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Iron Eagle: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack for the TriStar Pictures film Iron Eagle, released on July 23, 1986, by Capitol Records. [1] A separate film score by Basil Poledouris titled Iron Eagle: Original Motion Picture Score was released on July 9, 2008 by Varèse Sarabande .
The song was used multiple times during the training and battle scenes of the film, where the young hero, Doug Masters, plays the track on his cassette player and headphones. This version can still be found on the Internet. "One Vision" also appeared on the Iron Eagle soundtrack released in 1986.
Thrill of a Lifetime is the second album (and the last to feature Mark Free on vocals) by the American hard rock band King Kobra, released in 1986 by Capitol Records.The album features "Iron Eagle (Never Say Die)", the theme song of the 1986 film Iron Eagle.
"Tomcat Prowl", written by Doug Bennett and John Burton, is a song performed by Doug and the Slugs for the soundtrack to the 1988 action film Iron Eagle II. It was the group's second-highest-charting single in their native Canada, reaching #23 on the RPM Top 100 Singles chart. [ 1 ]
"Iron Eagle (Never Say Die)" was included in the soundtrack album from the 1986 movie Iron Eagle. Song credits: Jake Hooker-Duane Hitchings - 1986 - Capitol Records. "Hunger", covered by King Kobra but written by Kick Axe (listed as "Spectre General"), was featured in The Transformers: The Movie, and included on the soundtrack album.
The album enjoys the status of an unofficial soundtrack for the 1986 film Highlander, for which no official soundtrack album was released. The title, "A Kind of Magic", derived from one of the lines character Connor MacLeod ( Christopher Lambert ) says to describe his immortality. [ 12 ]
The album title is in reference to the 2004 Jim Carey and Kate Winslet-led film, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. The sci-fi romance, directed by Michel Gondry and written by Charlie Kaufman ...
Joe Kane of "The Phantom of the Movies" said "Iron Eagle boasts the hottest rock score of any war film since Apocalypse Now. Alas, the similarity ends there. Forget the picture and buy the soundtrack album instead; King Kobra's titular music video, Never Say Die, is better made than the movie itself." [13]