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The Reincarnation of Peter Proud (Jerry Goldsmith) (1975)
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Average: 2.88 Stars
***** 11 5 Stars
**** 20 4 Stars
*** 28 3 Stars
** 23 2 Stars
* 15 1 Stars
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Composed, Conducted, and Produced by:

Orchestrated by:
Herbert Spencer
1996 Soundtrack Library Bootleg Tracks   ▼
2018 Intrada Album Tracks   ▼
1996 Soundtrack Library Album Cover Art
2018 Intrada Album 2 Cover Art
Soundtrack Library (Bootleg)
(1996)

Intrada Records
(December 4th, 2018)
The 1996 Soundtrack Library album was a widely circulated bootleg. The 2018 Intrada Records album was limited to an unknown quantity and available only through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $22. It rose in value to $100 or more after selling out.
There exists no official packaging for the 1996 Soundtrack Library bootleg. The insert of the 2018 Intrada album includes extensive information about the film and score.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,330
Written 8/26/24
Buy it... if you trust Jerry Goldsmith to provide intelligent instrumental and thematic design to cues for murder, masturbation, incest, and fornication.

Avoid it... if you expect to find any truly satisfying album presentation for this challenging hybrid score, its poor sound quality long inhibiting its appeal.

Goldsmith
Goldsmith
The Reincarnation of Peter Proud: (Jerry Goldsmith) Is it incest? Who cares?! If the 1975 movie The Reincarnation of Peter Proud teaches you one thing about your next life, it's this: When your wife kills you and you get reincarnated as a different man, don't go back and have sex with your own daughter thirty years later. Your ex-wife may just become enraged all over again and kill you a second time. As shocking as that premise may be, it would seem that this particular movie sought to make you feel bad about the death of one Peter Proud, but in fairness to the poor dude, he was suffering from terrible visions of his past life and couldn't help but investigate the people and places he was seeing in his dreams. He travels across America to pursue answers and confirms that he is indeed, for whatever reason, the reincarnation of some asshole who was so demeaning to his wife that she pounded the shit out his head in the middle of a lake. What's creepy about The Reincarnation of Peter Proud is the psychosis of the scorned woman, her mind sufficiently crazed by the events of her past to engage in the movie's most memorable scene: Margot Kidder masturbating in a bathtub while recalling her dead husband raping her long ago. Compared to that, the father-daughter action is merely a slightly disturbing sideshow. The movie was the kind of supernatural and psychological thriller typical to the middle of the 1970's, and stuff like that had the peril of alienating audiences in the theatre while being wholly unsuitable for television showings. Such was the dismal path to obscurity for The Reincarnation of Peter Proud, though artsy filmmakers have planned unsuccessfully to remake the movie for years. A common workhorse in this genre of the 1970's was composer Jerry Goldsmith, who took this assignment as the culmination of his genre efforts that included The Illustrated Man, The Other, and The Mephisto Waltz in a short period of time. These projects encouraged the composer to engage in a journey of experimentation that yielded a heavy synthesizer presence in The Reincarnation of Peter Proud and served as a practice run for the sounds of Logan's Run the next year.

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