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The Other (Jerry Goldsmith) (1972)
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Average: 2.95 Stars
***** 6 5 Stars
**** 11 4 Stars
*** 13 3 Stars
** 11 2 Stars
* 7 1 Stars
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Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:

Orchestrated by:
Arthur Morton
1997 Varèse Sarabande Album Tracks   ▼
2024 Varèse Sarabande Album Tracks   ▼
1997 Varèse Album Cover Art
2024 Varèse Album 2 Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(1997)

Varèse Sarabande
(September 27th, 2024)
The 1997 Varèse Sarabande album with The Mephisto Waltz was a regular U.S. release. The expanded 2024 album from that label was limited to 2,000 copies and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $20. It sold out quickly but was also released digitally for $15.
The inserts of both albums include information about the score and film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,350
Written 11/9/24
Buy it... if you appreciate Jerry Goldsmith's knack for capturing the dichotomy between an innocent child and a supernatural killer, this score manipulating the tone for the former as he becomes the latter.

Avoid it... on any album if you expect a pleasant listening experience that matches what you hear in the film, the challenging score largely dropped from the final picture.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
The Other: (Jerry Goldsmith) The 1970's were rich with films about otherwise normal-looking children behaving in demonic and supernatural ways. Usually, the best option in these fantasy horror movies is to simply kill the offending child, but that never seems to happen. Chalk up yet another win for the violent brat concept in 1972's The Other, which takes place in an idyllic 1935 New England setting. Several generations of a family operate a farm, and when the Russian grandmother teaches one of the young twins of the household how to astrally project his mind onto other living creatures, including humans, the boy loses control of the capability and unwittingly turns into a serial murderer with an affinity towards eliminating troublesome family and friends via nasty falls. It doesn't help that the boy is naturally curious about the strange and unusual happenings at a local carnival. By the end of the picture, his father, brother, and older sister's infant are dead, and the grandmother takes it upon herself to execute the little shit before he can kill again. Of course, she only succeeds in destroying herself, leaving the boy left with catatonic and paralyzed surviving members of his family and primed to cause more havoc elsewhere. It's a highly dissatisfying movie glorifying suffering and death, and audiences never warmed up to it despite generating some decent theatrical returns. The project represented one of several movies composer Jerry Goldsmith tackled with a psychologically troubled child at its core, usually with good success. He was embroiled in a period of diminished acclaim in his career during the early 1970's, though, relegated too often to mediocre television films of minimal scope. But he strove to maintain the quality of his output despite the poor films he was assigned during this period. In the case of The Other, a large portion of his recorded music was discarded in the film, some of it replaced with sound effects while often yielding to silence instead. Despite this partial rejection, Goldsmith succeeded quite well in generating a coherent narrative throughout the story, even if that music is a little too heavy-handed at times. That forceful suspense and horror manipulation would work in The Omen, but the filmmakers and some critics found the music's presence too pronounced even in what remained in this film.

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