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Movie soundtracks are chancy in that the music is often geared to specific parts of the film that are meant to evoke concurrent emotions; many don't hold up apart from their cinematic context. The trend of the past few years has been to gratuitously traipse down memory lane, with the convenient stance that a hit parade of 1970s funk will lend an otherwise bloodless film some street cred. Thankfully the soundtrack to
Good Will Hunting doesn't strive for fake urban cool; this film about white, working-class Bostonians gets a mostly white, working-class sound. The soundtrack effectively mirrors the half-filled desires and lives that the film capitalises on: restlessness, ennui, doubt and unrequited love rule here. Elliott Smith contributes the most, and the best, songs: beautiful weepers that outshine Danny Elfman's sombre original score, which makes only a few appearances.
--Alan E. Rapp