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La-La Land has announced two new releases due next week -- Lorne Balfe's score for Netflix's recent sequel BEVERLY HILLS COP: AXEL F, which incorporates Harold Faltermeyer's classic theme from the original 1984 film; and an "ultimate cut" edition of Harry Manfredini's score for FRIDAY THE 13TH PART V: A NEW BEGINNING.


The latest release from Music Box is a two-disc, expanded edition of Gabriel Yared's Oscar-nominated score for THE TALENTED MR. RIPLEY, the 1999 remake of Patricia Highsmith's classic first novel in her "Ripley" series (previously filmed as Purple Noon, and recently remade as the mini-series Ripley). Ripley was the second of four theatrical features Yared scored for writer-director Anthony Minghella, and starred Matt Damon as Ripley with a remarkable supporting cast - Gwyneth Paltrow, Cate Blanchett, Philip Seymour Hoffman and an Oscar-nominated Jude Law. Disc One features the full film score, while Disc Two features alternates and demo cues.


The latest release from Caldera presents the score to HAUNTED HEART, a new romantic thriller from director Fernando Trueba (Belle Epoque, Chico & Rita), with music by Zbigniew Preisner (The Double Life of Veronique, Damage).


IN THEATERS TODAY

Beetlejuice Beetlejuice - Danny Elfman
The Cowboy and the Queen - Craig Richey
Don't Say It - Michele Josia
El Candidato Honesto - Dan Zlotnik
The Front Room - Marcelo Zarvos
His Three Daughters - Rodrigo Amarante
I'll Be Right There - James Righton
Paradise Is Burning - Giorgio Giampa
Red Rooms - Dominique Plante
Seeking Mavis Beacon - Fatima Al Qadiri 


COMING SOON

September 13
Beverly Hills Cop: Axel F - Lorne Balfe - La-La Land
Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning - Harold Faltermeyer - La-La Land
Industry: Season 2 - Nathan Micay - LuckyMe
October 4
White Bird - Thomas Newman - Lakeshore
Coming Soon  
Bernard Hoetger
- Carsten Rocker - Alhambra
Desire Hope
- Szymon Szewczyk - Kronos 
Eyeball
 - Bruno Nicolai - Quartet
Geo
- Matteo Cremolini - Kronos
The Golden Age of Science Fiction Vol. 6 - Malcolm Lockyer, Ruby Raksin - Dragon's Domain
Haunted Heart - Zbigniew Preisner - Caldera
La corta notte delle bambole di vetro (Short Night of Glass Dolls)
 - Ennio Morricone - Quartet 
The Moonwalkers - Anne Nikitin - Silva
The Paul Chihara Collection Vol. 5
 - Paul Chihara - Dragon's Domain [CD-R]
Pentathlon
 - David Spear - Dragon's Domain   
The Talented Mr. Ripley
- Gabriel Yared - Music Box 


THIS WEEK IN FILM MUSIC HISTORY

September 6 - Louis Silvers born (1889)
September 6 - William Kraft born (1923)
September 6 - Patrick O'Hearn born (1954)
September 6 - Franz Waxman begins recording his score for My Geisha (1961)
September 6 - Hanns Eisler died (1962)
September 6 - John Williams records his score for the Eleventh Hour episode "The Bronze Locust" (1963)
September 6 - George Duning's scores for the Star Trek episodes "Is There In Truth No Beauty?" and "The Empath" are recorded (1968)
September 6 - Jerry Fielding posthumously wins the Emmy for his TV movie score High Midnight; Patrick Williams wins for the Lou Grant episode “Hollywood” (1980)
September 6 - Wladimir Selinsky died (1984)
September 6 - Jay Chattaway records his score for the Star Trek: Voyager episodes “The Chute” and “Future’s End Parts 1 & 2” (1996)
September 7 - Leonard Rosenman born (1924)
September 7 - Sonny Rollins born (1930)
September 7 - Carlos Camilleri born (1931)
September 7 - Gianni Marchetti born (1933)
September 7 - Waldo de los Rios born (1934)
September 7 - Mark Isham born (1951)
September 7 - Fred Steiner's score for the Star Trek episode "Mudd's Women" is recorded (1966)
September 7 - Herman Stein records his score for the Lost in Space episode "Space Circus" (1966)
September 7 - Miklos Rozsa begins recording his score for The Power (1967)
September 7 - Owen Pallett born (1979)
September 7 - Recording sessions begin for Christopher Young’s score for The Core (2002)
September 8 - Philippe-Gerard born (1924)
September 8 - Peter Maxwell Davies born (1934)
September 8 - Nelson Riddle records his score for the Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea episode “Escape from Venice” (1965)
September 8 - Robert Drasnin records his score for The Wild Wild West episode “The Night of the Deadly Bed” (1965)
September 8 - Fred Steiner's score for the Star Trek episode "Mirror, Mirror" is recorded (1967)
September 8 - Dustin O’Halloran born (1971)
September 8 - Patrick Williams records his score for The Streets of San Francisco episode “The Thrill Killers” (1976)
September 8 - Artie Kane records his score for The New Adventures of Wonder Woman episode “Anschluss ‘77” (1977)
September 8 - Leonard Rosenman wins his second Emmy, for Friendly Fire; David Rose wins for the Little House on the Prairie episode “The Craftsman” (1979)
September 8 - John Barry begins recording his unused score for The Golden Child (1986)
September 8 - Alex North died (1991)
September 8 - Dennis McCarthy records his score for the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode “The Homecoming” (1993)
September 8 - Ernest Troost wins the Emmy for The Canterville Ghost; Hummie Mann wins for the Picture Windows episode “Language of the Heart;” Mike Post wins for his main title theme to Murder One (1996) 
September 8 - Dennis McCarthy begins recording his score for the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode “You Are Cordially Invited” (1997)
September 8 - Jay Chattaway wins his first Emmy for the final Star Trek: Voyager episode, “Endgame;” Arturo Sandoval wins for the For Love or Country: The Arturo Sandoval Story score; James Newton Howard wins for the Gideon’s Crossing main title theme (2001)
September 8 - George Fenton wins his second Emmy, for the Planet Earth episode “Pole to Pole;” Jeff Beal wins his second Emmy, for the Nightmares and Dreamscapes segment “Battlefield;” Trevor Morris wins his first Emmy, for The Tudors main title theme (2007)
September 8 - Ramin Djawadi wins his first Emmy, for the Game of Thrones episode score “The Dragon and the Wolf;” Cyrille Aufort wins for March of the Penguins 2: The Next Step, and Carlos Rafael Rivera wins for Godless’ main title theme (2018)
September 9 - Hoyt Curtin born (1922)
September 9 - Jerrold Immel born (1936)
September 9 - Bernard Herrmann begins recording score cues for Hangover Square (1944)
September 9 - Christopher Palmer born (1946)
September 9 - David A. Stewart born (1952)
September 9 - Bernard Herrmann begins recording his score to Beneath the 12-Mile Reef (1953)
September 9 - Eric Serra born (1959)
September 9 - Alex North begins recording his score to The Shoes of the Fisherman (1968)
September 9 - Richard Markowitz records his score for the Mission: Impossible episode “The Numbers Game” (1969)
September 9 - Harry Geller records his only Mission: Impossible score, for the episode “The Innocent” (1970)
September 9 - Harry Escott born (1976)
September 9 - Hugo Friedhofer's score for Die Sister, Die! is recorded (1976)
September 9 - Joey Newman born (1976)
September 9 - Recording sessions begin for Philippe Sarde’s score to Ghost Story (1981)
September 9 - David Shire begins recording his score for The Journey Inside (1993)
September 9 - Jay Chattaway records his score for the Star Trek: Enterprise episode “Anomaly” (2003)
September 9 - Michael Galasso died (2009)
September 9 - Michael Stein and Kyle Dixon win the Emmy for Stranger Things main title theme; Jeff Beal wins for House of Cards’ “Chapter 63;” Jeff Russo wins for the Fargo episode “Aporia” (2017)
September 10 - Arnold Schwarzwald born (1918)
September 10 - Johnny Keating born (1927)
September 10 - Hugo Riesenfeld died (1939)
September 10 - Roy Ayers born (1940)
September 10 - Jack Beaver died (1963)
September 10 - Les Baxter records his score for the U.S. release of Black Sabbath (1963)
September 10 - Richard Shores records his score for The Wild Wild West episode “The Night of the Sedgewick Curse” (1968)
September 10 - Richard LaSalle records his score for the Land of the Giants episode “The Unsuspected” (1969)
September 10 - Allan Gray died (1973)
September 10 - Laurence Rosenthal records his score for 21 Hours at Munich (1976)
September 10 - Bruce Broughton records his score for the Amazing Stories episode "Welcome to My Nightmare" (1986)
September 10 - Laurence Rosenthal wins his sixth Emmy, for Young Indiana Jones and the Hollywood Follies; Don Davis wins his second Emmy, for the SeaQuest DSV episode “Daggers;” Jerry Goldsmith wins his fifth and final Emmy, for the Star Trek: Voyager theme (1995)
September 10 - Dennis McCarthy records his score for the Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode “A Time to Stand” (1997)
September 10 - Dennis McCarthy records his score for the Enterprise episode “Shockwave, Part 2” (2002)
September 10 - Carter Burwell wins the Emmy for part 5 of Mildred Pierce; Trevor Morris wins his second Emmy, for The Borgias’ main title theme; Garth Neustadter wins for the American Masters episode “John Muir in the New World” (2011)
September 10 - Gert Wilden died (2015)
September 10 - Sean Callery wins his fourth Emmy, for the theme to Marvel’s Jessica Jones; Mac Quayle wins his first Emmy, for the Mr. Robot episode score “eps1.0_ hellofriend.mov;” Danny Elfman wins his second Emmy, for his music direction of Danny Elfman’s Music from the Films of Tim Burton; Victor Reyes wins his first Emmy, for The Night Manager episode 2 (2016)
September 11 - Herbert Stothart born (1885)
September 11 - Arvo Part born (1935)
September 11 - Leo Kottke born (1945)
September 11 - Hugo Friedhofer begins recording his score to Between Heaven and Hell (1956)
September 11 - Stu Philips begins recording his replacement score to The Appointment (1969)
September 11 - Gerald Fried and Quincy Jones win the Emmy for Part 1 of Roots; Leonard Rosenman and Alan & Marilyn Bergman win for Sybil (1977)
September 11 - Fred Steiner records his only Star Trek: The Next Generation episode score, for “Code of Honor” (1987)
September 11 - Laurence Rosenthal wins his fifth Emmy, for the Young Indiana Jones Chronicles episode “Vienna, 1908;” Lennie Niehaus wins for the cable movie Lush Life; John Debney wins for his SeaQuest DSV main title theme (1994)
September 11 - Bruce Broughton wins his ninth Emmy, for Warm Springs (2005); Michael Giacchino wins for the Lost pilot score; Danny Elfman wins for Desperate Housewives’s main title theme (2005)
September 11 - Antoine Duhamel died (2014)
September 12 - Wolfgang Zeller born (1893)
September 12 - Gavriil Popov born (1904)
September 12 - David Raksin begins recording his score for Laura (1944)
September 12 - Christopher Dedrick born (1947)
September 12 - Hans Zimmer born (1957)
September 12 - Bernard Herrmann records his score for The Alfred Hitchcock Hour episode “Terror at Northfield” (1963)
September 12 - Lalo Schifrin begins recording his score to Bullitt (1968)
September 12 - Nathan Larson born (1970)
September 12 - Jerry Goldsmith wins his fourth Emmy, for part 2 of Masada; Bruce Broughton wins his first Emmy, for “The Satyr” episode of Buck Rogers in the 25th Century (1981)
September 12 - Franz Grothe died (1982)
September 12 - Patrick Williams wins his second Emmy, for the TV movie The Princess and the Cabbie; David Rose wins for the Little House on the Prairie episode score “He Was Only Twelve – Part 2” (1981)
September 12 - Recording sessions begin for Pino Donaggio's Body Double score (1984)
September 12 - William Alwyn died (1985)
September 12 - Jay Chattaway records his score for the Star Trek: The Next Generation episode “Darmok” (1991)
September 12 - Bruce Broughton wins his eighth Emmy, for Eloise at Christmastime; Velton Ray Bunch wins for the Star Trek: Enterprise episode “Similitude;” Randy Newman wins for Monk’s second season main title theme (2004)
September 12 - John Willliams wins the Main Title Theme Emmy for Great Performances; Howard Goodall wins for the cable movie Into the Storm; Joseph LoDuca wins for the Legend of the Seeker episode “The Prophecy” (2009)
September 12 - Rachel Portman wins her first Emmy, for Bessie; Jeff Beal wins for House of Cards, “Chapter 32;” Dustin O’Halloran wins for Transparent’s main title theme (2015)

DID THEY MENTION THE MUSIC?

CLOSE TO YOU - Dominic Savage, Oliver Coates

"Savage and Page eventually bisect 'Close to You' into two distinct chapters, one in which Sam heads home to his family, and a later one that sees him again reunited with Katherine, searching for more. Only one of these chapters feels deserving of Page’s tremendous vulnerability, while the other feels like a betrayal of the very themes that set the rest of the film apart. A tinkling, overly dramatic score does little to pump up the actual drama of the film -- mostly, it feels cheap and manipulative, something the film avoids in its best moments -- while Catherine Lutes’ swirling cinematography keeps us constantly on the wrong foot, and occasional moments in which she focuses on nothing of import rankle."
 
Kate Erbland, IndieWire 
 
"This tentative romance is poignant, but timidly approached: Katherine never comes fully into focus as a character outside her relationship to Sam, which itself is drawn in soft pastel strokes, while the sparse piano and sorrowful strings of the score (composed by Savage with Oliver Coates) is called on to fill in some emotional blanks. The stories of a brittle family fallout and a second-chance spark don’t entirely mesh together, though they afford Page a full spectrum of feeling to play: hard and soft, guarded and unbound, combative and seductive. For any viewers who have lost touch with the star, it’s a happy reacquaintance."
 
Guy Lodge, Variety 
 
THE KILLER - Marco Beltrami

"Allusions to Woo's 1980s masterpiece are weightless nostalgia. Where Woo once took risks, this year's The Killer is unambitiously by the books. Marco Beltrami's highpoint score tries to add some zip with jazzy woodwind rhythms, but visuals lag behind musical peppiness. Certain aerial moves pulled off by Emmanuel read like an actor floating on wires, while chase sequences struggle to reach maximum speeds. There's nothing exquisite or exceptional about Woo's second go-around, which makes one ponder why this watered-down take exists outside scrubbing subtitles (except Parisian characters speak French, so that's also moot). It's all so inconsequential, advancing in the most routine fashion as far as deadly criminal clusterfunks play out -- the total opposite of Woo's frenzied and endearing source calamity."
 
Matthew Donato, Collider 
 
"But this isn’t really a movie about, how do you say in French… ídeas. This is a movie about the way Emmanuel struts in slow-motion outside of Jenn’s nightclub as smoke billows off of the streets behind her, and how cool it is when she gets through a pat-down by hiding a deconstructed sword in her dress. This is a movie about posing Zee and Sey in a Mexican standoff with Jenn perfectly framed in a wheelchair between them. It’s a movie about the frisky split-screen that Woo introduces into scenes with the improvisational delight of free jazz (all the better to de-emphasize the story with), and the horny saxophone that Marco Beltrami’s score uses to inject actual jazz into the middle of an exuberantly staged hospital shootout (all the better to celebrate the fun of playing)."
 
David Ehrlich, IndieWire 
 
"A final battle inside Zee’s favorite church (set to a score that occasionally features jazzy horns) is an exercise in the sort of combat and carnage that defined his heyday, and while it’s not the equal of his finest hours -- largely because it’s woefully short on balletic gracefulness -- it has a muscularity that leans into his stars’ strengths."
 
Nick Schager, The Daily Beast

MY PENGUIN FRIEND - Fernando Velazquez
 
"Shot occasionally through Dindim’s perspective, 'My Penguin Friend' offers a genuine sense of wonder and play (Fernando Velázquez’s tinkly score assists) as the penguin colony of Patagonia prepares to head off into the ocean for their summer months, feeding and breeding to their hearts’ content. Dindim dozes in his nest as a group of enthusiastic birders observe the start of his tribe’s thrilling migratory process (while some of the I-am-a-penguin shots look CGI-fake, the majority of them are immersive and impressive and will surely delight a younger audience)."
 
Kate Erbland, IndieWire 

THE NEXT TEN DAYS IN L.A.

Screenings of older films in Los Angeles-area theaters.

September 6
THE BAD SLEEP WELL (Masaru Sato) [New Beverly]
BRAZIL (Michael Kamen) [Vidiots]
BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN (Gustavo Santaolalla) [Vidiots]
BURLESQUE (Christophe Beck) [Vidiots]
GREMLINS (Jerry Goldsmith) [Nuart]
HEAT (Elliot Goldenthal) [Vista]
I HEARD IT THROUGH THE GRAPEVINE [Academy Museum]
I LOST MY BODY (Dan Levy) [Los Feliz 3]
JACKIE BROWN [New Beverly]
THE LIFE AQUATIC WITH STEVE ZISSOU (Mark Mothersbaugh) [New Beverly]
MATADOR (Bernardo Bonezzi) [BrainDead Studios]
MYSTERIOUS SKIN (Robin Guthrie, Harold Budd) [BrainDead Studios]
THE NOTEBOOK (Aaron Zigman) [Aero] 
OVER THE EDGE (Sol Kaplan) [Alamo Drafthouse]
PARIS, TEXAS (Ry Cooder) [Egyptian]
TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY (Brad Fiedel) [Vista]

September 7
THE BAD SLEEP WELL (Masaru Sato) [New Beverly]
BOULEVARD NIGHTS (Lalo Schifrin) [Los Feliz 3]
A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (Rod McKuen, John Scott Trotter, Vince Guaraldi) [New Beverly]
BURDEN OF DREAMS [Academy Museum]
THE CASTAWAYS OF TURTLE ISLAND (Dorival Caymmi, Nana Vasconcelos) [Los Feliz 3]
THE CONVERSATION (David Shire) [Aero]
GLORIA (Bill Conti) [Egyptian]
THE GREAT MOUSE DETECTIVE (Henry Mancini) [Vidiots]
HEAT (Elliot Goldenthal) [Vista]
HEATHERS (David Newman) [Vidiots]
JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS (Bernard Herrmann) [Egyptian]
LAW OF DESIRE [BrainDead Studios]
LOOKING FOR LANGSTON [Academy Museum]
MURIEL'S WEDDING (Peter Best) [BrainDead Studios]
NIGHT ON EARTH (Tom Waits) [Egyptian]
NOW AND THEN (Cliff Eidelman) [Vidiots]
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (Richard O'Brien, Richard Hartley) [Nuart] 
THE ROOM (Mladen Milicevic) [Landmark Westwood]
ROXANNE (Bruce Smeaton) [Vidiots]
SOME LIKE IT HOT (Adolph Deutsch) [Vista]
STALKER (Eduard Artemyev) [Alamo Drafthouse]
TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY (Brad Fiedel) [Vista]
TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. (Wang Chung) [Los Feliz 3]
TOY STORY 2 (Randy Newman) [Academy Museum]
TWIN PEAKS FIRE WALK WITH ME (Angelo Badalamenti) [New Beverly]
 
September 8
ARREBATO (Negativo) [BrainDead Studios]
THE BAD SLEEP WELL (Masaru Sato) [New Beverly] 
A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (Rod McKuen, John Scott Trotter, Vince Guaraldi) [New Beverly]
THE CITY OF LOST CHILDREN (Angelo Badalamenti) [BrainDead Studios]
COWBOY BEBOP: THE MOVIE (Yoko Kanno) [Vidiots]
EARTHQUAKE (John Williams) [Aero]
GERONIMO: AN AMERICAN LEGEND (Ry Cooder) [Academy Museum]
HARRY AND THE HENDERSONS (Bruce Broughton) [Vidiots]
HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE (Patrick Doyle) [Alamo Drafthouse]
HEAT (Elliot Goldenthal) [Vista]
HIGH SCHOOL [Egyptian]
LE CERCLE ROUGE (Eric Demarsan) [Egyptian]
MAINE-OCEAN EXPRESS [Los Feliz 3]
SOME LIKE IT HOT (Adolph Deutsch) [Vista] 
TENET (Ludwig Goransson) [Fine Arts]
TO LIVE AND DIE IN L.A. (Wang Chung) [Los Feliz 3] 
WHERE IS THE FRIEND'S HOUSE? (Amine Allah Hessine) [Vidiots]
WINGS [Academy Museum]
A WOMAN UNDER THE INFLUENCE (Bo Harwood) [Egyptian] 

September 9
BEND OF THE RIVER (Hans J. Salter), THE FAR COUNTRY [New Beverly]
BOYFRIENDS AND GIRLFRIENDS (Jean-Louis Valero) [Egyptian]
HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE (Patrick Doyle) [Alamo Drafthouse] 
HEAT (Elliot Goldenthal) [Vista] 
I AM NOT YOUR NEGRO (Alexei Aigui) [Academy Museum]
MAD MAX (Brian May) [Alamo Drafthouse]
MR. KLEIN (Egisto Macchi, Pierre Porte) [Los Feliz 3]
A NIGHT AT THE OPERA (Herbert Stothart) [Culver]
THE PLOT AGAINST HARRY (Frank Lewin) [Egyptian]
ZOMBIE (Giorio Tucci, Fabio Frizzi) [Alamo Drafthouse]

September 10
ANOTHER WOMAN [Los Feliz 3]
BEND OF THE RIVER (Hans J. Salter), THE FAR COUNTRY [New Beverly]
HEAT (Elliot Goldenthal) [Vista] 
INFERNAL AFFAIRS (Chan Kwong Wing) [Vidiots]
MAD MAX (Brian May) [Alamo Drafthouse] 
OUT OF THE BLUE (Tom Lavin) [Egyptian]
PARIS, TEXAS (Ry Cooder) [Los Feliz 3]
SHOOT THE MOON [Egyptian]
STALKER (Eduard Artemyev) [Alamo Drafthouse] 
ZOMBIE (Giorio Tucci, Fabio Frizzi) [Alamo Drafthouse] 

September 11
BROKEN ENGLISH (Scratch Massive) [Los Feliz 3]
DAISIES (Jiri Slitr, Juri Sust) [Vidiots]
FIFI MARTINGALE (Reinhardt Wagner) [Los Feliz 3]
FRENCH EXIT (Nick deWitt) [Egyptian]
HARRY POTTER AND THE GOBLET OF FIRE (Patrick Doyle) [Alamo Drafthouse]
HEAT (Elliot Goldenthal) [Vista]
THE LAST LAUGH, FAUST [Aero]
OVER THE EDGE (Sol Kaplan) [Alamo Drafthouse] 
PIECES OF APRIL (Stephin Merritt) [Egyptian]
TITANIC (James Horner) [Academy Museum]
VAGABOND, INTO THE WILD (Michael Brook) [New Beverly]
WOMEN ON THE VERGE OF A NERVOUS BREAKDOWN (Bernardo Bonezzi)[BrainDead Studios]

September 12
INGLORIOUS BASTERDS, DJANGO UNCHAINED [Aero]
OPENING NIGHT (Bo Harwood) [Egyptian]
PRIDE & PREJUDICE (Dario Marianelli) [Los Feliz 3]
SHAUN OF THE DEAD (Daniel Mudford, Pete Woodhead) [Vista]
VAGABOND (Joanna Bruzdowicz), INTO THE WILD (Michael Brook) [New Beverly]

September 13
AFTER LIFE (Yasuhiro Kasamatsu) [BrainDead Studios]
AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON (Elmer Bernstein) [Vista]
BEFORE SUNSET [Vidiots]
CRITTERS (David Newman) [Nuart]
FRIDAY THE 13TH PART VI: JASON LIVES (Angelo Badalamenti) [Alamo Drafthouse]
IF BEALE STREET COULD TALK (Nicholas Britell) [Academy Museum]
JACKIE BROWN [New Beverly]
LIGHT OF DAY (Thomas Newman) [Los Feliz 3]
SHAUN OF THE DEAD (Daniel Mudford, Pete Woodhead) [Vista] 
SIDEWAYS (Rolfe Kent) [New Beverly]
SNAKES ON A PLANE (Trevor Rabin) [Vidiots]
SUNRISE [Academy Musuem]
THELMA & LOUISE (Hans Zimmer) [Vidiots]
TIE ME UP! TIE ME DOWN! (Ennio Morricone) [BrainDead Studios]

September 14
ACROSS THE UNIVERSE (Elliot Goldenthal) [New Beverly]
ALL ABOUT MY MOTHER (Alberto Iglesias) [BrainDead Studios] 
AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON (Elmer Bernstein) [Vista] 
THE BUGS BUNNY/ROAD RUNNER MOVIE (Carl Stalling, Milt Franklyn) [New Beverly]
THE DEER HUNTER (Stanley Myers) [Alamo Drafthouse]
HAIRSPRAY (Marc Shaiman) [Landmark Westwood]
INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE (John Williams) [New Beverly]
LAW AND ORDER [Los Feliz 3]
MULHOLLAND DRIVE (Angelo Badalamenti) [Los Feliz 3]
THE MUMMY (Jerry Goldsmith) [Academy Museum]
PARIS, TEXAS (Ry Cooder) [Aero]
PLAYTIME (Francis Lemarque) [Vidiots]
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (Richard O'Brien, Richard Hartley) [Nuart] 
THE SHAGGY DOG (Paul Smith) [Vista]
SHAUN OF THE DEAD (Daniel Mudford, Pete Woodhead) [Vista] 
THE SKELETON KEY (Edward Shearmur) [Los Feliz 3]
STREETS OF FIRE (Ry Cooder) [BrainDead Studios]
WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? (Frank DeVol) [Los Feliz 3]

September 15
THE BRINK'S JOB (Richard Rodney Bennett) [Los Feliz 3]
BROKEN ARROW (Hugo Friedhofer) [Academy Museum]
FREE WILLY (Basil Poledouris) [Vidiots]
HARRY POTTER AND THE ORDER OF THE PHOENIX (Nicholas Hooper) [Alamo Drafthouse]
HOSPITAL [Aero]
INDIANA JONES AND THE LAST CRUSADE (John Williams) [New Beverly] 
INLAND EMPIRE (David Lynch) [Vidiots]
LE SAMOURAI (Francois De Roubaix) [Vidiots]
MARCH OF THE PENGUINS (Alex Wurman) [UCLA/Hammer]
OPPENHEIMER (Ludwig Goransson) [Fine Arts]
PARIS, TEXAS (Ry Cooder) [Los Feliz 3]
THE PRINCESS BRIDE (Mark Knopfler) [BrainDead Studios]
THE SHAGGY DOG (Paul Smith) [Vista]
SHAUN OF THE DEAD (Daniel Mudford, Pete Woodhead) [Vista] 
SPOTLIGHT (Howard Shore) [Los Feliz 3]
STAR TREK -- THE MOTION PICTURE (Jerry Goldsmith) [Alamo Drafthouse]
SUNRISE [Academy Musuem]
TALK TO HER (Alberto Iglesias) [BrainDead Studios]


THINGS I'VE HEARD, READ, SEEN OR WATCHED LATELY

Heard:
Adaptation (Burwell); Hollywood '95 (various); The Best of Rosie & the Originals (Rosie & the Originals); The Fall of the Roman Empire (Tiomkin); Synecdoche, New York (Brion); Rita Moreno Sings (Moreno); Show Time on Broadway (Adams); The Black Orchid (Cicognini); Operation Crossbow (Goodwin); Rita Moreno (Moreno); Una Ves Mas (Moreno); Judith (Kaplan); Gershwin Overtures (Gershwin); Houseboat (Duning); Manhattan (Gershwin); Arabesque (Mancini); Cat-Women of the Moon/Robot Monster (Bernstein); Devil Girl from Mars (Astley); A Countess from Hong Kong (Chaplin); Five Million Years to Earth (Cary); The Creeping Unknown/Enemy from Space (Bernard); Kenner (Piccioni); Invasion of the Body Snatchers (Dragon)

Read: Strip Tease, by Carl Hiaasen

Seen: Somewhere; Don't Give Up the Ship; Between the Temples; Three on a Match; Blonde Crazy; Slingshot; AfrAId

Watched: Out of Sight; The Wire ("Slapstick"); Veep ("D.C."); The People Next Door; You're the Worst ("Not a Great Bet")

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Alex Wurman born (1966)
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David G. Russell born (1968)
Dennis McCarthy records his score for the Star Trek: Voyager episode “Timeless” (1998)
Harold Faltermeyer born (1952)
Jerry Fielding's score for the Star Trek episode "The Trouble With Tribbles" is recorded (1967)
Malcolm Lockyer born (1923)
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