Bruno Coulais
Vidocq
Label:   
Date:  2001
Length:  51:38
Format:  CD
Genre:  Soundtrack
  Category:  soundtrack
  Ref#:  1136
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      La Soufflerie    2:22
      2.  
      Introduction    1:42
      3.  
      Le Complot    2:11
      4.  
      Les Hommes et les Bougies    1:00
      5.  
      Vidocq (Generique debut)    1:39
      6.  
      Les Draps    1:43
      7.  
      Les Pleurs de l'Enfant    1:50
      8.  
      Le Premier Combat    2:40
      9.  
      Les Prostituees    1:08
      10.  
      Les Doubles    0:47
      11.  
      La Deuxieme Revelation    2:24
      12.  
      Le Deuxieme Combat    2:35
      13.  
      Kyrié    0:52
      14.  
      Les Documents    1:06
      15.  
      Les Temoignages    2:38
      16.  
      La Danse    1:13
      17.  
      Les Barricades    1:05
      18.  
      L'Egorgee    3:21
      19.  
      L'Automate    2:25
      20.  
      Les Peaux    1:05
      21.  
      La Premiere Revelation    3:54
      22.  
      Les Foudroyes    1:23
      23.  
      L'Orgie    0:53
      24.  
      La Poursuite aux Invalides    1:39
      25.  
      L'Elixir de Jouvence    1:25
      26.  
      La Mort de l'Alchimiste    2:25
      27.  
      Apocalyptica - Hope Vol.2    4:00
    Additional info: | top
      Already a box office sensation with a million-selling soundtrack in its native France, writer/director Christopher Barratier's tale of a post-war music teacher's lasting impact on his young charges rode its formulaic Hollywood roots all the way to Academy Award and Golden Globe nominations as Best Foreign Language Film, as well as an Oscar nod for Best Song ("Look To Your Path [Vois Sur Ton Chemin]," a collaboration between the director and film composer Bruno Coulais). Taking his inspiration from the boy's chorus at the center of the film's drama, Coulais has concocted a masterful, classically rooted score that showcases the crystalline, youthful harmonies of Les Petits Chanteurs de Saint-Marc Choir. The composer bridges the baroque and modern eras in a collection of mostly Latin choruses and chants, a skillful, often haunting fusion that also netted Coulais' compelling score BAFTA and Cesar Awards in Britain and his native France, respectively. -- Jerry McCulley
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