Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review
(27 customer reviews) 14 of 14 people found the following review helpful
Opening Track,
May 11, 2000 Tom Banks (UK) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Some Kind Of Wonderful: Music From The Motion Picture Soundtrack (Audio CD)
A delightful film, matched by tracks that were obviously picked with scenes in mind. I have to agree with fellow reviewer Emily that the opening track is the cat's whiskers, but unfortunately, it doesn't appear on the album. The track is called Dr Mabuse by a German band called Propaganda, and the opening titles with Mary Stuart Masterson on drums listening to the track on headphones is excellent.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
All Kinds Of Wonderful,
July 11, 2000 This review is from: Some Kind Of Wonderful: Music From The Motion Picture Soundtrack (Audio CD)
Nowadays soundtracks are issued as strict money makers. Gather together a bunch of superstars, have them contribute material that's "inspired" by the movie and collect millions. Soundtracks are supposed to convey the feeling of and set the mood for a movie. Martin Scorcese & Quentin Tarrentino do it, but maybe no one better than John Hughes. He uses the songs included on this cd and the ones in the movie but not included here as the spirit of the film. They all have a hard edge to them with lyrics about obession, fear and vulnerability which is what the movie is all about. The artists are basically made up of unknowns with some typically strange 80's band names (Lick The Tins, Flesh For Lulu to name two) and there are no hits among them. Taken as a whole, the music, like the film, is: wonderful.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
get it for furniture's "brilliant mind",
March 21, 2005 Levon Kazarian "levon" (san francisco, ca usa) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Some Kind Of Wonderful: Music From The Motion Picture Soundtrack (Audio CD)
there's a scene in the movie where a song is playing on a boombox and one of the characters walks over and presses "stop." No! I stopped the DVD and played those few seconds again and again to hear the song. it turned out to be furniture's "brilliant mind," a hard to find single from 1986 that made the british charts. it's an understated, moody, and sophisticated song in the mold of the lotus eaters, talk talk, late roxy music & bryan ferry, or seona dancing. it begins with a world weary lament: "I'm at the stage where everything I thought meant something seems so unappealing, I'm ready for the real thing but nobody's selling" the song portrays the stuggle to find life's offerings worthwhile, and to the advice everyone around him offers, the singer replies "you must be out of your brilliant mind." it's a masterpiece of romantic new wave crooning.
the rest of the CD also offers some hard to find songs that give a better sense of the depth of 80s music than your average 80s...Read more