Star Trek V: The Final Frontier - Complete Expanded Soundtrack - 03 The Mountain [Main Title]
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- Опубликовано: 8 апр 2022
- Recently it came to my attention that there was no real upload on RUclips of the 2010 release of the complete extended soundtrack for Star Trek V. It was actually kind of a pain to even find a way to obtain this extended soundtrack on the internet, legitimately or otherwise.
Whatever you may think of Star Trek V as a movie, its soundtrack is above reproach. This edition of the soundtrack is 31 minutes longer than the initial release and features some really great compositions that weren't cleanly heard before. Jerry Goldsmith is in top form here. This soundtrack sits at a place where his style had matured from the groundbreaking score of Star Trek: The Motion Picture, but was still taking you in interesting new directions. You can definitely pick out some of the compositional similarities to his later scores like Total Recall and Mulan as well.
Some highlights:
-Sybok's theme
-The amazing Klingon theme from TMP, which really gets its time in the spotlight here
-"The Mountain" (basically the theme representing the main trio's friendship in this movie)
-"A Busy Man" (used in this film to represent the journey to find God, but brought back very prominently in the TNG movies as a theme of friendship for that crew)
-The many ways Goldsmith iterates on the main TMP theme, even going so far as to quietly bring back his rejected TMP theme as one of those variations!
Enjoy! Кино
From 2:40 I can literally see the blue skies and mountains and feel the crisp mountain air amongst the forests. Amazing music!
Among the many movies the sole redeeming factor of which is that they gave Goldsmith a canvas to do something wonderful, this is the one I am most grateful for, and this is the track that gratitude is centered on.
As others have said this film had MANY issues but Jerry Goldsmith's score was not one of them! Arguably one of the greatest in the series - While there have been other great "Trek" scores the Jerry Goldsmith theme from the motion picture and all variants will always be my absolute favorite. Between Star Trek, Alien, The Omen, Patton, First Blood, Total Recall, Hoosiers, Innerspace etc... Goldsmith belongs up there with John Williams and Hans Zimmer
I love this movie. Since first time❤
This scene has always stuck in my mind as a young boy. Dreaming of what is out there. I avoided trivial relationships because of Star Trek. Having time to explore other things. This has made all the difference in my life.
Great comment, but ironic in that many people wade into trivial relationships and activities as "Star Trek fans". I don't mean all fans, I mean the many who focus on superficialities and 'being a fan', rather than taking the message of optimism and self-actualization and running with that in building a life for themselves.
"'You'll have a great time, Bones. You'll enjoy your shore leave, you'll...be able to relax.'"
{ McCoy puts down his binoculars. }
"You call this relaxing?! I'm a nervous wreck. If I'm not careful, I'll end up talking to myself..."
Hi, Bones! Can we drop in for dinner???
This was a great film. Full stop.
I got to meet Mr. Goldsmith backstage in OKC, Nov. 1983. He was very polite and signed my program. A great memory, but I didn't have a camera with me!
I can imagine Alex Honnold climbing to this beautiful music :). Maybe he was inspired by the scene.
A _broken_ great Star Trek film.
1:10.
History says that this is the least successful film in the Star Trek saga. Personally I was able to appreciate several aspects of it: a truly remarkable soundtrack, especially "The mountain" one of the most beautiful themes ever, the story that encroached on different fields, up to bringing the Enterprise in search of "god" ( that since I am an Atheist, it is the search for nothing) up to the story of the Klingon commander who wanted to destroy Kirk's ship to rise to a great warrior, and once defeated he greets Kirk with respect and honor. To conclude, a failed film but not to be slaughtered either (personal opinion)
Well said, I love them all and I'm glad they're there
still my favorite to this day of the TOS movies and the people that didn't like it or hated on it, don't understand life and friendships and family in my humble opinion
I like star trek v, personally I think its a much better film than nemesis or into darkness (the worst films inmho). All the 6 original crew movies are great
I'm not the biggest fan of Horner's work in Star Trek and I absolutely despise Leonard Rosenman's work in general (it's practically the same themes and motifs used over and over again throughout his discography). When I heard this in the beginning of Final Frontier, i couldn't help but smile. The Maestro is back!
I saw 4 yesterday and my god all I could think of was how awful the scores for that and robocop 2 were
@clumpyschlipz7571 He also did the score for Ralph Bakshi's The Lord of the Rings and it's the same theme. 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@brandonsmith9098 I'm listening to it now and its such a wet fart of a song 😂
Music this beautiful has no business being in a film this absurd.
And I have been a _Trek_ fan for more than thirty years - this film is complete nonsense.
And has one of the best Trek soundtracks of all time. :-D
"An ambitiously different idea that ultimately falls flat."
Often considered by many to be
the absolute stinker in the Star Trek franchise,
and winning 3 Golden Raspberry Awards
for Worst Actor, Worst Director & Worst Picture,
ALL for William Shatner!
AND, it even failed to double its $33 million budget
by making only $63 million!
The writing and direction from
William Shatner is very dull and boring,
The visuals look very dated,
The casting is still pretty good,
But hey, at least the music by Jerry Goldsmith
is absolutely outstanding & beautiful!
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier is an
underdeveloped failure of a film,
chock with great characters and music!
2/10
The music by the maestro Jerry Goldsmith is the only good thing about this movie, unfortunately...
@@Swatyo
I agree! It’s the only redeeming thing
about this train wreck!
"William Shatner" and "dull and boring" do not belong in the same sentence under any circumstances. In fact, from what I've heard of the film, it sounds batshit insane, meaning it's anything but "dull and boring." Calling something "dated" is a detracting and superficial way of pointing out when it was made, a factor that should not be considered an imperfection. You're essentially saying that it's too indicative of its time to be good, which is just ridiculous.
@@Swatyo But it's not "the only good thing," so there is nothing unfortunate about that.
@@imfsresidentotaku9699 what is something that is actually good about this movie, aside from the soundtrack ?