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The Man (Jerry Goldsmith) (1972)
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Average: 2.66 Stars
***** 5 5 Stars
**** 11 4 Stars
*** 17 3 Stars
** 18 2 Stars
* 12 1 Stars
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Composed by:

Re-Recording Conducted by:
William Stromberg

Re-Recording Orchestrated by:
Leigh Phillips

Re-Recording Performed by:
Royal Scottish National Orchestra

Re-Recording Produced by:
Douglass Fake
Total Time: 16:05
• 21. Douglass Dilman (Main Titles) (1:48)
• 22. They Want a President (2:12)
• 23. The Lincoln Memorial (1:20)
• 24. The Oval Office (2:08)
• 25. An Invisible Man (0:31)
• 26. Mrs. Blore (1:06)
• 27. Let Him Loose (1:02)
• 28. Fishing (2:11)
• 29. Will They Make It? (1:16)
• 30. Protests (0:18)
• 31. Hail to the Chief and End Credits (2:00)


(Total time reflects only music from The Man on this album; total album time is 51:28.)
Album Cover Art
Intrada Records
(March 8th, 2022)
The sole album from Intrada Records in 2023 was limited to an unknown quantity and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $23.
The insert includes detailed information about the score and film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,354
Written 11/6/24
Buy it... on its only album, a re-recorded performance from 2021, for a moderately interesting but challenging and rather underwhelming Jerry Goldsmith drama score.

Avoid it... if you become frustrated by music that fails to reach its potential, the extreme brevity of this work yielding a lack of development that negatively impacts the movie.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
The Man: (Jerry Goldsmith) Originally set to be an ABC television production, the potential of Irving Wallace's story of The Man pushed the release to Paramount for a theatrical debut instead. With input from Rod Serling, the 1972 tale postulates about the political chaos that would erupt if an African-American were to suddenly become the United States President. (Wait, really? Yes, in 1972, nobody could have conceived of either black or orange men in the White House.) In this scenario, the President and Speaker of the House are killed (unfortunately off-screen) in a building collapse overseas, and a cranky, terminally ill Vice President refuses to take command of the country. Hence ascends the fourth in line, the Senate president pro temp, a respected, moderate senator and statesman who happens to be black. The script shows the immediate and persistent resistance to the new President Dilman, with many in his own white cabinet members scheming with a racist senator to either control the man or force him out of office. The appeal of the movie is the combination of the choice dialogue and James Earl Jones' restrained but powerful performance in the lead role. The position of music in the movie is highly limited, perhaps as a result of the production's origins as a lesser television project. But Jerry Goldsmith tackled television films with the same intelligence as those for the big screen, so it's not surprising that his music for The Man is substantially large at its most prominent moments. The biggest complaint listeners will have about this score and film is the relatively poor spotting of the music in the picture. Only roughly 16 minutes of score made it into the movie, dominating a few scenes in broader spaces with resounding force but diminishing into the background or nothingness for most of the conversational scenes. There are times when Jones performs fantastic lines from the script and a musical reference at that moment could have reinforced the importance of the moment. But silence in the background is often preferred, marking a missed opportunity for both compelling drama and suspense from the music.

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