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The Black Cauldron (Elmer Bernstein) (1985)
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Average: 3.42 Stars
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Alternative review at movie-wave.net
Southall - May 17, 2012, at 2:00 p.m.
1 comment  (4296 views)
Bootleg track listing
JTS - May 28, 2008, at 1:03 a.m.
1 comment  (2915 views)
Very Underrated   Expand
JTurner - June 4, 2006, at 5:27 p.m.
2 comments  (3905 views) - Newest posted March 21, 2012, at 7:42 p.m. by Chris_FSB25
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Composed and Conducted by:

Re-Recording Performed by:
The Utah Symphony Orchestra

Produced by:
George Korngold
Randy Thornton
Audio Samples   ▼
1985/2017 Varèse Albums Tracks   ▼
1996 Taran Bootleg Tracks   ▼
2011 Disney Album Tracks   ▼
1985 Varèse Album Cover Art
1996 Taran Album 2 Cover Art
2012 Disney Album 3 Cover Art
2017 Varèse Album 4 Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(1985)

"Taran" Bootleg
(1996)

Walt Disney Records/
Intrada Records
(April 2nd, 2012)

Varèse Sarabande
(March 13th, 2017)
The 1985 Varèse Sarabande album was a regular U.S. release, but it fell completely out of print by 1993 and sold on the secondary market for over $100. The 1996 "Taran" album is a bootleg without track titles and sold at soundtrack specialty outlets in the 1990's for roughly $30. The 2011 expanded Disney/Intrada album initially sold for $20 and is limited to 10,000 copies. The 2017 Varèse re-issue is limited to 1,000 copies and retailed at soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $16.
The inserts of the first two albums include no extra information about the score or film. The 2011 Disney/Intrada album contains extensive information about both, as well as technical notes about the recording and photography from the sessions. The insert of the 2017 Varèse album also features details about the film and score, joined by a note from the composer.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #567
Written 11/1/96, Revised 4/2/17
Buy it... if you appreciate massively symphonic and surprisingly serious scores for your animated pictures and have lingering affection for Elmer Bernstein's obsession with the ondes martenot instrument.

Avoid it... if you are accustomed to hearing transparent themes, easy concepts, and mostly bright attitude in your animated film scores.

Bernstein
Bernstein
The Black Cauldron: (Elmer Bernstein) In the mid-1980's, the Walt Disney animated film division was suffering through arguably the worst times in its history. All but dead since 1977's The Rescuers, Disney was counting on The Black Cauldron to pull itself back into the forefront of the animated film genre, and as part of that plan, the film was to be vastly different from the studio's previous ventures. It would feature no songs, incorporate computer enhancement to hand-drawn images, receive a PG-rating for darker and scarier images, and be presented in 70mm. Despite all of these new aspects, or perhaps because of them, The Black Cauldron was a monumental and expensive failure. It would take The Little Mermaid four years later to resurrect the lost animated division at Disney, and another dozen years passed before audiences had the opportunity to view the film again on video. Technically based upon Lloyd Alexander's "The Chronicles of Prydain," The Black Cauldron chronicled "The Book of Three" and "The Black Cauldron," two of five books in the series. The resulting story retains basic characters, including the travelling team of protagonists consisting of an aspiring young hero, his pig (which holds the key to locating the titular cauldron), an old wizard, a princess, and the usual bumbling, cowardly sidekick. The evil Horned King seeks the cauldron with which to unleash an army of nasty undead soldiers on the land, and the good-guys are tasked with finding the cauldron before that can happen. Many of the intricacies of the books were lost in the screen adaptation, however, disappointing fans of the concept. Also deviating from the normal realm of Disney animated features was a score by legendary composer Elmer Bernstein, who had just received an Oscar nomination for one of his multitudes of comedy works and was mired in parody writing for much of the early 1980's. At the tail end of this period came Ghostbusters, the composer's most recent major effort heading in to The Black Cauldron.

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