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In Too Deep (Christopher Young) (1999)
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Average: 2.64 Stars
***** 108 5 Stars
**** 91 4 Stars
*** 103 3 Stars
** 140 2 Stars
* 195 1 Stars
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Composed and Co-Produced by:

Conducted by:
Pete Anthony

Co-Produced by:
Konstantinos Christides
Flavio Motalla
Audio Samples   ▼
1999 Varèse Album Tracks   ▼
2008 Promotional Album Tracks   ▼
1999 Varèse Album Cover Art
2008 Promotional Album 2 Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(September 21st, 1999)

Promotional
(April, 2008)
The 1999 Varèse Sarabande album is a regular U.S. release. The 2008 promotional album is an extremely limited pressing, offered free by one soundtrack specialty outlet on orders over $100. It was no longer advertised as being available two weeks later.
The Varèse album's insert includes no extra information about the score or film. The promo's insert contains a lengthy note from Young about his frustrations with the score and the Varèse album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,240
Written 10/18/99, Revised 5/5/08
Buy it... on the rare 2008 promotional album if you originally enjoyed the R&B and noir elements of the score and are open to hearing Christopher Young's own rearrangement of the material to better reflect them.

Avoid it... on the same promo album if you seek a true representation of the music actually used in the film (including the orchestral portions), which the 1999 Varèse Sarabande product more accurately reflects.

Young
Young
In Too Deep: (Christopher Young) As a fragmented tribute to several cop and organized crime thrillers of the past, In Too Deep didn't really present any new concepts with which to draw audience interest. Decent performances by Omar Epps and LL Cool J were wasted by a derivative script and poor pacing. Epps plays an undercover cop assigned to infiltrate LL Cool J's drug distribution business in Cincinnati, and the (often tense and violent) interaction between the two is the central focus of the story. Australian director Michael Rymer was unsuccessful in reaching out to black pop culture audiences with In Too Deep, despite the heavy influence of rap and R&B sounds in the songs and score for the production. Composer Christopher Young had proven his ability to provide convincing scores for black culture films with such noteworthy efforts as Tales from the Hood and Set It Off, and In Too Deep is an intelligent extension of some of the same ideas. At the time, the project reportedly represented the first in a set of three films that Young was signed to write for Miramax arthouse ventures. He was thrilled to not only have the opportunity to write the score, but also contribute the melody to one of the film's songs. The assignment required Young to infuse an orchestral base of urban suspense and drama with an R&B sound representative of the culture in the story. Not only did he accomplish this, but he even managed to incorporate a slightly noir style of classic street thriller origin with the use of muted trumpets and saxophones as counterpoint to the score's more fluid R&B movements.

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