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Logan's Run (Jerry Goldsmith) (1976)
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Average: 3.01 Stars
***** 13 5 Stars
**** 20 4 Stars
*** 25 3 Stars
** 19 2 Stars
* 13 1 Stars
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Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:

Orchestrated by:
Arthur Morton
1992 Bay Cities/2000 Chapter III Albums Tracks   ▼
2002 FSM/2015 WaterTower Albums Tracks   ▼
1992 Bay Cities Album Cover Art
2000 Chapter III Album 2 Cover Art
2002 FSM Album 3 Cover Art
2015 WaterTower Album 4 Cover Art
Bay Cities
(1992)

Chapter III Records
(July 25th, 2000)

Film Score Monthly
(February 2002)

WaterTower Music
(August, 2015)
The 1992 Bay Cities and 2000 Chapter III albums were regular U.S. releases, the latter paired with Goldsmith's Coma and falling out of print quickly due to the label's demise. The 2002 Film Score Monthly album was limited to 3,000 copies and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets. The 2015 WaterTower re-issue of the FSM product's contents is a digital-only "Deluxe Edition."
The inserts of the 1992 Bay Cities and 2000 Chapter III albums contain no extra information about the score or film. That of the 2002 Film Score Monthly album includes extensive details about both. The digital 2015 WaterTower album offers no packaging.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,301
Written 8/20/24
Buy it... for Jerry Goldsmith's masterful interplay between the score's two themes, the romantic payoff at the end a hearty conclusion to an otherwise challenging work.

Avoid it... if the composer's synthetic explorations of atonality during the 1970's drive you insane, for the completely electronic passages in the score are wildly intrusive.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
Logan's Run: (Jerry Goldsmith) The distinction between utopia and dystopia is explored in the 1976 futuristic thriller Logan's Run, a science fiction extravaganza highly awarded for its visual aesthetic. Several hundred years into the future, humans live in relative comfort under giant domes, with all their needs guided by computers. Orgies and other heathenistic activities are encouraged and normal. But in return for that lifestyle is a rule that all people must die at the age of 30. Naturally, some people find such a restriction unacceptable, and they try to escape the city. Thus enter the "sandman" assassin force that tracks down and kills such dreamy malcontents. But what happens when a sandman and his love interest escape the city and discover the ruins of old America? The fate of the city is sealed at that point, but not before flashy fight sequences, the obligatory talking robot of 1970's imagination, and a man versus machine showdown. Although Logan's Run wasn't particularly popular with critics, it showed well with young audiences and briefly spawned a television series. Hired to accentuate the dichotomy between the bizarre human experience in the city and the realities of the heart and world beyond was Jerry Goldsmith, who was in the midst of truly embracing electronics as an experimental form of atonal ambient force. His approach to Logan's Run was destined to resolve with his trademark symphonic romanticism, laced as necessary with the robust action methods common to his late 1970's works. But for the city's environment, the composer leaned into the journey that had earned attention with his outlandish synthetic music for The Illustrated Man. The electronics in this score are not the early iterations of his 1980's sounds that listeners heard in The Cassandra Crossing or Damnation Alley. Instead, they were all-out analog funfests of atonal layering of several performances using sound effects that are distinct from those that Goldsmith used thereafter. Various sounds of squishing noises are particularly interesting even if they are not entirely listenable, the composer using this collection of wet noises to likely augment the sexual nature of the lifestyle in the city.

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