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Midnight Run (Danny Elfman) (1988)
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Average: 3.58 Stars
***** 24 5 Stars
**** 32 4 Stars
*** 18 3 Stars
** 12 2 Stars
* 7 1 Stars
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Composed and Co-Produced by:

Co-Arranged and Co-Produced by:
Steve Bartek

Co-Arranged by:
Mark Coniglio
Total Time: 41:34
• 1. Walsh Gets the Duke (1:47)
• 2. Main Titles (2:21)
• 3. Stairway Chase (0:54)
• 4. J.W. Gets a Plan (1:41)
• 5. Gears Spin I (0:54)
• 6. Dorfler's Theme (1:24)
• 7. F.B.I. (1:16)
• 8. Package Deal (1:07)
• 9. Mobocopter (2:42)
• 10. Freight Train Hop (1:18)
• 11. Drive to Red's (1:04)
• 12. In the Next Life (1:06)
• 13. The River (1:19)
• 14. The Wild Ride (1:31)
• 15. Amarillo Dawn (0:26)
• 16. Potato Walk (1:09)
• 17. Desert Run (1:09)
• 18. Diner Blues (1:19)
• 19. Dorfler's Problem (1:01)
• 20. Gear's Spin II (1:30)
• 21. The Confrontation (2:30)
• 22. The Longest Walk (1:32)
• 23. Walsh Frees the Duke (2:44)
• 24. End Credits: Try to Believe* (4:16)

* performed by Mosley & The B-Men (Oingo Boingo)
Album Cover Art
MCA Records
(1988)
Regular U.S. release.
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,320
Written 11/27/24
Buy it... for a vibrant and refreshingly unique entry in Danny Elfman's career, a very bluesy comedy score of immense positivity and enticing performance inflection.

Avoid it... if you simply cannot escape the era of the recording, because while the music remains fresh stylistically, some listeners may not be able to tolerate its connections to the 1980's.

Elfman
Elfman
Midnight Run: (Danny Elfman) Much in the same style as the director Martin Brest 's previous Beverly Hills Cop, the 1988 action/comedy film Midnight Run relies upon the chemistry of its leads to carry its appeal. Robert De Niro is a bounty hunter tasked with finding the ridiculous but otherwise compliant Charles Grodin, a former accountant for the mob, and bring him to the bail bondsman who made the unfortunate bet that the accountant wouldn't flee after being tagged for his mob activity. The bounty hunter, Jack Walsh, succeeds in finding that man, otherwise known as "The Duke," but unfortunately for both of them, it seems that half the universe is after one or both of them as well, including the mob's boss, federal agents, and yet another bounty hunter. The entire movie is an arduous chase across the United States while Walsh avoids running afoul with any of these other characters. The two handcuffed leads eventually form a bond of trust that leads to a surprisingly positive conclusion at the end. The film was an immense fiscal success, received top-level awards nominations, and confirmed the prowess of both Brest and De Niro in the comedy genre. The movie was also a worthy diversion for Danny Elfman, who by 1988 was suddenly neck-deep into his new composing profession and branching out into various genres for himself. His very busy writing schedule in 1987 and 1988 cemented his credentials beyond the quirkiness of his Oingo Boingo roots. While he had tackled assignments for non-fantasy contemporary topics, Elfman hadn't really opened up with a divergent style to the extent that Midnight Run allowed, exploring blues and country tones in absolutely saturating fashion. While the composer had laced his material for The Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo and then Forbidden Zone with a definite Cab Calloway influence, he had never really opened up and devised a whole work informed by those genre origins. In retrospect, Midnight Run is therefore one of Elfman's most unique and fresh scores not just for the 1980's but in his entire career, a sustainable experience despite being rooted in the instrumentation of the time of its creation.

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