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The Cassandra Crossing (Jerry Goldsmith) (1976)
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Average: 2.79 Stars
***** 8 5 Stars
**** 16 4 Stars
*** 24 3 Stars
** 21 2 Stars
* 14 1 Stars
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Composed, Orchestrated, Conducted, and Produced by:
1990 RCA Album Tracks   ▼
2008 Prometheus Album Tracks   ▼
1990 RCA Album Cover Art
2008 Prometheus Album 2 Cover Art
RCA Records
(1990)

Prometheus Records
(December 15th, 2008)
Both the 1990 RCA Records and 2008 Prometheus Records albums were regular commercial releases, the latter distributed primarily through soundtrack specialty outlets. Both are long out of print.
The insert of the 1990 RCA album contains no extra information about the score or film. That of the 2008 Prometheus album offers information about both.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,329
Written 8/18/24
Buy it... on the 2008 Prometheus album only if you are an established enthusiast of Jerry Goldsmith's brutally raw, propulsive action and pretty character themes of the late 1970's.

Avoid it... if you expect any truly satisfying presentation of this merely average score to exist, its film recording relegated to muted mono sound and its stereo album sometimes significantly different in tone.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
The Cassandra Crossing: (Jerry Goldsmith) With aspirations of performing as well as the ensemble cast disaster-oriented films from the early 1970's, The Cassandra Crossing was itself a disaster in the making. It postulated that a plague is inadvertently spread by terrorists in Geneva that storm the lab to destroy that very weapon. The lone escaping criminal boards a train to Stockholm and proceeds to infect that voyage of a thousand people, causing the militaries of the western powers to conjure ways to quarantine or even destroy the whole train. The passengers learn of the dilemma just as the government scientists start to speculate that the plague actually isn't that lethal, but then the plot becomes a race against time as the train had already been diverted to cross a derelict bridge that was destined to collapse. Some of the passengers try and succeed in separating the train in two, but the front half plunges over the collapsing structure. While the movie made the use of breakthrough photography from helicopters, the actual bridge collapse used a model that was unrealistic and laugh-worth, yielding one of the worst such scenes in cinematic history. On the upside, some of the grisly deaths shown on the train in that sequence did earn the film a harsher rating. Critics booed the film at screenings and called out the wretched casting errors across the board, though The Cassandra Crossing still managed to turn a profit. The 1976 movie employed action scoring expert Jerry Goldsmith, who was embarking on a period at the height of his career in which such thrillers were commonplace. His large orchestral scores for these films often carried a redemptive, lyrical theme to counterbalance the composer's jagged meters and raw symphonic force. In many ways, The Cassandra Crossing is very comfortable in this realm of work, and it has the added benefit of utilizing the composer's emerging synthetic layering amongst the orchestral tones and a touch of European accent from soloists. Because the film was presented in mono sound, the score's final mix was executed as such, so the entire situation has suffered from muffled ambient quality since the start. In retrospect, this circumstance is frustrating given the battle over surround sound formats that started at that time.

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