Darran Anderson relishes hearing Rupert Hines’ soundtrack to Jerzy Skolimowski’s 1978 psychological horror, The Shout and discovers a sonic gateway in the process. Contains mild spoilers for films The Shout, Berberian Sound Studio, Blow Out, and The Conversation

*Rupert Hine in NYC, early 1980s courtesy of Buried Treasure *

One of the theories around pareidolia – the tendency to see recognisable forms in otherwise nebulous materials such as faces in clouds, or animal outlines in rocks – is that it bestows an evolutionary head start on those who have it. It gives the body a split-second response before any thought takes place, rather than allowing time for confirmation that there is a ravenous sabre-tooth…

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