Friday, December 20, 2013
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Homefront Trailer 2013 Jason Statham, James Franco Movie - Official [HD]
Homefront is a 2013 American action thriller film directed by Gary Fleder. Based on Chuck Logan's novel of the same name and adapted into a screenplay by Sylvester Stallone, the film stars Jason Statham, James Franco, Winona Ryder, and Kate Bosworth. Filming began on October 1, 2012 in New Orleans.
The film was released nationwide in theaters on November 27, 2013.[3] The film was originally planned to be released in 2014. In July 2013, the MPAA rated the film as R rating for strong violence, pervasive language, drug content and brief sexuality
Plot[edit]
DEA agent Phil Broker (Jason Statham) sees his quiet family life turned upside down when his path crosses with a band of drug traffickers, led by Gator (James Franco), a meth kingpin.[4]
After an undercover operation in which a biker gang leader, Danny T, goes to jail, Phil Broker retires to a quiet life in a small town. After a confrontation at school between Broker's daughter and a local bully, the bully's mother tells her brother Gator to scare Broker. After breaking into Broker's house, Gator discovers that Broker is the agent who put Danny T in jail. Gator enlists the help of Danny T's henchman, Cyrus Hanks. Cyrus and his crew attempt to attack Broker and kidnap Broker's daughter. Broker kills Cyrus and his crew in the process, but fails to rescue his daughter as she was taken by Motts onboard a speedboat and his friend Tito was shot. Broker manages to contact Maddy, while also being located by the Sheriff. Broker reaches Gator's warehouse, where the kingpin disagrees with Motts of taking Maddy. Gator's sister, Cassie and her husband intervene, learning of Maddy's presence but not before Gator accidentally shoots Cassie in the stomach and the warehouse suddenly explodes due to the explosion set by Broker on his earlier visit. Broker pursues Gator, who takes Maddy hostage throughout the streets towards a closing bridge where they are surrounded by the Sheriff and his men. Broker's vehicle crashes and flips, but he survives and brutally beats Gator to submission. He intends to shoot him in the head, but Maddy's presence prevents him from doing so. Gator and Motts are then arrested by the police of their crimes; Cassie and Tito survives their wounds, and Broker reunites with Maddy.
Cast[edit]
- Jason Statham as Phil Broker
- James Franco as Morgan "Gator" Bodine
- Winona Ryder as Sheryl Mott
- Kate Bosworth as Cassie Bodine
- Chuck Zito as Danny T
- Frank Grillo as Cyrus Hanks
- Rachelle Lefevre as Susan Hatch
- Clancy Brown as Sheriff Keith Rodrigue
- Christa Campbell as Lydia
- Stuart Greer as Lewis
- Omar Benson Miller as Tito
- Izabela Vidovic[5] as Maddy
Reception[edit]
Homefront has received mainly mixed to negative reviews from critics, as it currently holds a 38% rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 92 reviews with the consensus stating: "While it boasts a capable cast, the disappointingly dull Homefront hearkens back to classic action thrillers without adding anything to the genre."Jason performed his action skills like before movies and showed what a true father can do to protect his daughter[6]
Grown Ups 2 Trailer 2013 Adam Sandler
Plot[edit]
Three years after the events of the first film, Lenny Feder has relocated his family back to his Connecticut hometown where he and his friends grew up.
In the film's opening in the Feder household, Lenny wakes up to find a wild deer standing next to his bed. Upon waking up, his wife Roxanne startles the deer, causing it to urinate all over their home. Eventually, Lenny is able to get the deer out of the house just in time to take his children Greg,Keith , and Becky to their last day of school. Roxanne brings up the idea of their family having another baby, but Lenny says their family is perfect as is, upsetting Roxanne.
At the Lamonsoff household, Eric Lamonsoff and his wife Sally are at odds with each other over how to raise their children- Sally believes in unwavering support while Eric prefers to be more practical with them. At the McKenzie household, Kurt surprises his wife Deanne with a thoughtful anniversary present, only to find that she has completely forgotten. Meanwhile, Marcus Higgins is waiting at a train station after receiving a letter from an old girlfriend, who tells him that he has a seventeen-year-old son Braden. Marcus is stunned to see a tattooed, six-foot-tall boy, who turns out to be Braden. Marcus tries to be nice and takes him to school, but Braden shows an immediate dislike toward him.
After dropping off their kids, Lenny, Eric, Kurt, and Marcus spend the day roaming around town, reminiscing about the amazing summers they used to have when they were kids and Lenny's childhood bully, Tommy Cavanaugh. Lenny argues that he could take Tommy as a kid and he can still take him. Eventually, the friends go to see Becky's ballet recital, where Lenny runs into Tommy, whom Lenny is visibly terrified of. Tommy threatens that if Lenny ever lies again about being able to beat him up, he'll publicly beat Lenny up.
Once the kids are out of school, Lenny, Eric, Kurt, and Marcus decide to visit the old quarry, where they used to swim as kids. There they run into a bunch of partying frat boys who force them to jump into the quarry naked. Braden who was partying with the frat boys, witnesses this and goes off to vandalize their frat house. When the frat boys return, they swear to take revenge.
Lenny arrives home to help Roxanne set up for a 1980s-themed party for their friends. Meanwhile, Marcus begins to bond with Braden, who realizes he was wrong about his father. As all of their friends begin to arrive, Roxanne urges Lenny to consider having another baby. Lenny continues to protest the idea and is left dumbfounded when Roxanne reveals that she is pregnant. Lenny, feeling overwhelmed by this discovery, goes off to drink with his friends. The Feder's party goes well most of the night until Tommy Cavanaugh shows up and disrespects Lenny in front of everyone, so Lenny challenges Tommy to a fight. In a surprising turn, Tommy decides to take a dive so that Lenny can look tough for his kids, and the two develop a mutual respect. Soon after, the angry frat boys arrive at the house looking for retribution for the damage to their frat house. They go on to insult the local town residents, inciting a fight. The locals hold their own against the frat boys and eventually send them running away defeated.
After all the commotion dies down, the four friends have pancakes at Eric's mom's house. Mrs. Lamonsoff reassures Lenny that a new baby is a wonderful thing and eventually he will never be able to imagine life with just three kids (and also mentions that Eric was an accidental baby because they were in the bathroom at a New England Patriots game). Lenny has a change of heart and returns home, telling Roxanne he is sorry and excited about the new baby, and they reconcile.
Production[edit]
Filming of Grown Ups 2 began on June 2, 2012, in Massachusetts, United States and ended on August 15, 2012.[4] Columbia Pictures and Happy Madison Productions distributed the film. The film was written by Adam Sandler, Fred Wolf and Tim Herlihy and directed by Dennis Dugan, Sandler's longtime collaborator.[5] The film was released on July 12, 2013 in the United States. It was released on August 9, 2013 in the United Kingdom.[6]
The film is the first film sequel that Adam Sandler has starred in. The movie also has a role played by WWE hall of famer "Stone Cold" Steve Austin.[7] Stand-up comedian Chris Hardwick confirmed a cameo as an ice cream vendor via his Facebook page.[8] Additionally, the film features a cameo appearance by sportscaster Michael Kay and includesShaquille O'Neal as a cop.[9] On July 10, 2012, it was announced Arnold Schwarzenegger's son, Patrick, would be appearing as one of the frat brothers.[10] Oliver Cooper was offered a role as one of the fraternity brothers but had to back out due to scheduling conflicts.[11] The first trailer for the film was released on April 2, 2013.[12]
Release[edit]
Critical response[edit]
Like the first film, Grown Ups 2 has been heavily panned by critics. The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 7% approval rating with an average rating of 2.6/10 based on 95 reviews.[13] The consensus states: "While it's certainly the movie event of the year for filmgoers passionate about deer urine humor, Grown Ups 2 will bore, annoy, and disgust audiences of nearly every other persuasion."[14] Another review aggregator, Metacritic, which assigned a normalized rating based on 27 reviews from mainstream critics, calculated a score of 19/100, indicating "overwhelming dislike".[15] Time named it the worst movie of 2013.[16]
John DeFore of The Hollywood Reporter gave the film a negative review, saying "Throughout, gags are cartoonishly broad and afforded so little time for setup and delivery we seem to be watching less a story than a catalog of tossed-out material."[17] Andrew Barker of Variety said that "Among the slackest, laziest, least movie-like movies released by a major studio in the last decade, "Grown Ups 2" is perhaps the closest Hollywood has yet come to making Ow! My Balls! seem like a plausible future project."[18] Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle gave the film one out of four stars, saying "The temptation arises to say something nice about "Grown Ups 2" just because it doesn't cause injury. But no, it's a bad movie, just old-school bad, the kind that's merely lousy and not an occasion for migraines or night sweats."[19] Linda Barnard of the Toronto Star gave the film zero out of four stars, saying "Adam Sandler scrapes the bottom of the barrel—and then he pukes into it—with Grown Ups 2, a lazily cribbed-together swamp of pointless and unfunny sketches that makes 2010’s Grown Ups look like Citizen Kane."[20] Matt Patches of Time Out New York gave the film one out of five stars, saying "In the first five minutes, a deer walks into the star's bedroom and urinates on his face. It's all downhill from there."[21]
Rafer Guzman of Newsday gave the film one out of four stars, saying "For all its warm and fuzzy notions of family and community, Grown Ups 2... has a desperate reliance on nasty jokes about pee, poo and -- with surprising frequency -- gay panic."[22] A rare positive review came from Owen Gleiberman of Entertainment Weekly, who gave the film a B, saying "In certain ways, Grown Ups 2 marks a return to classically Sandlerian infantile anarchy."[23] Elizabeth Weitzman of the New York Daily News gave the film two out of five stars, saying "Like most Adam Sandler movies, it’s exactly like most Adam Sandler movies... This movie stars all Sandler’s buddies and gleefully embraces lowbrow crudity even while promoting loving family values."[24] Ignatiy Vishnevetsky of The A.V. Club gave the film a D–, saying "Largely free of Sandler’s usual schmaltz and lame romance, it’s pure plotless, grotesque high jinks, bizarre and inept in a way that’s fascinating without ever being all that funny."[25] Nick Schager of The Village Voice gave the film a negative review, saying "A few decent one-liners notwithstanding, the movie comes off as willfully uninspired."[26] Mark Olsen of the Los Angeles Times gave the film one and a half stars out of five, saying "Grown Ups 2 looks like it was a lot of fun to make. And the last laugh is on us."[27]
Claudia Puig of USA Today gave the film one star out of four, saying "Mystifyingly, the movie manages to emerge plot-free. Instead, it offers a succession of humorless gross-out gags, fat jokes, suggestive posturing, bullying, belches and pratfalls. Life is simple -- and gross -- in Sandlerville."[28] Sara Stewart of the New York Post gave the film half a star out of four, saying "The movie lurches from one gross-out scene to another, flipping the bird at continuity and logic. It honestly seems as if Sandler and his team descended on a random suburb, halfheartedly improvising and moving on when they got bored."[29] Stephanie Merry of The Washington Post gave the film one and a half stars out of four, saying "Grown Ups 2 isn’t merely mindless. At times it seems to actually drain IQ points from its viewers while wasting a talented cast of “Saturday Night Live” alums, who are all capable of being much smarter and so much funnier."[30] Andy Webster of The New York Times gave the film one out of five stars, saying "This is pap, plain and simple: scattered raunch-lite devoid of emotional resonance. At best, it sells itself on the spectacle of a TV show’s cast reunion—and even then it disappoints. With the debacles of “That’s My Boy” and “Jack and Jill,” Mr. Sandler has increasingly squandered his comic capital. His onetime “SNL” brethren do themselves few favors—beyond a paycheck—by working in his orbit."[31]Peter Keough of The Boston Globe gave the film one and a half stars out of four, saying "Apparently the world demanded another family-friendly version of "The Hangover," one that combined scatological comedy with smarmy sentimentality."[32]
Connie Ogle of the Miami Herald gave the film one out of four stars, saying "Nobody escapes untainted by the foul stench of Grown Ups 2; it’s bad enough to make you look askance at Salma Hayek, Maria Bello, and Maya Rudolph, all of whom deserve a chance to do something funny other than pose as wives exuding various degrees of sexiness."[33]Richard Roeper gave the film one and a half stars, saying "When Taylor Lautner is the funniest thing in a movie starring Adam Sandler and Chris Rock, we're in trouble."[34] Randy Cordova of The Arizona Republic gave the film one out of five stars, saying "In its own way, "Grown Ups 2" sets the bar really high. After all, it’s hard to imagine another comedy coming along this year that is this abrasive and free of laughs. It’s like everyone involved intentionally tried to create a horrible movie."[35] Alonso Duralde of The Wrap gave the film a negative review, saying "Yes, it's time for another visit to the Adam Sandler Death-of-Cinema Fun Factory, the big-screen version of a terrible sitcom where laugh tracks are replaced by the co-stars chuckling at their own awful material."[36] Adam Nayman of The Globe and Mail gave the film two out four stars, saying "None of the stars are trying very hard, and so the most memorable presences are the cameos: If nothing else, Grown Ups 2 will go down as the only film in history to find room for Steve Buscemi alongside "Stone Cold" Steve Austin."[37]
Rambo III (1988) - Trailer
This article is about the film. For the video game, see Rambo III (video game).
Rambo III | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster
| |
Directed by | Peter MacDonald |
Produced by | Buzz Feitshans Mario Kassar Andrew G. Vajna |
Screenplay by | Sylvester Stallone Sheldon Lettich |
Based on | Characters by David Morrell |
Starring | Sylvester Stallone Richard Crenna Marc de Jonge Kurtwood Smith Sasson Gabai Spiros Focas |
Music by | Jerry Goldsmith |
Cinematography | John Stanier |
Editing by | O. Nicholas Brown Andrew London James R. Symons Edward Warschilka |
Studio | Carolco Pictures |
Distributed by | TriStar Pictures |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 101 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $62 million [1] |
Box office | $189,015,611 |
Rambo III is a 1988 American action film. The film depicts fictional events during the Soviet war in Afghanistan. It is the third film in the Rambo series following First Blood and Rambo: First Blood Part II. It was in turn followed by Rambo in 2008, making it the last film in the series to feature Richard Crenna as Colonel Sam Trautman before his death in 2003.
One minute of the movie was censored in the United Kingdom.[2]
Plot[edit]
Colonel Sam Trautman (Richard Crenna) returns to Thailand to once again enlist the help of Vietnam veteran John J. Rambo (Sylvester Stallone). After witnessing Rambo win a stick fighting match, Trautman visits Rambo at a Buddhist temple under construction and asks Rambo to join him on a resupply mission for mujahideen rebels in Afghanistan. Despite showing him photos of civilians suffering under Soviet military intervention, Rambo refuses and Trautman proceeds with the mission. Soviet forces ambush Trautman's convoy, capture him, and send him to a mountain base to be interrogated by Colonel Zaysen (Marc de Jonge) and his henchman Kourov.
Rambo learns of Trautman's capture from embassy field officer Robert Griggs (Kurtwood Smith) and convinces the official to take him through a clandestine operation, though Griggs warns him that the government will deny of his existence if he is captured or killed. Rambo immediately flies to Peshawar, Pakistan and has the local arms supplier Mousa Ghani (Israeli actor Sasson Gabai) to bring him to Khost, a town in southern Afghanistan close to the Soviet base where Trautman is jailed. The mujahideen in the village, led by chieftain Masoud, are already hesitant to help Rambo in the first place, but are definitely convinced not to help him when their village is attacked by Soviet helicopters after one of Mousa's shop assistants tips off the Soviets. Aided only by Mousa and a young boy named Hamid, Rambo makes his way to the Soviet base and starts his plan to free Trautman. The first attempt is unsuccessful and Hamid and Rambo are wounded in the process while fighting a number of Russian troops. After escaping from the base, Rambo tends to Hamid's wounds and sends him and Mousa away to safety, before cauterizing his own wound.
Rambo recovers and infiltrates the base again the following day, just in time to rescue Trautman from being tortured with aflamethrower. He and Trautman rescue several other prisoners and hijacks a Hind helicopter to escape the base. However, the helicopter is damaged as it departs and soon crashes, forcing Rambo and Trautman to continue on foot while the other prisoners run off to safety after wishing Rambo and Trautman good luck. After Rambo destroys a Soviet attack helicopter with an explosive-tipped arrow, Zaysen sends Kourov and a Spetsnaz team against the two. Rambo and Trautman easily eliminate the Spetsnaz in an underground cave, but an injured Kourov surprises Rambo as he exits the cave. In the subsequent hand-to-hand fight, Rambo manages to kill Kourov. As Rambo and Trautman make their way to the Pakistani border, Zaysen blocks them with a large mechanized force and orders them to surrender. However, Masoud's mujahideen forces attack the Soviets in a cavalry charge. In the ensuing battle, in which both Trautman and Rambo are wounded, Rambo manages to commandeer a tank and kill Zaysen by machine-gunning him in his helicopter cockpit. Zaysen's helicopter then collides with Rambo's tank but Rambo survives the explosion. At the end of the battle, Rambo and Trautman say goodbye to their mujahideen friends and leave Afghanistan to go home.
Production[edit]
Some critics noted that the timing of the movie, with its unabashedly anti-Soviet tone, ran afoul of the opening of Communism to the West under Mikhail Gorbachev, which had already changed the image of the Soviet Union to a substantial degree by the time the movie was finished.[3] The 1990 Guinness World Records deemed Rambo III the most violent film ever made, with 221 acts of violence, at least 70 explosions, and over 108 characters killed on-screen. However, the body count of the fourth film in the series,Rambo, surpassed that record, with 236 kills. The Mi-24 Hind-D helicopters seen in the film are in fact modified Aérospatiale SA 330 Puma transport helicopters with fabricated bolt-on wings similar to the real Hind-Ds which were mainly used in the former Soviet bloc nations. The other helicopter depicted is a slightly reshaped Aerospatiale Gazelle.
Arnold Schwarzenegger Commando (1985) TRAILER
Commando is a 1985 American action film starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Rae Dawn Chong, with Dan Hedaya, Alyssa Milano,Vernon Wells, and James Olson in supporting roles. It was directed by Mark L. Lester and shot on location in and around Los Angeles, California.
The film was nominated for a Saturn Award for Best Special Effects but lost to James Cameron's Aliens. The film's score was provided by James Horner. A critical success and commercial hit, Commando was the 7th highest grossing R rated movie of 1985 worldwide, and the 25th highest grossing overall.[2]
Retired Delta Force Operative Colonel John Matrix is informed by his former superior Major General Franklin Kirby that all the other members of his unit have been killed by unknown mercenaries. The mercenaries, among them Bennett, an ex-member of Matrix's team fired for overt brutality in service, attack Matrix’s secluded mountain home and kidnap Matrix’s young daughter Jenny. While trying to intercept them, Matrix is also overpowered by the mercenaries.
It is revealed that Matrix is needed to carry out a political assassination for a South American dictator named Arius, who wishes to lead a military coup in his home country of Val Verde. Arius, who was deposed by Matrix in the course of one of his missions, has chosen the colonel because the current president trusts him implicitly. With Jenny's life on the line, Matrix reluctantly accepts the demand.
After boarding a plane to Val Verde, Matrix manages to kill his guard, Henriques, and jumps from the plane just as it is taking off. With approximately 11 hours' time (the period of the flight), he sets out after another of Arius' men, Sully. He then enlists the aid of an off-duty flight attendant named Cindy, and instructs her to follow Sully to a shopping mall. Cindy first assumes that Matrix is a maniac, but after seeing him desperately trying to get his hands on Sully, she has a change of heart and henceforth assists him in his endeavor. After a lengthy car chase, Matrix catches up with Sully whom he drops off a cliff to his death.
With Cindy's aid, Matrix learns where Jenny is being held. He then breaks into a surplus store to equip himself with military weapons, but the police arrive and Matrix is arrested. Cindy helps him escape, and after commandeering a seaplane from a nearby marina controlled by Arius, Matrix and Cindy land the plane off the coast of Arius' island hideout. Matrix instructs Cindy to contact General Kirby and then proceeds to Arius’ villa, kills Arius’ entire private militia, and subsequently confronts and kills Arius in a gunfight.
Matrix locates Jenny in the basement of the villa, where she has fled and was cornered by Bennett. After a fierce struggle, Matrix finally kills Bennett. Kirby arrives with a military detachment and asks Matrix to rejoin the Special Forces Unit, but Matrix declines and departs the island aboard the seaplane with Jenny and Cindy.
Production[edit]
Development[edit]
Screenwriter Jeph Loeb states that the film was originally conceived as a vehicle for Gene Simmons (who passed on it), and later scripted with Nick Nolte in mind to play the lead as an out-of-condition former commando struggling with the demands of his mission. Walter Hill was originally involved in the development process.[3]
The original concept was for an Israeli special forces–Mossad agent, who is sick of the continual death and destruction in the Middle East. So he quits Israel and emigrates to the United States, where he is forced out of his self-imposed retirement after the kidnapping of his daughter. This was modified and further adapted when Schwarzenegger was cast; some of the original dialogue can be viewed in the deleted scenes when Matrix says he regrets his past actions.
Filming[edit]
Principal photography commenced on April 22, 1985 and lasted for 45 days.[4] The film was shot on location in California. The unnamed island off the coast of Santa Barbara, to which Matrix flies to rescue his daughter, was filmed on the Pacific coast at San Simeon. The barracks that are "attacked" are actually beach properties belonging to the Hearst Castle Estate. The house that Matrix storms at the film's climax was actually the former main residence of the Harold Lloyd Estate in the Benedict Canyon district of Beverly Hills. The car chase scene between Sully and Matrix starts on Ventura Blvd and moves into the hills on Benedict Canyon.
Distribution[edit]
Marketing[edit]
Diamond Toymakers released a line of action figures in 1986 in an attempt to cash in on the success of G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero. Matrix now leads an elite special forces unit (which replaced his old deceased unit from the original film) called C-Team, made up of Spex, Blaster, and Chopper, against the forces of F.E.A.R., led by Psycho (who is based on the character of Bennett) and consisting of Lead-Head, Stalker, and Sawbones. There was an assortment of 4" figures, containing all of the above, a series of 8" figures, consisting of Matrix, Spex, Blaster, Psycho, Lead-Head, and Stalker. Chopper and Sawbones are absent. Finally, there was an 18" John Matrix that came with a pistol, an M16, and a grenade.
Home media[edit]
The first DVD of Commando was released in region 1 in the U.S. on May 25, 1999. Common with early DVD releases, the disc featured a non-anamorphic video transfer, a basic 2.0 surround track, and only the US theatrical trailer as an extra. DVDs released in other regions soon followed, some with anamorphic transfers, but the 2001 UK region 2 DVD was censored by the BBFC (approximately 12 seconds of cuts) due to violence. These cuts were brought over from the 1985 original theatrical release. However, a German master was used for the UK DVD, meaning the film was cut even more than it should have been, leading to 56 seconds of cuts instead of the BBFC's 12 seconds. If the film had been resubmitted to the BBFC, it would be passed uncut under the BBFC's new, more liberal rules. This has proven to be the case as the BBFC's website indicates that both versions of the film (the U.S. theatrical cut and the unrated edition) for the DVD were passed on June 11, 2007. With the unrated edition released, the film is in its entirety, a first for the UK.
On June 5, 2007, 20th Century Fox officially announced that a completely unedited and unrated director's cut of the film would be released on region 1 DVD on September 18, 2007. Through seamless branching, this disc not only features an unrated cut (which was claimed to run at 95 minutes, but is only 91 minutes, with 92 seconds of extra footage), but as a bonus, also contains the original 90 minute, R-rated US theatrical version. Aside from this, the DVD is a special edition, featuring an audio commentary from director Mark L. Lester(only on the theatrical cut), additional deleted scenes, a Pure Action featurette, a Let Off Some Steam featurette, and four photo galleries with over 150 photos. The transfer is anamorphically enhanced and features a 5.1 audio mix.
In April 2008, the 90-minute theatrical version of the film was released to consumers on the high definition Blu-ray Disc format.
Reception[edit]
Box office[edit]
Commando was a commercial success. It was also the 7th top-grossing film of 1985 worldwide. It was outgrossed by The Color Purple, Out of Africa, Back to the Future, Sylvester Stallone's Rocky IV and Rambo: First Blood Part II.
Critical response[edit]
The film maintains a 69% on Rotten Tomatoes (based on 32 reviews), indicating generally positive reviews. Reviews from Kevin N. Laforest, Scott Weinberg, Dave Kehr and Luke Thomson acknowledge the film's tongue-in-cheek humor as well as its status as a cult classic.[5]
Soundtrack[edit]
A song titled "We Fight for Love", featured in the film and recorded by the Power Station, wasn't included in the official soundtrack. The song featured founder Robert Palmer's replacement, Michael Des Barres, and was the band's only song with Des Barres singing lead. It would appear on the 2006 remaster of The Power Station.A soundtrack album was released by Varèse Sarabande on December 2, 2003 as part of the label's CD Club and was limited to 3000 copies.[6] The score, composed by James Horner, is notable for its prominent use of steel drums.
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