Choose a format:
| 1 | Wonderland | :10 |
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| 2 | Love on the Rocks | Becaud/Diamond | 3:09 |
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| 3 | 20th Century Boy | Bolan | 3:40 |
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| 4 | Shooting Star | Rodgers | 6:17 |
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| 5 | Good Times Roll | Ocasek | 3:45 |
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| 6 | Search and Destroy | Pop/Williamson | 3:26 |
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| 7 | Girls on Film | Rhodes/Taylor/Lebon | 3:32 |
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| 8 | In Every Dream Home a Heartache | Ferry | 5:28 |
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| 9 | Faith to Arise | Reid | 4:36 |
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| 10 | The Mighty Quinn (Quinn the Eskimo) | Dylan | 2:46 |
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| 11 | Big Shot | Joel | 4:03 |
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| 12 | Gloria/In Excelsis Deo | Morrison/Smith | 5:53 |
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| 13 | Stranglehold | Nugent | 8:24 |
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| 14 | Drift Away | Williams | 3:58 |
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| 15 | If You Could Read My Mind | Lightfoot | 3:49 |
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| 16 | Can I Touch It | :35 |
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Overview
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Production Details
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Editorial Reviews
Wonderland
Audio Compact Disc [Original Soundtrack]
Label: Sbme Special Mkts.
Category: Pop/Rock
Wonderland
UPC: 886972454221
Release Date: 04/01/2008
Original Release Date: 04/01/2008
- Movie Soundtrack
Main Performer
Heather Phares
The soundtrack to Jonathan Cox's Wonderland revolves around the dark underworld that surrounded porn star John Holmes in the early '80s -- including the July 1, 1981, murders of the Wonderland gang in which he was implicated (and for which he was later acquitted). Not surprisingly, the music plays like the evil twin to the ecstatically decadent Boogie Nights soundtrack, mixing strutting glam rock and punk with the coked-up new wave, pop, hard rock, and singer/songwriter fare that defined '70s and early-'80s music outside of disco. The soundtrack begins on something of a sour note with Jonathan Davis' "Love on the Rocks," a bitter, Bowie-esque ballad that tries to ape '70s rock conventions but just ends up paling in comparison to the songs that surround it. Davis' overwrought vocals and lyrics like "Yesterday's gone/And all I want is a smile" make the song downright seedy and unpleasant, but then again, so is the story that the movie tells. However, after that Wonderland has nowhere to go but up, which it does with revved-up songs like T. Rex's "20th Century Boy," Iggy & the Stooges' "Search and Destroy," the Cars' "Good Times Roll," and one of the soundtrack's most apt picks, Duran Duran's "Girls on Film." Roxy Music's "In Every Dream Home a Heartache," Patti Smith's "Gloria/In Excelsis Deo," and Ted Nugent's "Stranglehold" all capture the film's claustrophobic, paranoid vibe, albeit in very different ways, while songs like Dobie Gray's "Drift Away," Bad Company's "Shooting Star," and Gordon Lightfoot's "If You Could Read My Mind" provide a not-so-ironic counterpoint. The dialogue that bookends the music is mostly throwaway (even the provocatively titled "Can I Touch It?"), but that doesn't prevent Wonderland from being a successful, if slightly depressing, soundtrack. ~ Heather Phares, Rovi
