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Varèse Sarabande Records Release the “Stephen King Soundtrack Collection”

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Varèse Sarabande Records announced today a new 8-CD box set celebrating the music of four classic Stephen King titles – Dreamcatcher, Firestarter, The Stand, and The Shining.  The limited edition Stephen King Soundtrack Collection box set (1500 units) is designed to pay tribute to Stephen King paperbacks with a 24-page bound booklet.

Two beloved titles are featuring expanded editions.  The 1994 post-apocalyptic mini-series The Stand, earned prolific composer W. G. Snuffy Walden an Emmy nomination that year.  The four-part mini-series boasted an all-star cast including Gary Sinise, Rob Lowe, Molly Ringwald, Ray Walston, Ruby Dee, and Ossie Davis.  Directed by Lawrence Kasdan, 2003’s Dreamcatcher features original music by Academy Award nominee James Newton Howard.  Both are being released as 2-CD deluxe editions.

One of the earlier Stephen King books to be adapted into film, Firestarter features original music by Tangerine Dream – and is being reissued for the first time in almost 15 years.  The film launched Drew Barrymore into superstardom, following her introduction as Gertie in E.T. two years earlier.  The album is considered the crowning achievement from one of the band’s most prolific lineups (Edgar Froese, Christopher Franke, and Johannes Schmoelling).

The 1997 three-part mini-series The Shining is being presented on a 3-CD set, one disc for each night of the special event series.  The origin of the miniseries is attributed to King’s dissatisfaction with the 1980 adaptation directed by Stanley Kubrick.  The mini-series was shot at The Stanley Hotel (Estes Park, CO) – which was the hotel that inspired King to write the book in the first place.  The Nicholas Pike-penned score is being released commercially for the first time.

Housing the collection is a 24-page bound booklet, featuring liner notes by Randall D. Larson with original art by Shawn Conn.

Stephen King Soundtrack Collection will be available directly from Varèse Sarabande Records www.varesesarabande.com on November 10, 2017.


DREAMCATCHER: Four disillusioned friends take a camping trip, but the town they are vacationing in comes under attack from extra-terrestrial parasites which threaten all life on Earth.

Disc One:
1. Main Titles (2:47)
2. Finding The Keys / Be Careful (2:15)
3. Accident / To The Cabin (2:03)
4. Gathering Wood / Remembering Duddits (1:01)
5. Memory Warehouse (0:35)
6. Toasting Duddit (0:53)
7. Saving Duddits (2:56)
8. Finding Rick (1:50)
9. Animal Exodus (3:43)
10. The Bathroom / What Is It? (3:55)
11. Weasel Kills Beaver (5:43)
12. Military Moves In (1:06)
13. Scout’s Honor (2:43)
14. Becky Bleeds (1:14)
15. Weasel Attacks Pete (3:32)
16. Jonesy And Gray Debate (5:00)
17. Henry Returns To The Cabin (4:20)
18. Boys Find Josie (4:19)

Disc Two:
1. I’m That Monster (3:50)
2. Gray Kills Pete / Trucker (2:37)
3. Jonesy Gets Files (2:10)
4. Soldiers Find Henry (2:27)
5. Reading Curtis’ Mind (0:45)
6. Henry Tells Owen (2:49)
7. Owen Rescues Henry (1:08)
8. Jonesy Calls Henry (2:06)
9. Picking Up Duddits (2:54)
10. Killing Trooper (1:06)
11. Duddits Tells Story (3:27)
12. Curtis Takes Chopper (3:18)
13. Curtis And Owen Battle (2:55)
14. Owen Dead (2:06)
15. Mr. Gray Go Away (3:35)
16. Duddits and Mr. Gray (2:40)
17. It’s Over (0:37)
18. End Credits (5:37)


FIRESTARTER: After taking part in an experiment, a college couple acquires telekinetic powers; subsequently their daughter Charlene (“Charlie”) is born with Pyrokinesis. They go on the run to keep the child from becoming weaponized by government agents.

Disc Three:

1. Crystal Voice (3:13)
2. The Run (4:53)
3. Testlab (4:04)
4. Charly The Kid (3:58)
5. Escaping Point (5:13)
6. Rainbirds Move (2:36)
7. Burning Force (4:24)
8. Between Realities (3:01)
9. Shop Territory (3:19)
10. Flash Final (5:19)
11. Out Of The Heat (2:33)


THE SHINING: Spending the winter alone with his family as caretakers in a remote hotel, a recovering alcoholic wrestles with his personal demons – and plenty more coming at him from out of the ancient, haunted woodwork.

Disc Four (Night #1):
1. Main Titles – Night #1 (1:55)
2. Flashback (1:23)
3. Hello / Nice Day For Croquet (Tied) (2:03)
4. Tire Slash Time / Time To Play (3:26)
5. Memory Of Dad (5:14)
6. Scary Stop Sign (2:19)
7. Read Between The Lines (1:37)
8. A Scary View (2:02)
9. The Hotel Waits / Comin’ To Get Doc / Lend Me A Hand (4:33)
10. Danny Holds Back (2:14)
11. That’s How It Is For Me (1:06)
12. Give Me A Holler (1:53)
13. The Lonely Wind / The Picture Changes / What’s So Sweet About It? (2:24)
14. Alone (2:00)
15. A Near Fall (2:09)
16. No Sale (1:40)
17. Safe As Safe Can Be / There Is No Tony (2:31)
18. Night Nest / Freeze You Bastards (2:45)
19. End Credits – Night #1 (0:54)

Disc Five (Night #2):
1. Main Titles – Night #2 (2:00)
2. How Did He Break His Arm? (1:35)
3. The Usual Suspects (2:49)
4. Behind The Door (5:40)
5. Are You Gonna Hurt Me? / What Does Redrum Mean? (3:02)
6. Please Stay (1:56)
7. Dollhouse Mallet / Into The Room (6:17)
8. Dad On The Radio / That Was Close (5:19)
9. A Key Is Missing (2:29)
10. Boy On The Stairs (1:56)
11. Not My Shade (0:58)
12. I’m Not Seeing That / Trapped (2:30)
13. They’re After Danny (3:36)
14. End Credits – Night #2 (0:53)

Disc Six (Night #3):
1. Main Titles – Night #3 (1:49)
2. Someone Got Their Fuse Blown (5:04)
3. That’s Not The Problem (1:44)
4. Dad In The Window / Where There’s A Will (4:56)
5. Drive Through The Snow (2:23)
6. Girl With A Knife / Interfering Again (2:27)
7. It’s A Drag (2:49)
8. Nothing But Spooks / Unmask (5:07)
9. Batter Up / Run And Hide (1:50)
10. Between The Eyes (3:37)
11. Here’s Jack (2:31)
12. What’s Been Forgotten (2:57)
13. Take Your Medicine (4:29)
14. What Could You Know? (2:29)
15. Dump It (2:09)
16. Think The Party’s Over (3:04)
17. All’s Well That Ends Well (3:38)
18. End Credits – Night #3 (0:53)
19. Main Titles – Night #1 [Mix 1] (1:57)
20. Hello (0:17)
21. Nice Day For Croquet (1:34)
22. They’re After Danny [Mix 1] (3:24)
23. Main Titles – Night #3 [Mix 1] (1:49)
24. What Could You Know [Mix 1] (2:28)


THE STAND: After an apocalyptic influenza pandemic decimates half the world’s human population, scattered remnants join one of two camps, one led by a benevolent elder named Mother Abagail and the other by maleficent sorcerer Randall Flagg. This epic conflict of good versus demonic evil will end with humanity’s last stand.

Disc Seven:

1. Project Blue (1:33)
2. The Dreams Begin (2:07)
3. On The Road To Kansas (3:56)
4. The Trashman In Vegas (1:57)
5. Headin’ West (1:55)
6. Larry & Nadine (The Rejection) (2:38)
7. Mother Abigail (3:10)
8. “Sorry Mister, I Don’t Understand” (Tom & Nick Meet) (2:53)
9. Mid Country: By The Stream (3:21)
10. Mother Greets The Multitudes (1:25)
11. M-O-O-N…That Spells Suicide (2:12)
12. “One Will Fall By The Way” (3:43)
13. Beginning Of The End (3:21)
14. The Stand (3:45)
15. Tom & Stu Go Home (2:33)
16. “Ain’t She Beautiful” (6:00)

Disc Eight:
1. Escaping (2:06)
2. Streets Of New York (0:53)
3. Trashy And The Dark Man (1:24)
4. Sewing The Canvas (1:27)
5. Corn Fields (2:06)
6. Locked Up (2:03)
7. New York No More (3:51)
8. The Funeral (2:58)
9. Leaving Mother Abigail’s (1:43)
10. Las Vegas (3:14)
11. Nadine Seduction (1:55)
12. Table Talk (5:44)
13. Boulder To Vegas (3:07)
14. Trashy Lights Up (1:56)
15. Nadine’s Dream (2:51)
16. Captured (2:06)
17. War Preparations (3:25)

Horror movie fanatic who co-founded Bloody Disgusting in 2001. Producer on Southbound, V/H/S/2/3/94, SiREN, Under the Bed, and A Horrible Way to Die. Chicago-based. Horror, pizza and basketball connoisseur. Taco Bell daily. Franchise favs: Hellraiser, Child's Play, A Nightmare on Elm Street, Halloween, Scream and Friday the 13th. Horror 365 days a year.

Editorials

‘Reeker’ – Revisting the Forgotten 2005 Slasher Movie and Its Prequel

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Reeker

There is no forgetting the putrid and almost sickly sweet smell of human death once it has become an olfactory memory. Those unfamiliar with this hyper-specific stench should count themselves lucky. However, that odor of mortality is all the characters of Reeker have to keep themselves safe. Danger lurks wherever that fetor goes. Dave Payne’s 2005 horror film introduced a unique villain named after his most notable attribute, yet by the time that cadaverous stink has been inhaled by potential victims, the chance for escape may have already expired.

Following a silly but grisly cold-open — a random family becomes a roadside picnic for The Reeker, who remains unseen early on — director and writer Payne sets up what looks to be a garden-variety slasher: one by one, young folks are murdered in gruesome fashion, somewhere out in the middle of nowhere. No doubt that pitch sounds familiar. As straightforward as the film starts out, though, the malodorous antagonist is revealed to be only a part of the bigger picture. The story ultimately subverted expectations and reimagined a fairly common plot twist from back in the day.

The Sixth Sense can be thanked for the resurgence of the “dead all along” twist. M. Night Shyamalan picked an oldie but a goodie — 1962’s Carnival of Souls is considered to be the first film to use this technique — for his breakthrough film’s iconic ending. “It was all a dream” and “unreliable narrator” both get a lot of mileage as well, if not more so, yet revealing a character has been dead all this time has its own special shock factor. In the case of Reeker, learning Jack (Devon Gummersall), Gretchen (Tina Illman), Nelson (Derek Richardson), Trip (Scott Whyte) and Cookie (Arielle Kebbel) were involved in a life-threatening car accident prior to ever reaching their destination does not come as a huge surprise; Payne dropped enough hints along the way. What helps this practice of a now-tropey twist stand out is the delivery.

Reeker

Image: Scott Whyte’s character succumbs to death in Reeker.

Although Reeker does not quite pull the rug out from under observant viewers, it makes up for its foreseeable outcome by enriching the death motif and leaning hard into the story’s limbo element. For the first two acts, Payne supplied a seemingly clear-cut slasher scenario with a supernatural veneer, then he firmly directed the audience to the film’s alleged aha moment: the aptly named Halfway Motel was, in fact, a waiting room for all the characters involved in nearby car accidents, and The Reeker served as an analog for Death (with a touch of Charon thrown in). The Reeker’s brutal kills also mirrored the real-world inflictions these motorists sustained in their roadway wrecks. Another director might downplay this certain state of flux just to avoid early detection, but Payne hides it in plain sight. A bold move for a story banking on its big reveal.

On a design note, merging 35mm and digital did wonders for The Reeker’s surreal depiction; in retrospect, these now-dated visual effects add to that unearthly quality. The characters’ fetid foe is trapped between two worlds as he convulses all over the screen, jabs and eviscerates with whatever tool is appropriate, and then vanishes into a puff of smoke. This cross between a sadistic welder, zombie and generic glitch entity is not all that imposing — for everything this film does do well, it lacks in major scares — however, The Reeker is rather uncomfortable to watch at times. For audiences, this blink-and-miss-it Grim Reaper proxy is often too much to take in during the few seconds he is corporeal. Whereas for the characters, they can never comprehend The Reeker’s rationale, or in some instances, the realization comes as an afterthought.

As unconventional as Reeker can be when propped up against other slashers from the 2000s, it slightly succumbs to tradition when deciding the fates of its main characters. In Payne’s film, those who partake in sex and drugs tend to die. This moralism in the horror genre, while neither official nor consistent, is shown enough to be accepted as fact. The lone survivors in Reeker just so happen to be the nice but jaded blind guy, Jack, and the one character who had a vocal issue with there being MDMA in her car, Gretchen. The pair never hooked up with anyone or each other, either. As for horny and high Cookie and Nelson, they each perished in due time. Jokester Trip also passed over to the hereafter, however, the motivation for his demise is trickier to nail down because he went from jerk to hero in his final minutes. In addition, Trip’s shady drug dealer (Eric Mabius) was spared and even turned out to be a good samaritan. The Reeker’s other victims, including an RV driver played by Michael Ironside, have nothing prickly about themselves that would feed into the so-called moral morass of horror.

reeker

Image: In the prequel No Man’s Land: The Rise of Reeker, both The Reeker and his two victims get caught in an explosion.

No Man’s Land: The Rise of Reeker (Reeker 2: No Man’s Land in other parts) served as a prequel to the first film, but it was also able to stand on its own story-wise. As the title suggests, this entry explained how The Reeker came to be and how he operated in that halfway realm between life and death. In place of the younger cast was a range of adults, including Maya (Mircea Monroe), a struggling food server wishing to be free of her layabout ex-boyfriend Alex (Stephen Martines) and his partner in crime (Desmond Askew), and the local sheriff (Robert Pine) hoping to retire and pass the badge on to his estranged son (Michael Muhney). These characters and others were, more or less, strangers to one another, so they had to contend with that tension on top of the otherworldly threat at hand.

Anyone who had seen the first Reeker knew how this follow-up would play out, and in many respects, No Man’s Land is a retread. That being said, there is a little more meat to the prequel’s characters; Maya and Alex’s quarrelsome relationship culminates in an affecting moment which better illustrates the series’ notion of second chances, something only touched on in the prior film, and the sheriff and son’s subplot is also somewhat fulfilling. The interactions this time around are more amusing and appreciated than the antics of bubble-headed coeds. And as indicated during Muhney’s character’s weird gallows confession — he is a secret dolphin voyeur — Payne was funny when he wanted to be. Surely the mention of the Council for the Ethical Use of Cell Phones at Gas Pumps during the film’s closing credits was done in jest.

With its high concept, the Reeker franchise could only go on for so long without eventually repeating itself. So finishing as a duology was for the best. The prequel already came close to being a rehash had it not improved on the original’s shortcomings (middle-act pacing, characters, production values), albeit marginally. Even so, these two films, which in hindsight were written off too quickly, make for an entertaining double-feature. No, they are not as smart as they would like to be, but they do put a different spin on a time-worn formula. And after watching plenty of unambitious and nondescript slasher films from the same era, the Reeker series is a breath of fresh air.


Horror contemplates in great detail how young people handle inordinate situations and all of life’s unexpected challenges. While the genre forces characters of every age to face their fears, it is especially interested in how youths might fare in life-or-death scenarios.

The column Young Blood is dedicated to horror stories for and about teenagers, as well as other young folks on the brink of terror.

Reeker

Image: The namesake of Reeker appears out in the open.

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