Product Details
My Funny Valentine: Sting at the Movies

My Funny Valentine: Sting at the Movies
Sting

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Average customer review:
This version of "At the Movies" was also released only in Japan and features a different track list than the original recording. See track list below.

Track Listing

  1. My Funny Valentine [From Ashura] - Herbie Hancock, Sting
  2. Englishman in New York [From Stars and Bars]
  3. Shape of My Heart [From the Professional (Leon) And Three of Hearts]
  4. Windmills of Your Mind [Thomas Crown Affair]
  5. My Funny Friend and Me [From the Emperor's New Groove]
  6. Mighty [Remix Version]
  7. Until... [From Kate and Leopold]
  8. All for Love [From the Three Musketeers] - Brian Adams, Rod Stewart, , Sting
  9. Secret Marriage [From Four Weddings and a Funeral]
  10. Someone to Watch Over Me [From Someone to Watch Over Me]
  11. It's Probably Me
  12. Angel Eyes
  13. Moonlight [From Sabrina]
  14. My One and Only Love [From Leaving Las Vegas]
  15. Fragile [From the Living Sea]
  16. Murder by Numbers [From Copycat]
  17. Valparaiso [From White Squall]
  18. Demolition Man [From Demolition Man]

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #50182 in Music
  • Released on: 2005-04-04
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Import
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Japanese only 18-track album, includes the title track featuring Herbie Hancock, 'English Man In New York', 'Murder By Numbers', 'Shape Of My Heart' and more. Universal. 2005.


Customer Reviews

Great update for your Sting movie collection...4
If there is one thing that Sting is under appreciated for, it is his contributions on movie soundtracks. I personally think that its great when artists contribute a song or two on moive soundtracks. Some argue that most artists put songs on soundtracks so you will go out and get that cd just for the one song. In this day of downloadable music (legal downloads, of course), you can create an entire new cd of music from individual songs of one artist. This cd shows you don't need to go through all the trouble and just get this recording.

Now, Sting released a movie cd a few years back, but this cd is a must to update your sting movie songs. The following list is the song with the movie it came from. Items marked with a star indicate a new addition:

1. My Funny Valentine - Ashura (Japanese), 2005*
2. Englishman In New York - Stars and Bars, 1988
3. Shape Of My Heart - The Professional (aka. Leon), 1994
4. Angel Eyes - Leaving Las Vegas, 1995
5. Until - Kate and Leopold, 2002*
6. It's Probably Me - Lethal Weapon 3, 1992
7. Windmills Of Your Mind - The Thomas Crown Affair, 1999*
8. The Secret Marriage - Four Weddings And A Funeral, 1994
9. Fragile - The Living Sea (Imax), 1995
10. The Mighty - Bring On The Night, 1986*
11. Valpraiso - White Squall, 1995
12. Someone To Watch Over Me - Someone To Watch Over Me, 1987
13. Moonlight - Sarbrina, 1995
14. My One And Only Love - Leaving Las Vegas, 1995
15. Murder By Numbers - Copycat, 1996
16. Demolition Man - Demolition Man, 1993
17. My Funny Friend And Me - The Emperor's New Groove, 2000*
18. All For Love - The Three Musketeers, 1993

Now, I listed the tracks according to the Amazon listing here. My cd has them in a different order. But since this is an import cd and to lessen any confustion, I will just stick with the listing here. Once again, this would be a great addition to your Sting collection. The only song that I really dislike and could have been omitted and replaced with another track is All For Love. I'm sorry, but Sting, Rod Stewart and Bryan Adams: a good song they do not create. Because I dislike the song so much, that is the only reason I gave it four stars instead of five.

He can make a standard so sexy5
Sting is really under appreciated for all the standards he has
recorded over the years and this one has some exceptional tracks.
Someone To Watch Over Me sung by Sting has become my favorite version of this song. He has a unique take on singing a standard
and should put out an album of the some of the ones he has done.
The songs on this album that he has written are also wonderful.
I guess Shape Of My Heart and Fragile have become standards themselves. If you like adult comtemporary you'll love this album.

It's New, But Is It Good?3
Answer: it's a mixed bag. Many, many films have been released within the last twenty years with Sting singing on the soundtrack. At the same time, his appearances in films have been dropping off slightly, so that you don't see him trying to act all that often any more. I don't know about you, but no matter what the cause, when Sting contributes to it I always feel that his attention is elsewhere. I haven't heard him excited in a long time, probably not since his duet with LULU (of "To Sir With Love" fame) on SAIL ON, SAILOR by The Beach Boys (on her TOGETHER LP). I haven't seen all of the movies for which Sting contributed tunes on the soundtracks, but on only a few of them has his presence been a boon. And yet for some reason they drag him out whenever things are slow.

ASHURA, the new Japanese sword and spectacle love story that's very much like HERO or CROUCHING TIGER, is very much a period piece. The audience that I was in burst into polite laughter when Sting started to croon "My Funny Valentine" during what looked to be the 15th century. He does a great job on the old Rodgers and Hart evergreen, it's just not a martial arts track.

Possibly the best track here, from the best movie, might be "Shape of My Heart," one of his most affectine numbers, from the French film LEON (THE PROFESSIONAL) with Jean Reno and Natalie Portman as the very young girl whose life is turned upside down by a hit man. The thriller is moody, intelligent, sensitive, and so is the track. I also enjoy Sting taking off on the Michel Legrand "WINDMILLS OF YOUR MIND" from the recent remake of THE THOMAS CROWN AFFAIR. Of course no one sings that song like Dusty Springfield, but you can see them paying respect to a wonderful soundtrack of long ago. Ditto with him taking on Gershwin with "SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER ME," from the chic Scott whodunit that tried to make stars out of Tom Berenger and Lorraince Bracco. The movie is worth watching, but nothing at all happens in it of any note.

This Japanese compilation is expensive, though not as much as you might pay if you were trying to collect all these fugitive numbers from a great performer, so you have to consider the factor of, you're paying for the convenience (and the great transfer). It's not a CD you're going to leave out on your coffee table, and for many will be a guilty pleasure only, but on the other hand, if you love Sting, you've got to have this one.