A Bridge Too Far: Original MGM Motion Picture Soundtrack [Enhanced CD] [Enhanced] [Soundtrack]
Editorial Reviews
From the Label
This title will be released on May 18th, 1999.
Director Richard Attenborough's star-studded film adaptation of author Cornelius Ryan's A Bridge Too Far, the story of World War II's ill-fated Operation Market Garden, was quite ill-fated in its own right. The spectacular and expensive film was a critical and financial failure when it was first released ( although I loved it), and effectively sounded the death knoll for big budget World War II films until last year's Saving Private Ryan. Operation Market Garden was an attempt to end the war by punching a hole through the retreating German army and push through to Berlin, but was sadly a costly defeat for the Allied armies.
The film features a huge number of stars (not unlike The Thin Red Line), including Laurence Olivier, Robert Redford, Sean Connery, Gene Hackman, Anthony Hopkins, Elliott Gould (granted, no longer a star) and Ryan O'Neal (ditto) amongst others. This tends to distract somewhat from the explosions and other things that go on in war movies.
The Soundtrack: The renowned score by composer John Addison (Oscar®-winning composer of Tom Jones, as well as Hitchcock's Torn Curtain, Sleuth and many others) conveys both the epic scale of the endeavor and the tragic impact of the operation's failure on the soldiers and civilians involved. It has never had a CD release, and is much beloved by enthusiasts of war movies.
A Bridge Too Far: Original MGM Motion Picture Soundtrack [Enhanced CD],John Addison,Rykodisc,Pop,Soundtrack,Soundtracks,Soundtracks & Film Scores
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A Bridge Too Far: Original MGM Motion Picture Soundtrack [Enhanced CD]
John Addison Manufacturer: Rykodisc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00000IXSI Release Date: 1999-05-18 |
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Customer Reviews:
Fine score is also a requiem for composer's war buddies.......2003-12-10
Richard Attenborough's epic about Operation Market-Garden isn't a bad movie (as I have stated in my review of the DVD); it just had the misfortune of having been made in the late 1970s, when most moviewatchers were leery about war movies. As the liner notes to this Rykodisc/MGM Soundtrack explain, "A Bridge Too Far is not a typical war film celebrating a heroic victory." Coming on the heels of America's defeat in Southeast Asia and antipathy for most things military, Attenborough's well-crafted film failed to draw audiences and disappeared from theaters and moviegoers' radar scopes. (The success of a movie set "a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away" didn't help A Bridge Too Far survive at the box office, either.)
Pity, because one of the finest attributes this movie has is its score. From the stirring and boldly optimistic march of the opening "Overture" (which will serve as the XXX Corps theme) to the somber and melancholy "Arnhem Destroyed," Addison's score follows the heartbreaking progress of Market-Garden as American, British and Polish paratroopers strive to capture a series of bridges along a single highway in Nazi-occupied Holland while a British armored corps races northward to relieve them.
For the composer, this score was an intensely personal project; Addison had been a young tank officer in XXX Corps, and when he heard his friend Attenborough was making a film about Market-Garden, he asked for the job as composer. Perhaps that's why this score is so powerful and moving. Whether the music is underscoring the breathtaking "Air Lift" (one of the most impressive scenes involving hundreds of C-47s and almost an army's worth of military clad extras), the nerve racking vigil of a sergeant as his company commander is being operated on in "Hospital Tent" or the race-against-time efforts of paratroopers and engineers to build a "Bailey Bridge," Addison gives each cue his heart and soul, thinking, perhaps, about his fellow tankers who fought and died in Northwest Europe in 1944-45. As director Attenborough writes in the liner notes, "[t]he music for A Bridge Too Far is, therefore, in one sense his requiem for those who fought beside him."
This 1999 enhanced CD also contains -- for PCs using Windows 95 and up -- a QuickTime video file of the original 1977 movie trailer.
The music makes the film!.......2001-09-01
The music depicting the aircraft as they load up and head for Holland gives a great feeling for what it must have been like and as shown on the film. I had the feeling that I could see the dust coming off the tow lines of the gliders as they were being pulled into the air. The paratroopers sitting in rows waiting to make the jump into Holland.
Yet there is also the destruction of Arnhem through music. You sense the desperation as the citizens build barricades using furniture, paving stones and even the bodies of the dead, as German tanks come bulldozing through. That is the real tragedy - the destruction of a town that up until September of 1944 had not suffered too severely from the German occupation.
The entire CD tells the story of Arnhem and Operation Market Garden in a way that is unforgetable and moving and heroic. It would do a Greek tragedy proud. If you've seen the movie this is a must have soundtrack. If you haven't, listen to it, then see the movie.
Very long awaited release.......2001-07-15
This is a straight forward war soundtrack with a marching bias. The glorious rhythms representing the advancing of the allied troups are contrasted by slow movements unveiling the coming tragedy. As described above, the unique quality of the score is the marching (in the words best sense) character of many tracks (sample "air lift"). Unfortunately the melodious invention of the composer is sometimes limited. There is rarely some development in the themes.
The technical quality is good but there are sometimes disortions. There is no sound improvement compaired to the disc.
My recommendation: buy it!
Major Military Music.......2001-01-24
Composer Too Far: John Addison was there at Arnhem in WWII.......2000-08-21
This music does the men who won this battle the proper honor--now then if we could get the general public to understand the battle and why it was a triumph not far enough and not a "bride too far" we might be able to structure our military forces today to be better ready to fight/win.
AIRBORNE!
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