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TechnoTV - The Lost Boys: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack

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List Price: $7.98
Our Price: $7.29
Your Save: $ 0.69 ( 9% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0075678176722 Format: Soundtrack Label: Atlantic / Wea Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Atlantic / Wea Release Date: 1990-10-25 Studio: Atlantic / Wea
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: A few great songs, a few duds Comment: This soundtrack has a few great songs, but also a few duds. So, keep that in mind when purchasing.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Very Quick! Comment: The sender on this was very prompt in mailing this CD. The CD was in great shape too.
Customer Rating:      Summary: lost boys fan Comment: love the cd, if your a lost boys movie fan of cause you will love the cd, love the old songs goes really well with the film i still listen to it today in the car its a must have.
Customer Rating:      Summary: People Are Strange Comment: The only reason that I do NOT give this soundtrack 5 stars is because it does not have that brilliant extended version of "People Are Strange" by Echo And The Bunnymen. Their cover is near perfect...
myspace.com/vadervader
Customer Rating:      Summary: Great soundtrack! Comment: I bought this soundtrack back when the movie came out and I still listen to it today. This is one of the greatest soundtracks of all times.
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Editorial Reviews:
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Director Joel Schumacher, who went on to helm many big-budget, tiny-intellectual movies, gave us an 1980s update of the story of the vampire. It was all hip, good-looking, and tremendously vacuous. Similarly, the music doesn't break any new ground or offer much that's timeless. INXS' collaborations with Jimmy Barnes are fine, for instance, but Foreigner vocalist Lou Gramm's "Lost in the Shadows (The Lost Boys)" verges on the painful in a way that only overwrought 1980s music can. Roger Daltrey's take on Elton John's "Don't Let the Sun Go Down on Me" is by the numbers, and so wasted. It's only Echo and the Bunnymen's cover of The Doors' "People Are Strange" that warrants much attention, even if it's, erm, buried. --Scott Wilson
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