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Vacancy (Original Soundtrack)

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Download links and information about Vacancy (Original Soundtrack) by Paul Haslinger. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Theatre/Soundtrack genres. It contains 23 tracks with total duration of 56:06 minutes.

Artist: Paul Haslinger
Release date: 2007
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack
Tracks: 23
Duration: 56:06
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Vacancy Main Title Theme 2:50
2. Lost In Nowhere 1:38
3. Meeting Mason 1:12
4. Trapped 1:25
5. Phone Booth 1:52
6. Under Surveillance 1:56
7. Trucker Arrival 1:10
8. Rats In the Tunnel 2:01
9. They're Under Us! 2:09
10. Nobody's Fault 1:38
11. Searching the House 2:11
12. Chase and Barricade 1:39
13. David Stabbed 3:34
14. A New Day 1:02
15. Killed By a Beamer 1:22
16. Going for a Gun 0:45
17. Amy Attacked 1:31
18. Amy's Revenge 1:13
19. Finding David 1:56
20. Vacancy End Credits 4:51
21. Vacancy Variant Acid Mix (featuring Michael Fakesch) 4:19
22. Temps Perdu Mix (featuring Christoph Harbonnier) 4:32
23. Transmutation Void Mix (featuring Lustmord) 9:20

Details

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Vacancy, directed by Nimrod Antal (Kontroll), is a low-budget horror movie in which the largest expenditure seems to have been the salaries of stars Luke Wilson and Kate Beckinsale. The film is a cross between Psycho (it is set at one of those far-from-the-Interstate motels) and less-sophisticated slasher fare, with a plot in which a lost couple find themselves pursued by maniacs intent on slaughtering them while filming the carnage, then adding it to their collection of snuff-film videos. The score is by Tangerine Dream member Paul Haslinger, who has come up with a highly electronic effort that is at times practically indistinguishable from the sound-effects tracks for the movie. Haslinger can't have had much of a budget himself, and the only ordinary musician he has employed is violinist/violist Jacques Deregnancourt, who joins other performer/contributors credited with programming, sound design, and processing. Haslinger does get to come up with some interesting scoring on "Vacancy Main Title Theme" and "Vacancy End Credits," which nod toward both Bernard Herrmann and John Carpenter; in between, in short cues with titles like "David Stabbed" and "Amy Attacked," he mostly settles for the usual quietly ominous and eerie sounds meant to set up the shocks and loud, harsh percussion effects meant to accentuate those shocks. The last 18-plus minutes of music are not really included in the 85-minute movie. They are remixes of some of the scoring by Michael Fakesch, Christoph Harbonnier, and Lustmord. The soundtrack to Vacancy is a modest effort that is more impressive than the film it accompanies.