The Package was directed by Andrew Davis, who made a name for himself several years later directing Harrison Ford and Tommy Lee Jones in The Fugitive. The latter appears in this end of the Cold War thriller alongside Gene Hackman, both with a notably large amount of hair. As with Davis, James Newton Howard was earning his stripes at this stage and to be fair, The Package is a somewhat anonymous action score, lacking some of Howard's more distinctive mannerisms which, it seems, he has acquired more recently. It also lacks the subtlety of something like The Fugitive, Howard was clearly going for a ballsy, Goldsmithian approach, combining synths, percussion and lots of brass, although does diverge at points for a more pop sensibility, most notably during Police Chase Eileen In Garage (another set of track titles that have dreadful grammar, missing out more than the occasional 'the') and the laughably naff The Shoot Out. It seems a trifle unimaginative to describe the score as a mixture of action and suspense, but frankly, that's all there is to it. The middle sags slightly, but it picks up with the exciting, multi part chase during the final tracks, thundering towards the more subdued conclusion and more perky End Credits.
In a curious, somewhat apt analogy, Brian Tyler is earning his stripes scoring 2003 Tommy Lee Jones thrillers, but fifteen years of action scores have certainly coloured his writing, as opposed to Howard who was writing them when the concept of the action/thriller score was really quite a new phenomenon, with Jerry Goldsmith (naturally) leading the way. If Tyler's early efforts are all craft and little art, the same could be said for early Howard. This is a score written with perfectly good craftsmanship, the brass blare, the strings run up and down endlessly, while the percussion holds everything together and keeps it all moving. However, it lacks a the strong identity of a Goldsmith (or a more recent Howard) score and certainly doesn't have much in the way of main themes. The liner notes by Paul Tonks (which do insist on the existence of a four note main theme - kind of short, don't you think? - and certainly not enough to hum in the shower) are interesting, relaying enough information about both film and score.
This limited edition can be purchased here.
Rating ~
Total Time ~ 50:41