Lalo Schifrin passed away last Thursday in Los Angeles of natural causes, at the age of 93. Born in Buenos Aires, Argentina, his epic career encompassed film, television, studio albums and concert works, and his accolades include four Grammy awards, four Emmy nominations, six Oscar nominations and an Honorary Award from the Academy in 2018, given "in recognition of his unique musical style, compositional integrity and influential contributions to the art of film scoring." Almost certainly his most popular piece of music was his theme for TV's Mission: Impossible - there's a good chance that without that theme, no one would have made even one feature film based on the TV show, much less eight.
For more information about his remarkable life and body of work, I recommend Jon Burlingame's obituary of Schifrin in Variety, and Mike Barnes' obituary in The Hollywood Reporter.
Though "Black Friday" is nearly five months away, La-La Land has announced a massive batch of new soundtrack CDs expected to ship this month, with the emphasis on action and especially espionage: an expanded, two-disc release of John Barry's classic score for the sixth (and some argue, greatest) James Bond movie, ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE; expanded, two-disc editions of scores from the film versions of two of Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan novels - Basil Poledouris' score for THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOBER and Jerry Goldsmith's THE SUM OF ALL FEARS; and two hit action sequels released just this summer, Max Aruj and Alfie Godfrey's score for MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE - THE FINAL RECKONING, and Dominic Lewis' score for KARATE KID: LEGENDS.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has invited 534 prospective new members including the following Music Branch invitees: composers Segun Akinola, Chris Bacon, Diego Baldenweg, Andranik Berberyan, Daniel Blumberg, René G. Boscio, Camille, Kwong Wing Chan, Toby Chu. Lorenz Dangel, Clément Ducol, Stephanie Economou, Wei San Hsu, Amanda Jones, Siddhartha Khosla, Michael A. Levine, Branford Marsalis, Nami Melumad, Youssou N’Dour, Ré Olunuga, Carlos Rafael Rivera, Amritha Vaz, Isobel Waller-Bridge, Anthony Willis and Rihards Zalupe; songwriters Abraham Alexander, Brandi Carlile, Adrian Quesada, Linda Thompson, and Andrew Watt; and music editors Jack Dolman, Maxence Dussère, Tom Kramer and Nic Ratner.
CDS AVAILABLE THIS WEEK
Friday the 13th, Part VI: Jason Lives - Harry Manfredini - La-La Land
Union Pacific: The Paramount Westerns Collection Vol. 2 - Daniele Amfitheatrof, Elmer Bernstein, Charles Bradshaw, Gerard Carbonara, Adolph Deutsch, Howard Jackson John Leipold, Cyril J. Mockridge, Leo Shuken, Nathan Van Cleave, Franz Waxman, Victor Young - La-La Land
IN THEATERS TODAY
40 Acres - Tobor Kobakov
Jurassic World: Rebirth - Alexandre Desplat - Score 2-CD set coming from Mutant
COMING SOON
July 11
Hurry Up Tomorrow - Abel Tesfaye, Daniel Lopatin - XO/Republic
Aug 1
The Brutalist - Daniel Blumberg - Milan
Coming Soon
Alien: Romulus - Benjamin Wallfisch - Mutant
Anna, quel particolare piacere - Luciano Michelini - Beat
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice - Danny Elfman - Waxwork
Cobra-Kai: The Final Season - Leo Birenberg, Zach Robinson - Mutant
David Shire Selected Works: The 1970s - David Shire - Caldera
How to Train Your Dragon [2025] - John Powell - Mondo
The Hunt for Red October - Basil Poledouris - La-La Land
Idoli controluce/…E la donna creo’ l’uomo - Ennio Morricone - Beat
Jurassic World: Rebirth - Alexandre Desplat - Mutant
Karate Kid: Legends - Dominic Lewis - La-La Land
The Mask of Sheba - Lalo Schifrin - Dragon's Domain
M3GAN 2.0 - Chris Bacon - Waxwork
Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning - Max Aruj, Alfie Godfrey - La-La Land
On Her Majesty's Secret Service - John Barry - La-La Land
The Penguin - Mick Giacchino - Mutant
Porca Vacca - Riz Ortolani - Beat
Sinners - Ludwig Goransson - Mutant
Star Wars: Skeleton Crew - Mick Giacchino - Mutant
The Sum of All Fears - Jerry Goldsmith - La-La Land
THIS WEEK IN FILM MUSIC HISTORY
July 4 - Fred Wesley born (1943)
July 4 - Larry Herbstritt born (1950)
July 4 - Nathan Furst born (1978)
July 4 - Astor Piazzolla died (1992)
July 4 - Benedetto Ghiglia died (2012)
July 5 - Paul Ben Haim born (1897)
July 5 - Robbie Robertson born (1943)
July 5 - Robert J. Kral born (1967)
July 5 - Jerry Fielding's score for the Star Trek episode "Spectre of the Gun" is recorded (1968)
July 5 - RZA born as Robert Fitzgerald Diggs (1969)
July 5 - Vaclan Trojan died (1983)
July 5 - David Ferguson died (2009)
July 5 - David Fanshawe died (2010)
July 5 - Fonce Mizell died (2011)
July 6 - Hanns Eisler born (1898)
July 6 - Bernardo Bonezzi born (1964)
July 6 - John Ottman born (1964)
July 6 - Ron Goodwin begins recording his score to Force 10 from Navarone (1978)
July 6 - John Williams begins recording his score for Superman (1978)
July 6 - Frank Cordell died (1980)
July 6 - Bruce Broughton begins recording his score for Stay Tuned (1992)
July 6 - Ennio Morricone died (2020)
July 7 - Anton Karas born (1906)
July 7 - Ron Jones born (1954)
July 7 - Recording sessions begin for Frederick Hollander’s score for We’re No Angels (1954)
July 7 - Johnny Mandel begins recording his score for Point Blank (1967)
July 7 - Gerald Fried's score for the Star Trek episode "Friday's Child" is recorded (1967)
July 7 - Atli Orvarsson born (1970)
July 7 - Richard Hazard records his final Mission: Impossible score, for the episode “The Bride” (1971)
July 7 - Sylvester Levay records his additional music for Howard the Duck (1986)
July 7 - Recording sessions begin on James Newton Howard's score for The Fugitive (1993)
July 7 - Recording sessions begin for Christopher Young’s score to Virtuosity (1995)
July 8 - Bob Alcivar born (1938)
July 8 - Jay Chattaway born (1946)
July 8 - Lyn Murray begins recording his score for The Bridges at Toko-Ri (1954)
July 8 - John Addison records his score for the Amazing Stories episode "The Pumpkin Competition" (1986)
July 9 - Richard Hageman born (1882)
July 9 - Elisabeth Lutyens born (1906)
July 9 - Earle Hagen born (1919)
July 9 - Paul Chihara born (1938)
July 9 - Harald Kloser born (1956)
July 9 - Conrad Salinger died (1961)
July 9 - Dickon Hinchliffe born (1967)
July 9 - Joseph Mullendore records his score for the Land of the Giants episode “Terror-Go-Round” (1968)
July 9 - Jerry Fielding begins recording his score for The Outfit (1973)
July 9 - James Horner records his score for the Amazing Stories episode "Alamo Jobe" (1985)
July 9 - Ken Thorne died (2014)
July 9 - Michael Masser died (2015)
July 10 - Jimmy McHugh born (1893)
July 10 - Don Costa born (1925)
July 10 - Bruce Fowler born (1947)
July 10 - Paul Glass records his score for Lady in a Cage (1963)
July 10 - Recording sessions begin for Richard Rodney Bennett’s score for L’Imprecateur (1977)
July 10 - Robert Mellin died (1994)
DID THEY MENTION THE MUSIC?
DANGEROUS ANIMALS - Michael Yezerski
"Sean Byrne’s 'Dangerous Animals' is sharp in all the right places. It’s an efficient, clever genre mash-up that works because of how well Byrne blocks its action, employs an old-fashioned score, and directs his actors to visceral performances. It’s deceptively well-made; most will dismiss this 'Jaws' meets 'The Silence of the Lambs' flick as just another B-movie, but Byrne makes so many smart choices in every aspect of the production. After far too long a hiatus, the director of the excellent 'The Loved Ones' and 'The Devil’s Candy' is back with another kind of summer movie, a surprising Cannes addition (and the first Australian film in the program in over a decade) that deftly maneuvers its ship through choppy waters to a thoroughly entertaining destination. From here, 'Dangerous Animals' is a pretty straightforward survival thriller, which is a good thing. Lepard’s script doesn’t have a lot of paths to take -- it’s not like they’re gonna run into other people in the middle of the night off the coast of Australia -- which allows Byrne’s directorial chops to shine within the tight structure of the film. He blocks the action between Tucker and Zephyr precisely, avoiding the hyperactive editing and jump scares that often drag down the survival genre. He also doesn’t forget to get crunchy. Every knock on the head or punch to the face connects with visceral power, and, of course, we feel every pointy thing from hooks to harpoons to razor-sharp teeth (that often result in some ace horror makeup work). A brilliant, rousing score by Michael Yezerski is also essential, rising and falling with the action."
Brian Tallerico, RogerEbert.com
"Even with those deficiencies, the film boasts a level of craft that keeps the story fleet, with Byrne relying on the dependable tension of a victim trapped at sea with her pursuer, sharks waiting in the waters surrounding her. Michael Yezerski’s winkingly emphatic score juices every scare as the gore keeps ratcheting up -- particularly during a moment when Zephyr finds an unexpected way to break out of handcuffs."
Tim Grierson, Los Angeles Times
"Hassie Harrison’s Zephyr leans hard into the desperation any good final girl needs, even if her later interactions with Moses lean just as hard into the cheese. The backstory has no place here, and we want to see Courtney doing something honestly watchable. Changing the location from the dingy, '10 Cloverfield Lane' or 'Split'-esque cell to Zephyr’s observation post as she watches a helpless victim fall prey to a shark, before shifting to the table where Tucker watches playback of the horrific act as he loudly consumes a meal makes good, necessary use of a fairly contained environment, as does the score courtesy of Michael Yezerski. It’s loud, percussive, and wouldn’t feel out of place were Hans Zimmer to have lent a hand."
Brian Farvour, The Playlist
"The lyrics of Crowded House’s 'Mean to Me' -- one of a handful of choice Oz-rock nuggets sprinkled in among the groaning and juddering of Michael Yezerski’s big-ass score -- hint that Zephyr is not programmed to be a helpless victim: 'She came all the way from America/She had a blind date with destiny.'"
David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter
ELIO - Rob Simonsen
"While I enjoyed 'Elio,' and I appreciated the animation and Rob Simonsen’s lovely orchestral score, I felt that this film was more tailor-made for adult sci-fi fans rather than their young kids."
Odie Henderson, Boston Globe
"While many of the side characters, such as the members of the Communiverse, drop out without warning, the sincere script penned by Julia Cho, Mark Hammer, and Mike Jones doesn’t forget to build Glordon and Elio’s endearing friendship. A couple of montages help, conjuring strong emotions that need not be said aloud. Nevertheless, the film overtly verbalizes many of its themes and feelings, rather than letting the transportive score, gentle green and blue palette, and magical world-building convey them. It’s as if the filmmakers struggle to trust kids enough to understand characterization and story."
Robert Daniels, RogerEbert.com
"So, by the time Rob Simonsen’s rather generic score begins to overdo the bombast and the film gears up for an emotional decision from Elio about where he belongs that it has to take more than a few logical leaps to arrive at, the pathos falls a tiny bit flat. It’s difficult not to wonder what 'Elio' could have been like, had the original concept from Molina made it onscreen, and whether or not the more 'personal' version of this story had the sharp edges and specificity needed to elevate the film from a cute kids’ film to something more meaningful."
Wilson Chapman, IndieWire
"Elio will befriend Glordon (Remy Edgerly), a larval goofball from the Crab Nebula who has a dozen wiggling limbs with various protuberances. Off-planet, the boy readily drops his defensive shields and opens himself to the excitement that’s been promised since the epic opening notes of Rob Simonsen’s eclectic score. In a sequence set to a Krautrock-esque banger, Elio and Glordon enjoy a montage that’s essentially a teaser for an amusement park experience that’s probably already in its drafting stage, with the buddies frolicking in waterslides and chugging a beverage called Glorp, styled so that it can be readily re-created with boba. As ever, everything is tethered to what our earthbound brains can imagine. Even the names Glordon and Glorp might be a nod to the Voyager’s known flight plan, which in 40,000 years is expected to have its first-ever close encounter with a star named Gliese 445."
Amy Nicholson, Los Angeles Times
THE RITUAL - Jason Lazarus, Joseph Trapanese
"Pacino and company present enough straight-faced concern and earnestness through their performances that I thought the movie, derivative as it may be, would be compelling enough to keep me watching. (Midell also throws in some antsy jump scares, heightened by composers Jason Lazurus and Joseph Trapanese’s loud, bombastic music cues.) But -- I’m not gonna lie -- they had me in the first half. Not only does the movie descend into predictably supernatural, building-shaking chaos, but it also reveals itself to be flagrantly, stubbornly pro-faith. (I sensed it might end up down this road when I saw the reverend mother being played by TV mom/out-and-proud conservative Christian Patricia Heaton.)"
Craig D. Lindsey, RogerEbert.com
"Midell’s tactics are almost as old as his diabolical baddie, and they include Jason Lazarus and Joseph Trapanese’s shrieky score, copious loud noises to accompany wan jolts, and indecipherable whispering that everyone hears late at night in their rooms or in empty church hallways."
Nick Schager, The Daily Beast
THE NEXT TEN DAYS IN L.A.
Screenings of older films in Los Angeles-area theaters.
July 4
ATTACK THE BLOCK (Steven Price) [Alamo Drafthouse]
DAZED AND CONFUSED [New Beverly]
HOUSE OF GAMES (Alaric Jans) [Nuart]
INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS [New Beverly]
NASHVILLE [Egyptian]
PEE-WEE'S BIG ADVENTURE (Danny Elfman) [Vidiots]
RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK (John Williams) [Vidiots]
RESERVOIR DOGS [Vista]
THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (Matt Clifford), REPO MAN (Steven Hufsteter, Humberto Larriva) [New Beverly]
THE ROOM (Mladen Milicevic) [Landmark Westwood]
SCREAM 2 (Marco Beltrami) [Vista]
STORMY WEATHER [Academy Museum]
SOUTHLAND TALES (Moby) [Los Feliz 3]
2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY [Aero]
2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY [Nuart]
July 5
AN AMERICAN TAIL (James Horner) [Culver]
ATTACK THE BLOCK (Steven Price) [Alamo Drafthouse]
THE BIG SLEEP (Max Steiner) [Vidiots]
THE CELL (Howard Shore) [Los Feliz 3]
A CINDERELLA STORY (Christophe Beck) [Egyptian]
DEATH BECOMES HER (Alan Silvestri) [Vidiots]
E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL (John Williams) [Vista]
FLASH GORDON (Queen, Howard Blake) [Academy Museum]
GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS (James Newton Howard) [Nuart]
INCEPTION (Hans Zimmer) [Egyptian]
LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (Maurice Jarre) [Aero]
MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON (Dimitri Tiomkin) [New Beverly]
RAMBO: FIRST BLOOD PART II (Jerry Goldsmith) [New Beverly]
RESERVOIR DOGS [Vista]
THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (Matt Clifford), REPO MAN (Steven Hufsteter, Humberto Larriva) [New Beverly]
RIO (John Powell) [Vidiots]
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (Richard O'Brien, Richard Hartley) [Nuart]
SCREAM 2 (Marco Beltrami) [Vista]
SHANGHAI BLUES (James Wong) [Los Feliz 3]
SPACEBALLS (John Morris) [Egyptian]
SUSPIRIA (Goblin) [Academy Museum]
THEY LIVE (John Carpenter, Alan Howarth) [Vidiots]
TROOP BEVERLY HILLS (Randy Edelman) [Academy Museum]
2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY [Aero]
July 6
CAPTAIN BLOOD (Erich Wolfgang Korngold) [Los Feliz 3]
E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL (John Williams) [Vista]
EASY RIDER [Vidiots]
HER (William Butler, Owen Pallett) [Los Feliz 3]
LOVE & MERCY (Atticus Ross) [Aero]
THE MASK OF ZORRO (James Horner) [Vidiots]
MR. SMITH GOES TO WASHINGTON (Dimitri Tiomkin) [New Beverly]
RESERVOIR DOGS [Vista]
THE RETURN OF THE LIVING DEAD (Matt Clifford), REPO MAN (Steven Hufsteter, Humberto Larriva) [New Beverly]
THE SEARCHERS (Max Steiner) [Egyptian]
STATE AND MAIN (Theodore Shapiro) [Nuart]
THUNDERBALL (John Barry) [Academy Museum]
TOP GUN (Harold Faltermeyer) [Aero]
TROOP BEVERLY HILLS (Randy Edelman) [Vidiots]
THE WILD BUNCH (Jerry Fielding) [Egyptian]
July 7
ATTACK THE BLOCK (Steven Price) [Alamo Drafthouse]
BATMAN & ROBIN (Elliot Goldenthal) [Academy Museum]
BRAVEHEART (James Horner) [Culver]
CHRISTMAS EVIL [Los Feliz 3]
CITY STREETS, THIS DAY AND AGE [New Beverly]
CREED (Ludwig Goransson) [Egyptian]
ROCKY (Bill Conti) [Egyptian]
TEKNOLUST (Klaus Badelt, Mark Tschanz) [Los Feliz 3]
July 8
ALPHAVILLE (Paul Misraki) [Los Feliz 3]
AMARCORD (Nino Rota) [Vidiots]
ATTACK THE BLOCK (Steven Price) [Alamo Drafthouse]
THE BOXER (Gavin Friday, Maurice Seezer) [Egyptian]
DUMB AND DUMBER (Todd Rundgren), ACE VENTURA: PET DETECTIVE (Ira Newborn) [New Beverly]
HOWARD THE DUCK (John Barry) [Aero]
NATIONAL LAMPOON'S ANIMAL HOUSE (Elmer Bernstein) [Landmark Pasadena]
RAGING BULL [Egyptian]
SPARTAN (Mark Isham) [Nuart]
TWO WEEKS IN ANOTHER TOWN (David Raksin) [Los Feliz 3]
July 9
THE ABYSS (Alan Silvestri) [Academy Museum]
DUMB AND DUMBER (Todd Rundgren), ACE VENTURA: PET DETECTIVE (Ira Newborn) [New Beverly]
DAZED AND CONFUSED [New Beverly]
GLENGARRY GLEN ROSS (James Newton Howard) [Nuart]
HOUSE OF GAMES (Alaric Jans) [Nuart]
THE HURRICANE (Christopher Young) [Egyptian]
MADE IN HONG KONG (Wah-chuen Lam) [Los Feliz 3]
PARASITE (Jung Jae-il) [Aero]
RADIO DAYS [Los Feliz 3]
WINGS OF DESIRE (Jurgen Kneiper) [Vidiots]
YOUNG MAN WITH A HORN [Academy Museum]
July 10
A COUPLE (Nathalie Beloeil) [Los Feliz 3]
THE DEVIL AND DANIEL JOHNSTON [Vidiots]
GIRLFIGHT (Thedore Shapiro [Egyptian]
MILLION DOLLAR BABY (Clint Eastwood) [Egyptian]
SAVED! (Christophe Beck) [Academy Museum]
THE SEARCHERS (Max Steiner) [Aero]
TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES (Brian Tyler) [Vidiots]
TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD (Elmer Bernstein) [New Beverly]
July 11
BABYLON (Justin Hurwitz) [Egyptian]
COLOSSUS: THE FORBIN PROJECT (Michel Colombier) [Nuart]
FLOYD NORMAN: AN ANIMATED LIFE (Ryan Shore) [Vidiots]
HEAVY METAL (Elmer Bernstein) [Vista]
INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS [New Beverly]
JETSONS: THE MOVIE (John Debney) [Los Feliz 3]
ONCE UPON A TIME...IN HOLLYWOOD [Vista]
THE SHAWSHANK REDEMPTION (Thomas Newman) [Vidiots]
SPACEBALLS (John Morris) [Aero]
SUMMER 1993 (Pau Boïgues, Ernest Pipó), SYSTEM CRASHER (John Gurtler) [UCLA/Hammer]
THE THING (Ennio Morricone) [Vidiots]
TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD (Elmer Bernstein) [New Beverly]
2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY [Vidiots]
VEGAS IN SPACE (Bob Davis) [Academy Museum]
WET HOT AMERICAN SUMMER (Theodore Shapiro, Craig Wedren) [New Beverly]
YOUNG MAN WITH A HORN [Academy Museum]
July 12
ADDAMS FAMILY VALUES (Marc Shaiman) [Academy Museum]
ALICE IN WONDERLAND (Oliver Wallace), THE JUNGLE BOOK (George Bruns) [New Beverly]
BATMAN: MASK OF THE PHANTASM (Shirley Walker) [Culver]
A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (Rod McKuen, John Scott Trotter, Vince Guaraldi) [Vista]
CAPE FEAR (Bernard Herrmann, Elmer Bernstein) [Vidiots]
THE DOORS [Egyptian]
DRIVE (Clint Mansell) [Academy Museum]
DUNE (Toto) [Aero]
THE GOONIES (Dave Grusin) [Los Feliz 3]
THE GOONIES (Dave Grusin) [Vidiots]
GUMMO [New Beverly]
HEAVY METAL (Elmer Bernstein) [Vista]
HELLBOY (Marco Beltrami) [Vidiots]
IT'S ONLY MONEY (Walter Scharf) [Los Feliz 3]
THE JUNGLE BOOK (George Bruns) [Vidiots]
LAWRENCE OF ARABIA (Maurice Jarre) [Aero]
MOONRISE KINGDOM (Alexandre Desplat) [New Beverly]
OLIVER & COMPANY (J.A.C. Redford) [New Beverly]
ONCE UPON A TIME...IN HOLLYWOOD [Vista]
PATHER PANCHALI (Ravi Shankar) [UCLA/Hammer]
THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW (Richard O'Brien, Richard Hartley) [Nuart]
THE TALL TARGET (Bronislau Kaper) [Los Feliz 3]
WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE? (Frank De Vol), STRAIT-JACKET (Van Alexander), TROG (John Scott) [Academy Museum]
ZATHURA (John Debney) [Egyptian]
July 13
ALICE IN WONDERLAND (Oliver Wallace), THE JUNGLE BOOK (George Bruns) [New Beverly]
ALL ABOUT LILY CHOU-CHOU (Takeshi Kobayashi, Salyu) [Los Feliz 3]
AMADEUS [Egyptian]
BARAKA [Egyptian]
A BOY NAMED CHARLIE BROWN (Rod McKuen, John Scott Trotter, Vince Guaraldi) [Vista]
THE CHILDREN'S HOUR (Alex North) [Los Feliz 3]
DOCTOR DOLITTLE (Leslie Bricusse, Lionel Newman, Alexander Courage) [Academy Museum]
DUNKIRK (Hans Zimmer) [Fine Arts]
MALCOLM X (Terence Blanchard) [Aero]
MOONRISE KINGDOM (Alexandre Desplat) [New Beverly]
NORTH BY NORTHWEST (Bernard Herrmann) [Aero]
ONCE UPON A TIME...IN HOLLYWOOD [Vista]
THINGS I'VE HEARD, READ, SEEN OR WATCHED LATELY
Heard: Cosmos: A SpaceTime Odyssey, Vol. 4 (Silvestri); Come Spy With Us: The Secret Agent Songbook (various); The Food of the Gods/Frogs (Kaplan/Baxter); Never Say Never Again (Legrand); UFO (Gray); My Beautiful Laundrette (Myers/Zimmer); The Hunter (Blondie); Tron: Legacy (Daft Punk); The Apple (Recht)
Read: Timequake, by Kurt Vonnegeut
Seen: Elio; The Postman Always Rings Twice [1946]; Portrait in Black; F1 The Movie; Maurice; M3GAN 2.0; 28 Years Later; Cleopatra [1963]; The Liberation of L.B. Jones; The Commitments
Watched: Mystery Science Theater 3000 ("Gamera vs. Jiger")
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