Things go a little hazy in Julie's eyes when Tom teaches her son some new defense techniques that involves viciously hurting one's opponent by means of nut blows, knees and elbows. Julie appreciates Tom stepping in and little by little, Tom starts to come around. Tom strategically places himself in the middle of a schoolyard fight between Julie's son and some monkey-bar punk. After the fur flies and Phil gets caught in the act, Phil is told to leave. Tom finally makes himself known to Julie after he finds Phil at a restaurant and sets up a plan to have her meet him at the same hotel he uses as a sex place with his mistress. Tom is now part of the house and his obsession with Julie unleashes hidden demons trapped in a mind that's trapped in an attic. He knows more about the Dryer family than Fred Dryer knows about them. He's the rat in the attic.īy setting up an elaborate microphone system in the attic, he's able to hear every word they say. He's the noise they blame for the dad's awful farting problem. He's the creak when they think it's the wind. Now Julie and Phil Dryer (Mimi Rogers who's smokin' and Michael Mckean - better known as Lenny) have a new tenant in their newly built dream house. As a child Tom would escape his parents violent outbursts and abuse by hiding in the most remote areas of the house - until he finally gets tired of being burned with cigarettes and torches down the house with them in it. Hunter would have found him and let Dee Dee have a round or two with him with her golden vibrator. I would however hide in the shower if I saw him coming towards me.Īfter his release from a state institution, Tom finds a cozy new place to call home: a secret place he builds in the attic of the Dryer family home. And you don't even know he's there.Ī pre-bugged out Gary Busey is a resident psychopath, ( Tom Sykes ) in a very strange performance that will ultimately make you pull back the shower curtain before taking a piss. Christopher Young, Jeff Atmajian orchestrate, Jeff Vaughn engineers, Christopher Young composes, Allan Wilson conducts the Graunke Symphony Orchestra.He sees you. Another asset: Informative notes from John Takis. Owners of that initial release need not apply, albeit modest enhancements to sound and packaging might attract. This new mastering of the original album follows that intricate sequencing without change. This included drafting by hand a detailed flowchart of the musical sequences, divided into segments and bars, all designed to bring the listener into the mind of a tortured and violent individual juxtaposed against a more reflective and serene backdrop. When Intrada first released this score in 1990, Young personally worked at length to build a cohesive “musical narrative” of the sometimes warm, sometimes, chilling and sometimes terrifying score in large pieces rather than a just a succession of customarily short cues. But Young also creates moving family material courtesy both an exposed four-note “duet” motif for bells & vibraphone, several warm passages for strings, lean ideas for solo French horn and - especially - some haunting material for chorus based on the four-note duet motif, now broadened into a fully-rounded, emotionally saddened theme. Standing out in this regard are furious orchestral outbursts during the lengthy 18-minute “The Hider” sequence and powerful low brass-dominated rhythmic figures during “Reversing Colors”. He devotes ample time to his aggressive horror idiom. For Young’s fans of his intense thriller voice, fear not. Amongst the coolest ideas are Young’s frequent use of bitonal chords that shift in and out, adding harmonic complexity without relying simply on dissonance. A wealth of complex string ideas, tremolos, harmonics, glissandos and other effects fill one portion of the score while chimes, percussion, flute, French horn, trombone all bring striking color to everything. Inspired writing takes listener on a musical journey through both the tortured mind of the “hider” and a sometimes idyllic, sometimes conflicted world of the married couple. Christopher Young scores for orchestra minus clarinets, trumpets, including wordless chorus. Reissue of vivid 1989 Christopher Young soundtrack for a new generation of his fans! Matthew Patrick directs, Lem Dobbs scripts, Mimi Rogers, Michael McKean play husband and wife against a troubled “hider” in the family attic, the volatile Tom Sykes, played by a dynamic Gary Busey. MUSSOLINI: THE UNTOLD STORY (2CD - REISSUE)īILL & TED'S EXCELLENT ADVENTURE (REISSUE) ROBIN HOOD: PRINCE OF THIEVES (4CD - REMASTERED AND EXPANDED)
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