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Toy Soldiers (Robert Folk) (1992)
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Average: 3.34 Stars
***** 41 5 Stars
**** 46 4 Stars
*** 38 3 Stars
** 27 2 Stars
* 21 1 Stars
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Holy crap, it's awesome!
Richard Kleiner - September 30, 2010, at 7:40 p.m.
1 comment  (1288 views)
The most underated composer out there.   Expand
Jaws8u - August 22, 2006, at 8:25 p.m.
2 comments  (3228 views) - Newest posted August 24, 2006, at 6:00 a.m. by Sheridan
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Composed, Co-Orchestrated, Conducted, and Produced by:
Robert Folk

Co-Orchestrated by:
Randy Miller
Peter Tomashek
Audio Samples   ▼
1992 Intrada Album Tracks   ▼
2021 Intrada Album Tracks   ▼
1992 Intrada Album Cover Art
2021 Intrada Album 2 Cover Art
Intrada Records
(November 24th, 1992)

Intrada Records
(December 6th, 2021)
The 1992 Intrada album was a regular U.S. release, but it fell completely out of print and was valued in the 2000's at $80 on the secondary market. The 2021 Intrada album is limited to an unknown quantity and available initially for $20 through soundtrack specialty outlets.
The inserts of both albums provide notes, including reflections by the composer and producer, about the score and film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,167
Written 4/19/97, Revised 2/23/22
Buy it... if you're prepared for a surprisingly entertaining and upbeat action score seemingly inspired by the thematic and stylistic tendencies of Jerry Goldsmith.

Avoid it... if you tend to exhibit little patience for scores that overplay their emotional appeals, Robert Folk pushing the score's two major themes to levels of importance not supported by the film's quality.

Folk
Folk
Toy Soldiers: (Robert Folk) Badly beaten by critics at the time of its release, 1991's Toy Soldiers is the tale of a Virginia prep school taken over by Colombian terrorists. Those terrorists are targeting the son of a judge overseeing the case of their leader in America, but they can't take the school before the judge's son is pulled by authorities. But the siege happens anyway, and the rest is predictable. The angry, machine gun-laden men still want their leader released from American custody, so they plant explosives around the school and threaten to blow up the sons of famous and wealthy citizens. But, as to be expected, those sons are deviant brats, and they are eventually more effective at foiling the terrorists than the horde of American military outside the school. Debuting director Daniel Petrie Jr. gives audiences nothing that they don't expect to see, and in the end, only Robert Folk's militaristic score stands out as a refreshing element. Even with that said, though, some critics commented that Folk's large-scale orchestral score did more to expose the film's ridiculous nature than provide a convincing musical backdrop for the suspense. Regardless, among the tragedies in the bronze and early digital age of film scoring was the career of composer Robert Folk, whose work qualified him for assignments far better than those he has received. Composing and conducting dozens of film scores since the early 1980's, Folk's career began to be noticed by film score collectors in the early 1990's, when several of his better-known scores began appearing on the Intrada Records label. In the public eye, his longest-standing affiliation in film scoring was with Police Academy and its numerous sequels and spin-offs. His output continued past 2000 with more B-rate comedy and action films, including Kung Pow: Enter the Fist and its sequel. His other works, though, were less glamorous and confined by the small screens of television or video projects. Meanwhile, Folk continued his writing for concert works, conducting several of the most famous ensembles in the world.

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