool! And they’re not on the OST, so if you want ‘em, you gotta get the LLL. 
     

    Fine,but…

     

    On 20/4/2024 at 3:37 PM, HunterTech said:

    But yes, the end credits suite is an incredibly effective edit, even if it's maybe too reliant on the climax cues for it to not feel too redundant to include in a playlist. I do wonder who on team the assembled it, since it definitely features unique bits that aren't in the rest of the score.

     

    The End Credits don’t represent the score!!!  I keep scanning through the score, wishing and hoping to find the same driving textures and motifs, but they aren’t there.  X-Jet has the motif, but it’s buried under synth. 
     

    I clearly don’t know the history of this like many of you. Is it possible this suite was assembled from an early rejected score that Kamen recorded? Or demos?

     

    This is maddeningly frustrating. 

  4. 9 hours ago, Faleel said:

    Isn't that the point? Orville is getting in the way of taking other things she could get?

     

    Yes, if she can get them, sure.  If not, she should do the Orville.  It's a steady gig.  I'm just spitballing, but she probably wants a role of her own, and not one that is dwarfed by writer/producer/actor/creator McFarlane.  But if she can't get that, well... that's Hollywood.

  5. Well, the way I see it, she’s not a star and should take what she can get. And if that’s the Orville, she should do it.  She’s lovely, and talented, but she’s over 30 which makes her 90 in Hollywood years.  Her ship sailed with the GI Joe role and the failed Wonder Woman pilot, which I only connected her with after seeing her on the Orville. 

  6. Deathstalker (1983)


    IMG_5543.jpeg

     

    Oh this is ridiculously fun!  Antihero Richard Hill wears a blonde wig the production designer got at a Halloween store.   The story is so thin, there’s nothing to get in the way of all the fights, rotoscoping magic effects, and oh yeah tons of nudity.  This is a Conan ripoff done right.  Deathstalker does indeed battle a pig headed monster like in the poster. Oddly enough, this came out the same year as Return of the Jedi, and the monster in the film looks a bit like one of Jabba’s Gamorrean Guards. 
     

    IMG_5545.webp


    Lana Clarkson plays Deathstalker’s woman. A Valeria to his Conan, she holds her own with a sword, and fights topless, but with a cloak bearing it all, as though she stepped right from the pages of Heavy Metal.  Come to find out, the actress as sadly murdered by Phil Spector in 2003 at age 40.  
     

    This is the first of four in the series. I understand part 2 is the best regarded. 
     

    This was a solid 8/10 for stupid sword and sorcery entertainment.  I laughed. 

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Guidelines.