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Ransom (The Terrorists) (Jerry Goldsmith) (1975)
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Average: 2.88 Stars
***** 9 5 Stars
**** 19 4 Stars
*** 24 3 Stars
** 19 2 Stars
* 14 1 Stars
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Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:

Performed by:
The National Philharmonic Orchestra
1991 Silva Screen Album Tracks   ▼
2005 Prometheus Album Tracks   ▼
1991 Silva Screen Album Cover Art
2005 Prometheus Album 2 Cover Art
Silva Screen Records
(1991)

Prometheus Records
(2005)
Both the 1991 Silva Screen Records and 2005 Prometheus Records albums were regular international releases.
The inserts of both albums include information about the score and film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,327
Written 8/23/24
Buy it... if you seek a surprising compelling thriller score from Jerry Goldsmith, complete with fascinating thematic tapestry, robust instrumentation, and accessible tonalities.

Avoid it... if you expect to find any satisfying album presentation for this music, its two albums featuring extremely poor sound quality due to the loss of the recording's masters.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
Ransom (The Terrorists): (Jerry Goldsmith) Some feature films were better destined for small screen debuts, and 1975's British thriller Ransom, known internationally as The Terrorists was exactly that kind of B-rate picture. Effectively ending its director's career at the helm of theatrical projects, the movie is a convoluted hostage plot in which aggressively discontented men take hostage both a commercial airliner and, separately, the British ambassador to a fictitious Scandinavian country named... wait for it... Scandinavia. (Yeah, the movie's that bad.) The first hostage situation involving the airliner is complicated when a rough landing at the country's airport damages the plane. That group of presumed villains demands a hookup with the terrorists that took the British ambassador hostage, and the entire affair has to be managed by the country's security head. That unenviable dupe is none other an annoyed Sean Connery in this case, which is essentially why the movie exists. Of course, the whole plot is a contrived scenario meant to propel all these characters towards a shootout. At least the filmmakers were able to finish shooting the picture; the owner of the Boeing plane rented for the filming tried to repossess the aircraft when the production missed its payments on it. Like many troubled cinematic projects, this one hired composer Jerry Goldsmith to help fix its ills, and he did as well as he could. There has never been a significant amount of music released from his efforts for Ransom, with much of the film left without music and the very short score presentations saddled with repeated tracks on album, suggesting that the filmmakers simply reused several cues throughout the narrative. Still, what Goldsmith did record for this movie is extremely compelling, its thematic tapestry fascinatingly complex, its instrumentation better varied, and the tonalities more accessible than in many of his other action works at the time. While there is synthetic accompaniment and electronically keyboarded instruments throughout, the demeanor of Ransom is tough and orchestral in a traditional sense. The interesting coloration of the music combines with unusual rhythmic and melodic formations to create one of the composer's more intriguing works of the decade.

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