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Our Price: $13.95
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Name: VARESE SARABANDE
Number: VAR66663

STRIPES (1981) (CD)
Composed by: Elmer Bernstein

Music Composed and Conducted by Elmer Bernstein.

"Stripes" was a huge hit and featured a score by one of film music’s greatest legends - Elmer Bernstein’s score for "Stripes" is a classic. For it he composed a march that was every bit as memorable as the one he wrote for "The Great Escape."

1. Stripes March (2:18)
2. Winger (1:28)
3. Depression (:41)
4. Push-ups (2:11)
5. Hair Cut (2:38)
6. Training (1:52)
7. Escape (1:35)
8. Cops (1:24)
9. Missing (1:42)
10. Home (:47)
11. Graduation March (2:22)
12. Italy (1:15)
13. Gone (2:27)
14. Captured (1:29)
15. Into the Fire (2:54)
16. Rescued (1:48)
17. V-J-R (2:31)
18. Freeze Frames (3:32)
19. End Credits (1:32)

Bonus Track
20. Stripes Trailer (2:07)

Bill Murray decides to be all that he can be - and it ain't pretty - in this hit comedy. John Winger (Murray) is a quick-witted but unambitious loser who comes home after getting fired to discover that his car has been repossessed and his girlfriend is leaving him. With no idea of what to do next, John and his best friend Russell Ziskey (Harold Ramis) impulsively join the Army, more as a practical joke than a career goal. John and Russell find themselves in basic training under the hard-nosed and impatient Sgt. Hulka (Warren Oates), who is stuck with an outfit of goofballs, including overweight Ox (John Candy), naive Cruiser (John Deihl), perpetually stoned Elmo (Judge Reinhold), and the appropriately-nicknamed Psycho (Conrad Dunn). The platoon succeeds in impressing the generals spite of themselves, and John and Russell even find time to romance two pretty female MPs, Stella (P.J. Soles) and Louise (Sean Young). However, when John and Russell commandeer a high-tech military vehicle for a European weekend getaway with the girls, they happen into Soviet territory and stumble into an international incident. Remarkably, "Stripes" was made with the full cooperation of the U.S. Army, despite its less-than-rosy view of the all-volunteer armed forces. 1981

  
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