Amazing Soundtracks


  1. pier007
  2. Pierluigi

Some of my favorites scores and compiled soundtracks.

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1
Vertigo (1958,  PG)
Vertigo 5.0 Stars
James Stewart, in the darkest, most profound and sad performance of his career, falls in love with the alluring, distant, unattainable and mesmerizing Kim Novak.
Bernard Herrmann composes a heavenly, breathtaking wagnerian symphony.
and Alfred Hitchcock, in the absolute peak of his powers, materializes the most beautiful, haunting, compelling and heart breaking tale of love that transcended any cinematic or human barrier.
my all time favorite motion picture.
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2
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968,  G)
2001: A Space Odyssey 5.0 Stars
visually, the most breath-taking film ever created. Anthological.
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3
The Godfather (1972,  R)
The Godfather 5.0 Stars
The quintaessential mafia film. the powerful almighty Don and his sons will always be at the top of the game. an exquisite film with operatic grandeur.
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4
Brazil (1985,  R)
Brazil 5.0 Stars
Terry Gilliam's masterpiece of lyrical and ethereal imagination. Unique take on Orwell's 1984 totalitarian regime. devastating and yet uplifting ending, I tremble every time I see it.
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5
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (1967,  R)
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly 5.0 Stars
Epitome of the spaghetti-western. phenomenal acting trio; epic, raw, operatic grand direction by the unique Sergio Leone, sublimed by Ennio Morricone's score, a quintaessential, perfect film-music marriage. fantastic at every level.
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6
Cinema Paradiso (Nuovo Cinema Paradiso) (1988,  R)
Cinema Paradiso (Nuovo Cinema Paradiso) 5.0 Stars
To live inside a fable, where we can play with time, places and sentiments, a perfect sphere of existence that can only be reached in dreams is a pleasant thought we all cinephiles love to have. As mere mortals, or the infants we still are, we have two ways to conquer that fantasy world, we can either sleep, or we can enter and sit in a dark room, operate a machine and enjoy the ride while we are awake.
That is the theme of one of the most beautiful fairy tales ever portrayed on the silver screen.
The adjectives to describe such amazing story are endless, the truth is that every image and musical note open a path to culminate in one of the most exhilarating, nostalgic, tender, uplifting, colossal and everlasting gems in film history.
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7
Edward Scissorhands (1990,  PG-13)
Edward Scissorhands 5.0 Stars
Tim Burton's masterpiece. an immensely beautiful, charming, poignant cinematic jewel. images full of lyricism embellished by an almost celestial score by Danny Elfman.
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8
Taxi Driver (1976,  R)
Taxi Driver 5.0 Stars
A seminal neo-noir, one of the most powerful and violent psychologic dramas. Scorsese's master direction and Herrman's jazzy score bring a new meaning to god's lonely man...
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9
Once Upon a Time in America (1984,  R)
Once Upon a Time in America 5.0 Stars
Sergio Leone closed his short but fruitful career with a last masterpiece. Morricone plays one of the best soundtracks of film history and Leone accomplishes a lyrical, nostalgic, violent and touching gangster epic. an ode to friendship and true love. immense duo Robert De Niro-James Woods.
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10
Psycho (1960,  R)
Psycho 5.0 Stars
horror/suspense masterpiece. Hitchcock hits the spot once again, creating one of his most eerie and captivating films. full on twists, memorable performances, as well as the best murder ever captured on screen!
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11
Il Postino (1994,  PG)
Il Postino 5.0 Stars
Massimo Troisi's last big goodbye. great soundtrack by Luis Bacalov. the simplicity and beauty of Italy at its best. A lovely, touching, marvel of a film
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12
The Omen (1976,  R)
The Omen 4.0 Stars
Cult classic emerged from 70s demonic craze. Gregory Peck, Lee Remick and the boy Harvey Stephens deliver powerful & nerve-racking performances, All led by Richard Donner's haunting take on Satan's child rise.
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13
Chinatown (1974,  R)
Chinatown 5.0 Stars
State of the art direction by Polanski. A homage that surpases a lot of Film-noirs and hard-boiled detective thrillers. one of the best and most bitter endings ever captured.
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14
Amarcord (1974,  R)
Amarcord 4.0 Stars
Fellini re visits his home town and the peculiar people living there. a magical and hilarious stay, an everlasting "festa per la dolce vita"
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15
Romeo and Juliet (1968,  PG)
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16
From Russia With Love (1964,  PG)
From Russia With Love 5.0 Stars
Best Bond film of all time!!! Sean Connery played the greatest character in film history around the best mission he has had so far. superb train fight and gorgeous leading lady.
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17
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969,  PG)
On Her Majesty's Secret Service 5.0 Stars
the most sensible, touching and special 007 film. Bond's more human side ever potrayed on screen. the only film Lazenby starred as 007, with no less than AMAZING results...
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18
Superman (1978,  PG)
Superman 4.0 Stars
The greatest cinematic transition of a comic book ever done. Richard Donner's vigorous narrative pulse, Christopher Reeve's perfect incarnation and John Williams' majestic score made this movie an instant everlasting classic. Margot Kidder, Gene Hackman and the legendary Marlon Brando are some of the other additions to a perfect equation. An epic and exhilarating tale about the themes we the mere mortals constantly love to revive. The one and only superhero movie.
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19
Breathless (À bout de souffle) (By a Tether) (1960,  Unrated)
Breathless (À bout de souffle) (By a Tether) 4.0 Stars
One of those that defied cinematic conventionalisms. stylish and memorable, superb enfant-terrible's direction, Martial Solal's jazzy score, and Belmondo's tough guy rol. Jean Seberg's beauty left me literally breathless.
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20
High Fidelity (2000,  R)
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21
The Wanderers (1979,  R)
The Wanderers 3.0 Stars
very funny and nostalgic film about an Italian-american gang in the early 60s. awesome soundtrack.
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22
Obsession (1976,  PG)
Obsession 3.5 Stars
Vastly underrated. beautifully shot by Vilmos Zsigmond, haunting score by the great Bernard Herrmann. the ultimate De Palma homage to Hitchcock. a thriller that follows the same line of Vertigo. ending up in a truly heartbreaking way.
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23
GoodFellas (1990,  R)
GoodFellas 5.0 Stars
Scorsese helms the absolute epitome of wiseguy films. the mob was never potrayed with such eclecticism, coldness, hilarity and coolness.
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24
The Son's Room (2001,  R)
The Son's Room 4.5 Stars
A touching and captivating look at a middle-class italian family and a crisis that suddenly breaks their common day to day. unforgettable.
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25
The Fly (1986,  R)
The Fly 4.5 Stars
One of Cronenberg's most comercial and yet superb films. gruesome, gory, raw and yet touching. one of the best sci-fi/horror films, better than the original.
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26
Pulp Fiction (1994,  R)
Pulp Fiction 4.5 Stars
Nothing new could be added to describe the greatness of this 90s genuine cinematic milestone. a cunning, diabolicaly cool experience.
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27
The Mummy (1999,  PG-13)
The Mummy 4.0 Stars
Takes away the dark atmosphere and lyricism of the Karl Freund classic and goes for fun, with an affable "Raiders of the lost ark" tonality, full of humour and rambunctious excitement. Jerry Goldsmith's score is brilliant.
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28
Carlito's Way (1993,  R)
Carlito's Way 5.0 Stars
DePalma's last masterpiece. Pacino accomplished one of his most memorable, touching and heart warming characters.
A film that goes relentlessly to the top of crime/neo-noir films of all time.
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29
The Right Stuff (1983,  PG)
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30
Midnight Cowboy (1969,  R)
Midnight Cowboy 5.0 Stars
A milestone of 60s cinema re-birth, one way ticket to the the decandence and misery of NYC, Voight and Hoffman are two hustlers with hope, innocence and compassion for each other. Raw, brutal, bitter and fascinating.
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31
Blow Out (1981,  R)
Blow Out 4.0 Stars
A mixture between Coppola's The conversation and Antonioni's Blow up, Brian De Palma weaves a compelling thriller, with a surprisingly good performance by a young John Travolta. Pino Donaggio's score and De Palma's stylish camera work really make the film a worthy experience. devastating ending, shocking and full of dark humour.
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32
The Conversation (1974,  PG)
The Conversation 5.0 Stars
San francisco, California. where some of the greatest thrillers in film history have taken place, is the location of one of the most haunting and painstaking character studies in the genre. Gene Hackman is simply brilliant in his personification of a surveillance expert sunk by guilt, who gradually succumbs to the insidious and intricate scheme he is struggling to find out. Profoundly insightful and conspicuous.
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33
Laura (1944,  Unrated)
Laura 5.0 Stars
Gene Tierney is Laura, an angel immortalized in a portrait, who enthralled the soul of three men, and my humble self as well. David Raksin's beautiful and haunting score and the utmost exactness of skill, both in screenplay and direction take this film up high as an enchanting love story and as a dark and complex mystery. Now I know why Otto Preminger, allegedly, destroyed all of the original director Rouben Mamoulian's footage. Another pinnacle of noir, and an obvious precursor, along with Luis Buñuel's Él, of my favorite film, Vertigo.
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34
Get Carter (1971,  R)
Get Carter 4.5 Stars
Sordid and mean spirited pulp with a classic score, and probably the british gangster film par excellence. Michael Caine, in a brutal but cool performance, plays the avenger Jack Carter, a London racketeer who goes to the foggy Newcastle trying to get the people who killed his brother. Seriously nihilistic, bleak and vividly detailed.
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35
The Sting (1973,  PG)
The Sting 4.0 Stars
Delightful caper movie, made by the legendary triad Newman-Redford-Roy Hill. magnificent screenplay and score. superb twist at the end.
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36
The Fearless Vampire Killers, or Pardon Me but Your Teeth Are in My Neck (1967,  Unrated)
The Fearless Vampire Killers, or Pardon Me but Your Teeth Are in My Neck 3.5 Stars
slap-stick comedy is not Polanski's forte but he manages to combine a sultry dark mood, a witty mise-en-scène, great performances and an insanely good soundtrack. Nostalgia and affection is what I feel for this film and for the gorgeous Sharon Tate, before her tragic fate, rest in peace.
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37
King Kong (2005) (2005,  PG-13)
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