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Grosse Pointe Blank

Movie Soundtrack  Main Performer

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1 Blister in the Sun Gano 2:08
2 Rudie Can't Fail Jones/Strummer 3:31
3 Mirrow in the Bathroom Charlery/Cox/Morton 3:09
4 Under Pressure Bowie/Queen [1] 4:03
5 I Can See Clearly Now Nash 2:46
6 Live and Let Die McCartney/McCartney 3:02
7 We Care a Lot Bordin/Faith No Mor 4:03
8 Pressure Drop Hibbert/Hibbert 4:18
9 Absolute Beginners Bowie/Weller 2:50
10 Armagideon Time Williams/Dodd 3:53
11 El Matador Cianciarulo 4:34
12 Let My Love Open the Door [E.Cola Mix] Townshend 4:58
13 Blister 2000 Gano 2:58
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Grosse Pointe Blank

Audio Compact Disc

Label: PolyGram

Category: Pop/Rock

Grosse Pointe Blank

UPC: 042282886729

Release Date: 03/18/1997

Original Release Date: 03/18/1997

Number of Discs: 1

Tracks: [Blister in the Sun, Rudie Can't Fail, Mirrow in the Bathroom, Under Pressure, I Can See Clearly Now, Live and Let Die, We Care a Lot, Pressure Drop, Absolute Beginners, Armagideon Time, El Matador, Let My Love Open the Door [E.Cola Mix], Blister 2000]
Contributors:
  • Movie Soundtrack  Main Performer 

William Ruhlmann

Director George Armitage's Grosse Pointe Blank (which probably should be called John Cusack's Grosse Pointe Blank, since he not only starred in it, but also co-wrote and co-produced it) is set at a ten-year high-school reunion in Grosse Pointe, MI, in the present day, that being the spring of 1996. Thus, ex-Clash member Joe Strummer, credited with the original score, could call upon music dating back to the mid-'80s for songs the characters, now in their late twenties, would know. You might expect, then, that those 1986 graduates would be grooving to, say, Heart's "These Dreams" or "Greatest Love of All" by Whitney Houston. But, of course, Cusack and Strummer are much too hip for such popular fare. Instead, they put together a collection of edgy, British-oriented new wave and alternative rock, mostly from the early and mid-'80s, tracks by the likes of the Clash, the English Beat, the Specials, and the Jam, plus Americans Violent Femmes and Faith No More. Then there are ringers like Johnny Nash's "I Can See Clearly Now," which was a hit in 1972 when the main characters would have been about three years old, and Guns N' Roses' version of "Live and Let Die," which wasn't a hit until 1991. Okay, so this isn't really the music that would have been popular with the 1986 graduating class in Grosse Pointe. Who cares? The soundtrack album works well, including a relaxed "remix" (actually a different version) of Pete Townshend's "Let My Love Open the Door" as well as a new take on Violent Femmes' "Blister in the Sun" called "Blister 2000." Like the movie, which grossed 28 million dollars, the soundtrack album was a modest success, peaking at number 31, which inspired a follow-up collection, More Music From the Film Grosse Pointe Blank. ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi