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For Love of the Game (Basil Poledouris) (1999)
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Average: 3.56 Stars
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Stephanie - February 21, 2008, at 4:14 p.m.
1 comment  (2616 views)
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Composed, Conducted, and Co-Produced by:

Orchestrated by:
Steven Scott Smalley

Co-Produced by:
Tim Boyle
Mi Kyoung Chaing
Audio Samples   ▼
1999 Varèse Album Tracks   ▼
2024 Varèse Album Tracks   ▼
1999 Varèse Album Cover Art
2024 Varèse Album 2 Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(November 16th, 1999)

Varèse Sarabande
(June 21st, 2024)
A 15-minute promotional release of the score in the months prior to the first commercial album is both rare and irrelevant. The 1999 Varèse Sarabande album was a regular U.S. release. That label's 2024 expansion is limited to 2,000 copies and primarily available through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $20. It was also made available digitally.
The insert of the 1999 album includes no extra information about the score or film. That of the 2024 expansion includes details about both.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #481
Written 11/20/99, Revised 8/15/24
Buy it... if you seek the final exploration of heartfelt personal triumph and broad strokes of Americana in Basil Poledouris' celebrated career.

Avoid it... if you expect the primary themes of this score to firmly reside in your memory, the work's tone mostly perfect but the melodies lacking the lasting punch needed in this genre.

Poledouris
Poledouris
For Love of the Game: (Basil Poledouris) There are many things for baseball fans to admire about Sam Raimi's first mainstream motion picture, For Love of the Game. Its loyalty to an authentic game is exhibited in its visuals, its star, Kevin Costner, is a tested on-screen veteran of the game, and announcers Vin Scully and Steve Lyons have familiar voices. At its core, though, For Love of the Game is a love story. At the end of a long career with the dismal Detroit Tigers, Costner's 40-year-old starting pitcher is forced into retirement after the last game of the 1999 season. While he reflects upon his life and his lost love during one more outing against the New York Yankees, he flirts with a perfect game, leading to an opportunity for salvation on and off the diamond. The main detriment of the movie, aside from endless scenes outside of the white chalk lines, is the ridiculously slow pacing of the game play. Ironically, the story's format wouldn't have been remotely possible if was set after the institution of the pitch clock in the game years later to speed things up. When considering the movie's music, Raimi had a strong, lasting collaboration with composer Danny Elfman, and it would have been interesting to hear the composer's take on a blend of contemporary romance and the American pastime. More qualified might have been James Newton Howard, a mainstay of Costner's films during this period. The assignment went, however, to Basil Poledouris, a smart choice because of his lengthy history of writing personal scores with a touch of Americana. It is exactly that type of score that Poledouris provided for For Love of the Game, and it turned out to be the composer's final mainstream effort before illness and troubles in his personal life concluded his artistic contributions. Costner himself had forgiven Poledouris for backing out of his assignment on Dances With Wolves, which everyone soon realized was a fateful decision for the composer. It eventually became clear that the duo of Les Misérables and For Love of the Game were the last of the composer's truly engaging works. The latter score is far less spectacular, but it speaks to the roots of Poledouris' habit of reaching to the heart of characters on screen and provided them with appropriately warm music, not to mention a few throwbacks to his folksy inclinations.

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