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The Negotiator (Graeme Revell) (1998)
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Average: 3 Stars
***** 84 5 Stars
**** 87 4 Stars
*** 94 3 Stars
** 85 2 Stars
* 84 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:

Arranged and Programmed by:
Paul Haslinger

Orchestrated by:
Tim Simonec
Del Hake
Clifford J. Tashner

Additional Music by:
Craig Armstrong
Audio Samples   ▼
Commercial Album Tracks   ▼
3-CD Bootleg Tracks   ▼
1998 Restless Album Cover Art
2003 Bootleg Album 2 Cover Art
Restless Records
(July 28th, 1998)
The commercial album is a regular U.S. release. The 3-CD bootleg has received varying art since arriving on the secondary market in 2003.
None of the inserts include extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #482
Written 8/18/98, Revised 1/21/07
Buy it... on the commercial album only if you seek the major action cues and end credits from the film.

Avoid it... on the commercial album if you want to hear the opening credits or many of the pivotal choral pieces heard in the film.

Revell
Revell
The Negotiator: (Graeme Revell) An above average cop thriller that made an even bigger name for itself on endless television showings, The Negotiator offers the idea that a prestigious and respected police negotiator in a big city can be pushed to such desperation that he himself takes hostages in the process of trying to prove his innocence. A battle of the minds ensues between that negotiator and the other, equally respected negotiator brought in to talk him down. The two acting performances by Samuel L. Jackson and Kevin Spacey as these negotiators are the highlight of the film, squaring off in a witty game of trust while the police forces and FBI around them seek brute force to end the siege. A certain amount of techno-babble (and the exploitation of a young Internet as an aspect of the story) added a new angle to the shiny urban landscape and police weaponry. The late 1990's were a breakthrough for composer Graeme Revell, and while he was assigned to several A-grade films of significant budget (such as The Negotiator, The Saint, and The Siege), the lack of any fantastic box office success amongst these films pushed his usual assignment list back into B-grade territory. His score for The Negotiator would be highly representative of his action music at the time, combining gritty orchestral recordings with powerful electronic rhythms and occasional synthetic or real voices. Some collectors have commented that The Negotiator sounds like a complicated combination of techniques from Hans Zimmer and Craig Armstrong's styles, as well as the normal palette of synthetic sampling that roots the score firmly as one of his own. That diversity of sound would cause The Negotiator to be a little more interesting in some regards than his other action scores of the time, though it is by no means a flawless effort. Where the music for The Negotiator suffers is in style points, for the best parts of the score (both in film and on album) are, not surprisingly, those that closely resemble the work of Zimmer and Armstrong. Even at the very least, however, Revell's writing for The Negotiator is basically sufficient, and it often holds an affection from his fans.

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