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Images (John Williams) (1972)
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Average: 2.25 Stars
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Composed, Orchestrated, Conducted, and Produced by:
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2000 ADVP (Bootleg) Album Cover Art
2007 Prometheus Album 2 Cover Art
2021 Quartet Album 3 Cover Art
ADVP Records (Bootleg)
(2000)

Prometheus Records
(December 12th, 2007)

Quartet Records
(June 7th, 2021)
The original 2000 ADVP Records album was a bootleg that spawned other bootlegs in subsequent years. The 2007 Prometheus Records and 2021 Quartet Records albums were each limited to 2,000 copies and sold for an initial price of $20 though soundtrack specialty outlets.
Nominated for an Academy Award.
The inserts of the 2007 Prometheus and 2021 Quartet albums contain information about the score and film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,298
Written 6/4/24
Buy it... only if you have witnessed the hysterically awful movie and can embrace the reason for the score's highly disturbing and discordant, avant-garde stylings.

Avoid it... unless you want to hear music so terrible that it's funny, including the sounds of a man taking a shit (or having an orgasm) during murder scenes.

Williams
Williams
Images: (John Williams) Acclaimed director Robert Altman was long known for his intense interpersonal dramas, but rarely did he venture into the straight horror genre. His most psychologically disturbing movie was 1972's Images, a strikingly weird exploration of mental instability. A London children's author played by Susannah York is a leading basket case, suffering hallucinations of herself and her male lovers to the extent that obsession, schizophrenia, and personality disorder all collide to compel her to grisly duties. Her husband takes her to the countryside so she can work on her book while escaping her increasingly disturbing visions, which are never really explained aside from the stress of her own pregnancy. That second home becomes a hell hole of murder as the author battles her hallucinations by killing the visions with a shotgun, knife, and car, leaving a trail of corpses that may or may not include most of the other, real characters in the tale. While mind-twisting thrillers of this sort have their potential, Images is a wreck of film because of its lack of empathetic connections to the supposed protagonists and Altman's truly bizarre shooting methods, the latter proving that he wasn't entirely adept at capturing shock value effectively. Also a distinctly oddball aspect of the movie is that the characters use first names of the actors playing their inverses in the story, something of a confusing in-joke for audiences. The film's only Oscar nomination came for John Williams' highly unconventional and thus memorable score, displacing the far more deserving The Cowboys. The composer was in the midst of a transition from his 1960's jazzy incarnation and the large-scale orchestral maestro that awaited later in the decade. In some ways, you could consider Williams' music for Images highly appropriate in context, but only because both the movie and the score in it are utterly terrible and distracting. The music represents perhaps Williams' most avant-garde career work, and it was an assignment that the composer enjoyed because of Altman's liberal instructions. The music was to be as strange as humanly possible, and Williams obliged with good cheer.

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