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I Am Sam (John Powell) (2001)
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Average: 2.76 Stars
***** 10 5 Stars
**** 20 4 Stars
*** 28 3 Stars
** 28 2 Stars
* 18 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Gavin Greenaway

Orchestrated by:
Bruce Fowler
Suzanne Moriarty
Total Time: 40:46
• 1. Starbucks & Hospital (5:04)
• 2. It's OK Daddy (1:06)
• 3. Sam's Friends (1:49)
• 4. Reading Together (1:36)
• 5. At the Park (1:08)
• 6. The Birthday Party (2:37)
• 7. Rita (3:16)
• 8. Sam Visits Lucy (2:55)
• 9. Buying Shoes (0:40)
• 10. Lucy Runs and Sam Loses (2:11)
• 11. Annie's Father (1:21)
• 12. Making Coffee (1:34)
• 13. Kramer v. Kramer (2:52)
• 14. Torn Away (1:44)
• 15. Lucy Paints, Sam Makes Origami (4:27)
• 16. Lucy, Calm Down (1:04)
• 17. Nighttime Visits (1:19)
• 18. I'm Getting More From This (1:38)
• 19. On the Stairs (2:25)

Album Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(January 8th, 2002)
Regular U.S. release.
The insert includes a list of performers but no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,288
Written 5/5/24
Buy it... if you desire a friendly and lightly propulsive mood-setter with a slightly quirky personality, John Powell exercising efficiency in his minimalism beyond all else.

Avoid it... if plucky guitar and ukulele music with occasional sound effects and minimal thematic development leaves you without any emotional foothold for this dramatic concept.

Powell
Powell
I Am Sam: (John Powell) Designed to be a tearjerker guided by its superb acting performances and tackling of a difficult topic, 2001's I Am Sam is a study of how a mentally disabled man manages an unexpected role as father. Played by Sean Penn to high acclaim, this man fathers a child with a homeless woman and must rely upon his supportive group of friends to help raise the girl. When the government comes to remove the girl and place her in a foster home at the age of seven years old, the girl does everything she can to help her foster parents and father come together to raise her. Along the journey, an attorney played equally well by Michelle Pfeiffer represents the man but ultimately learns more from him about her life than she anticipated. Despite all the opportunities for an unhappy ending, I Am Sam attempts to leave you with tears of joy, and while critics weren't buying it at all, audiences still made the movie a success story. Integral with the storyline are a variety of songs by The Beatles, the lyrics of which inform several basic plot points. The filmmakers initially wanted to sprinkle the original recordings by The Beatles into the movie but were unable to do so because of licensing restrictions. They instead hired a variety of well-known artists to provide covers of them instead, and sixteen such songs graced the popular soundtrack. Most of the renditions are rather low-key and intimate, but they range significantly in performance inflection. Separate and unrelated to these song placements is John Powell's original score for the movie, which itself espouses the same efficiently minimalistic presence for the concept. Powell was just emerging as a mainstream drama and comedy composer apart from the Hans Zimmer machine by this point, and many of his projects of this period were eclectic or quirky in ways not always palatable. Almost every moment of his work for I Am Sam is easily digestible, the environment he creates for the movie consistently affable and lightly propulsive, the warmth of his sparse but adequate ensemble almost never stepping aside to the realm of dissonance. For some listeners, the atmospheres he explores here may be inevitably boring, but the score maintains its very even and subtle simmer for a specific purpose and largely succeeds at its task.

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