Great film, and a really recognisable soundtrack that perfectly fitted the movie.
@1986SSMONTECARLO21 сағат бұрын
''I'm the little acorn that grows into the giant oak''
@DirtyMerkinКүн бұрын
Fantastic.
@kumaquattro-le1vkКүн бұрын
I was 18 and my high school sweetheart was 17. After the movie and once we got in my car, she started crying from all the emotions of the film . After high school, our 1 1/2 year relationship slowly ended and we each went our own way . 10 years later in 1976, a mutual friend informed me that she had died in a swimming pool accident . I still think of her to this day . RIP Wendy .
@leg414Күн бұрын
Simply Beautiful music from the master...John Williams and this makes the series unforgettable and timeless! Peace
@PR-pp2zc3 күн бұрын
Today's crowds are goofy they can never like this kind of music nor the film 😮
@steelpatriot36833 күн бұрын
Fantastic music. Many years ago I used to let the end credits play through on my old VHS copy just so I could listen to the music. A brilliant score.
@m.scottreeder3 күн бұрын
“Just look at those tattoos. They’d look real nice at a swimming pool in Acapulco.”
@mariangelaferrara71093 күн бұрын
RIP in Anouk Aimee
@gillesdelesque66003 күн бұрын
Une musique magique pour un des plus beaux films de ma vie
@j.r.marchley15633 күн бұрын
Music has always represented the emotional underpinnings of the visual medium. Even in the silent film days they had piano and organ accompaniment to enhance the experience. Televison especially in the 60's had some of the most iconic scores attached to the series airing at the time. Frontiere's scores for The Outer Limits are extraordinarily unique and immensely profound in their emotional impact. They are far superior to the acoustic wall paper that wafts through today's movies and television. Where the music is relegated to almost a sound effect, it a disgrace. Luckily we have the older score available for our musical pleasures.
@miltonabbiati75984 күн бұрын
Great Mind❤👏🏻 Legendary Basil Poledouris💖🔝 RoboCop is one of my favorite heroes of all time. Even today, it is among the films that I consider "crazy cool"!💥🦾 Cyberpunk aesthetics and Underground culture are the elements of a transition phase in my life. Research: Paul Verhoeven makes his Hollywood debut with a fairly ambitious film. If the essence of the story is that of a technological and spectacular one, its core is that of a resurrection. With obvious influences from comics, but also from the most advanced science fiction literature (Philip K. Dick), Verhoeven directs a tough, dizzying and, all in all, little consolatory film. Despite anticipated difficulties in marketing the film, particularly due to the title, the film performed well based on pre-release critical reactions and positive word of mouth. “RoboCop” was a financial success upon its release in July 1987, earning $53.4 million. The reviews praised it as a smart action film with deep philosophical and satirical messages, but were more conflicted about the extreme violence. The film was nominated for several awards and won an Academy Award as well as numerous Saturn Awards. The script had been offered (and rejected) by virtually every major Hollywood director before it reached Paul Verhoeven (among others, David Cronenberg). The director initially threw it away after reading the first pages, convinced that it was just a stupid action film. It was his wife who read the script to the end and convinced him that the story was much more complex with many satire and allegorical elements, only at that point Verhoeven finally decided to direct the film, the first directed by the director in America. The studio decided that Rob Bottin would be the ideal person to create RoboCop's armor because he had just finished doing the special effects for "The Thing." The organic food meal that RoboCop eats is actually parsnips, tomato puree, and crushed peanut butter bars. The Auto-9, RoboCop's supplied firearm, is a modified version of the Beretta 93R. RoboCop's gun was originally the Desert Eagle. Former President Richard Nixon was hired to promote the home-video version of the film for $25,000, a fee he donated to charity. Concerned that various police forces would object to the scene of the protagonist throwing Clarence Boddicker through the glass windows while being read his rights, the producers organized a preliminary screening for an audience of police officers, only to find that they were thrilled by the sight of the 'hero doing something they weren't allowed to do. The director Paul Verhoeven likened the character of RoboCop to the figure of Christ in an interview, citing some clear references in the film, such as the death of agent Alex Murphy, his resurrection as RoboCop and also the scene in which he faces the last time Boddicker walking on the water, which, dyed red by the blood of the criminal he killed with a slash to the neck, would refer to the miracle of the wedding at Cana with the transformation of water into wine. About 25 years after the film's release, an Internet rumor began circulating about getting funding for a RoboCop statue for the city of Detroit. Peter Weller himself created an ad to support the proposal. Ultimately, a Kickstarter campaign was created and proved to be a success, with the 10-foot-tall statue currently in production. In Sacramento, California, a robbery suspect took refuge in a movie theater to escape the police while RoboCop was showing. While waiting to go out he started watching the film and followed it with so much attention that he didn't notice that the police had evacuated all the other spectators from the cinema in the meantime. When the lights came on the stunned man was taken into custody. In addition to the sequels and the reboot, the film also inspired several comics, various video games and four television series, all featuring a cyborg police officer.
@starlight76416 күн бұрын
Beautiful music by Philippe Sarde for a movie that touched my heart many years ago.
@arvandvarahram7 күн бұрын
Thank you for the suit. Definitely the highlight of the film which was really ... well hm. "Night at the opera" is of one those magical tracks that I can listen to in a loop all day long, like Barry's "Bond lured to the pyramids".
@tbastdgagitw7 күн бұрын
Everything in this set was used on practically every episode
@user-gx8vh8jz6t7 күн бұрын
"I LIKE IT!" 😂 Happy Friday Mind!
@miguelhouse64998 күн бұрын
Very Beautiful Score :) :) :)
@genecollison468810 күн бұрын
I really like Lalo Schifrin’s score for Bullit, and The Cincinnati Kid.
@usuarioanonimo896911 күн бұрын
Is it just me, or does Ratigan looks so similar to Mr Hyde in this picture? The hat, the stick, and the evil expression 🤔🗿
@user-bk5uu5tw4f11 күн бұрын
11:51
@miltonabbiati759811 күн бұрын
Great Mind❤ Great Jerry Goldsmith👏🏻 Kim Basinger💖🔝💋🤩 Research: From a great novel by James Ellroy, a detective story that doesn't leave you stunned but recovers the best suggestions of the genre. The "hitter" Russell Crowe already reveals himself for what he is: more than a man, a bull. Oscar for the screenplay and for Kim Basinger, who makes a credible lookalike of Veronika Lake. Hanson chose Kim Basinger because he felt she "was the actress whose beauty could project the glamor of Hollywood's golden age." The film, which was presented in competition at the 50th Cannes Film Festival, also retraces true events sadly known as the Bloody Christmas of 1951. In 2015 it was chosen for preservation in the National Film Registry of the Library of Congress of the United States.
@kevinobrien391512 күн бұрын
The great lalo
@bouaffoudjamel412612 күн бұрын
❤❤❤ Un chef d'œuvre +la musique inoubliable. 🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉
@gregg59z13 күн бұрын
Bernard Herrmann film compser
@jaspertickler183113 күн бұрын
this soundtrack made me pick up a bass guitar and made me love playing it
@jody852693713 күн бұрын
This is great.. A pleasure to hear the original orchestrated versions. I have the Laurie Johnson re-recorded versions on cd. I forgive Mr. Johnson for the obvious money grab and inferior recordings but I will add that I was quite disappointed.
@j.r.marchley156313 күн бұрын
Jerry Goldsmith's composing career gave us such amazing diversity of film scores. Energetic, sweeping, epic and emotional. His music for L.A. Confidential is a listening experience extraordinaire.
@darrensmith699913 күн бұрын
Classic thank you (:
@darrensmith699913 күн бұрын
I have the Sound Trak on CD but thank you for the suite (:
@PlasmaCoolantLeak14 күн бұрын
"But this is my best sports jacket!",😆
@mogensschmidt249814 күн бұрын
i dare you to do the new one
@PlasmaCoolantLeak14 күн бұрын
Love this movie, esp being an SF Bay Area kid, seeing local news people from the TV stations in the area in the flick.
@silviatrapani584914 күн бұрын
Che Orgoglio!!!!!! SONO :SICILIANA!!!!❤
@DavidChrisCastillo-im1wg15 күн бұрын
Only in 1966!
@sickheadache990315 күн бұрын
This is..Great Score by John Barry to a truly Bad Flic. Director Bryan Forbes trying his best being Alfred Hitchcock and Was a Complete Fail. This sequence was the only thing good about the whole film. 🥴🤔
@user-cb5gd9un9c17 күн бұрын
After seeing this in the Theater back in '75.... I went right to the Record Store and bought the Album....GOOD Memories!!!....GREAT SOUNDTRACK!!!
@1986SSMONTECARLO18 күн бұрын
As far as I'm concerned Grusin should have won the Oscar for this MASTERPIECE!!!
@user-cb5gd9un9c17 күн бұрын
Oh Boy Yeah!!!
@ikaikamaleko837018 күн бұрын
Boy this takes me back in time, miss those days more than I can say.