TWO MULES FOR SISTER SARA
1. Main Title 4:10
2. A Time For Miracles 1:54
3. Night On The Desert 3:13
4. Sister Sara's Theme 5:18
5. The Swinging Rope 3:40
6. The Braying Mule 2:30
7. La Cueva 2:13
8. La Cantina 1:32
9. The Cool Mule 2:16
10. The Battle 3:30
11. Main Title (Reprise) 3:26
DAYS OF HEAVEN
12. Harvest 2:57
13. Threshing 2:05
14. Happiness 2:12
15. The Honeymoon 1:22
16. The Return 2:28
17. TheChase 1:57
18. The Fire 7:46
19. Ashes & Dust 2:15
20. Days Of Heaven 3:43
TWO MULES FOR SISTER SARA - Director Budd Boetticher wrote the story upon which this comic Western was based. Clint Eastwood stars as Hogan, a tough cowboy who rescues a woman, Sara (Shirley Maclaine) as she's about to be attacked by a trio of rapists. Surprised to learn that his new traveling companion is a nun, Hogan agrees to escort her to a camp occupied by anti-French revolutionaries. It turns out that neither of this pair is what they claim to be: Hogan is to scout out a French military garrison for a future attack, while Sara is actually a prostitute masquerading as a nun. After Hogan spies Sara smoking cigars and drinking whiskey, he begins to figure out she's not a bride of Christ, and the two team up with the Juaristas to destroy the French fortifications. 1970
DAYS OF HEAVEN - Terrence Malick's "Days of Heaven," the long-awaited follow-up to his 1973 debut "Badlands," confirmed his reputation as a visual poet and narrative iconoclast with a story of love and murder told through the jaded voice of a child and expressive images of nature. In 1916, Chicago steelworker Bill (Richard Gere, stepping in for John Travolta) flees to Texas with his little sister Linda (Linda Manz) and girlfriend Abby (Brooke Adams) after fatally erupting at his boss. Along with other itinerant laborers, they work the harvest at a wealthy, ailing farmer's ranch, but the farmer (playwright Sam Shepard) falls in love with Abby, and, believing her to be Bill's sister, asks the three to stay on at his elysian spread. Seeing it as his one real chance to escape perpetual poverty, Bill urges Abby to marry the sick man. Marriage, however, has more restorative powers, and the farmer has more magnetism, than Bill had planned. "Nobody's perfect," Linda impassively observes in one of her many voiceovers, after their brief paradise is erased by plagues of locusts, fire, and lethal jealousy. 1978