I love the episode 3 script ending cause it shows that Gordon is so fuckin well-spoken. (As an MIT physic graduate should be.) I can't wait to actually see what he says to end things.
You know what this meme teached us? Even in a dire situation, we must find the positive side that will benefit us. Gordon Freeman is one of the best videogames characters ever created, and his story is amazing.
Canny Freeman Hypothesis: I think even Laidlaw underestimated the effect an unstable teleportation device like the Borealis would have on a star. Teleporting away a part of a star's Corona could easily destabilize it and cause it to supernova. And if the Combine have their invasion portal open, that could send the supernova across dozens of dimensions, destroying multiple nexuses and crippling the Combine's ability to invade new worlds. It might kill whatever is left of numerous subjugated species in those dimensions, but prevent future subjugation of other worlds. Considering the amount of time and resources even an advanced civilization like the Combine would have to commit to building a Dyson Sphere or Dyson Swarm, it would be a while before they could invade Earth and other worlds again. By then, Earth *should* be more than ready for them.
I think, actually, you missed the point. Laidlaw was highlighting how massive the Combine empire truly was that even all of that would be a mere blip to them.
Didn't kliener say that the citadel network and any technology connected to it is already disabled due to the destruction of the earth one. So if the home system got destroyed, earth and any species that's still on their world has a fighting chance. It depends on how centralized the combine is and if their portals can connect to worlds without an established connection. If they aren't very centralized and have more hubs the size of the dyson sphere they would start recapturing worlds pretty quickly, only needing to get over the confusion and lose of information the lost of their home world would cause. If they cantered their power mainly in that one sphere that would have caused enough damage to splinter the combine. And any occupation force off world would have to survive their subjects and then try to regroup with any remaining part of the combine. So it's either get them off earth and hope you don't do anything that would allow the combine to rediscover your location or reduce them to a still overwhelming but beatable foe.
this video is just gordon becoming more gordon, no one can ever be cooler then the one free man in my eyes. he is the very definition of badass, perhaps awesomeness incarnate
1:05 *You destroyed the Combine and the Citadel, and you're left in its remains, but you've done your job freeman, You've freed everyone from the suffering. Its time to rest.*
Freeman, a former Black Mesa employee: *Literally saving the world, proving the resilience of humanity* Meanwhile at Aperture Science: *Insert lyrics from "Still Alive" bashing Black Mesa* Anyway, this cake is great.
Gordon Freeman: a legendary scientist, the master of crowbar and aliens worst nightmare. Half-life is amazing. And even now one of the best games ever.
Imagine being late for work and not even a fucking week later youre on a ship floating through space towards a enigmatic super dimension spanning empire's dyson sphere.
This brings up a good point. The fact that Gordon is just a scientist who has barely used a gun and managed to plough through hordes of metropolice shows how poorly trained they are and how instinctual Gordon is. I think the next Half-Life VR game (if it isn't a HL3) should be a spin-off featuring Adrian Shepherd in City-17 at the same time as Gordon's journey, around the time that the rebellion starts. Since Adrian is a trained combat veteran who just returned from combat minutes ago from his perspective, he would be able to kill and outmaneuver metropolice about as good as Gordon, but more tactical instead of instinctual. I'm imagining a scene where a metropolice is bullying a citizen, and the player has the opportunity to run up and beat them up and steal their baton, absolutely decimating them with his superior abilities in hand-to-hand combat, and would teach the player about meelee attacks, something that was lacking in HL:A. It would be interesting to see Adrian join the resistance effort during the week period that Gordon and Alyx were teleporting, to give more background info into how it started, maybe having Adrian be part of one of the first raids on a Combine checkpoint or something, then slowly showing the downfall of the Combine's grip over time. A clever way to jump time would be for Adrian to enter a resistance base and show the rebels settling down in their makeshift barracks, and skipping time once the player interacts with the bed to sleep. It would be a good way to show the rebel's dire living conditions and how tough their life is while also showing their determination to their cause, no matter how helpless it may seem.
I was left alone, riding the weaponized research vessel into the heart of a Combine world. An immense light blazed. I caught a cosmic view of a brilliantly glittering Dyson sphere. The vastness of the Combine’s power, the futility of our struggle, blossomed briefly in my awareness. I saw everything. Mainly how I saw the Borealis, our most powerful weapon, would register as less than a fizzling matchhead as it blew itself apart. And what remained of me would be even less than that
As cool as Epistle 3 is, and as important as I think it is, I feel it was made primarily to rid the burden of the story, to close it off before it became even more of a burden. It's good, but it's not what I'd call a true end to the half-life story.
@@inktheone5933 And Eli will be the one going bonkers instead of Alyx. Also, we don't know the specifics of Azian's fate. All Eli says is that Alyx and that picture were all he could carry out of BM. For all we know, G-man could also be holding Azian in limbo as leverage for Eli. Just food for thought.
I feel like the biggest teller of this is also the reason why I disliked the Epistle 3 ending so much: it completely uproots the central themes of the story that have been building up this entire time, not just through plot and characters, but through gameplay itself. That feeling of satisfaction you feel every time you get out of a tight spot in combat or solve a particularly tricky physics puzzle is there because you’ve shown an ability to innovate, to adapt, to problem-solve and overcome challenges that seemed, at first glance, impossible. The Resistance is lead by a tightly knit group of people. They behave like family, and arguably the most important people in the Resistance before Gordon’s arrival are actually father and daughter. Despite the extremely miserable state of the world, these people are still able to look at things in a hopeful light. Just listen to Alyx’s dialogue in episode 1: she makes jokes, cheers you on and appreciates the small victories. Had that hope, that desire to try anyway, that unquestionably human “why not” feeling in the face of something so marginally greater than ourselves not been there, the Resistance would have never existed. We would have just given up and submitted after the first seven hours, yet our nature pushes us to keep trying, to unite and find a new solution, regardless of how dire the situation becomes. You, as Gordon, as ‘the right man in the wrong place’, are a symbol of that hope because you represent humanity as a whole. You are one ordinary man, caught in a conflict far greater than yourself by chance, who adapts and survives with everything he’s got out of a burning desire to live. Humanity is, just like Gordon, a seemingly helpless victim of forces outside its comprehension, and it, just like Gordon, persists through innovation and a determination to be free once more. The main antagonist of the game, Wallace Breen, actively rejects his humanity, and in his many speeches, tries to convince others to do the same. He resides in his Citadel, looming over the rest of us as though he is superior for joining the Union, for he sees the very things that have taken Gordon and the Resistance as far as they’ve come so far as signs of weakness. He taunts you relentlessly as an effort to make you lose hope, and the very moment you bring his Citadel, the symbol of the Combine’s oppression and his supposed superiority for enabling it, down to the ground, one thought persists in your mind as you head towards the continuation of the story: “It’s time to prove him wrong.” And this is where we get into the problems with the nihilistic nature of Epistle 3. Because everything I’ve talked about so far is that Half Life 2 is a game about the greatest strengths of humanity. It’s a game about how we can overcome challenges that seem impossible with our unity and ability to problem-solve. It’s a game about how we should never lose hope because somewhere out there is always a solution we just haven’t quite found yet. The very central themes of the game disprove the idea that accepting our fate is the only solution, by ending the game like this, with the thought that our efforts amounted to nothing in the end, all of that is essentially thrown out of the metaphorical window. One of the series’ most iconic quotes, ‘the right man in the wrong place can make all the difference in the world’, is made meaningless by this ending because in Epistle 3, the right man in the wrong place made no difference at all. Add how out of character Alyx acted and the metric ton of plot threads left completely untied and we get an ending that truly could have only been written out of desperation to end the story in some way, for only out of this desperation can a story written to make one proud to be human make you feel so ashamed of it.
Valve: *hits blunt* "Epistle 3? nahhhhhh, Fuck that laidlaw shit, here's a REAL cliffhanger" I feel like they did us even more dirty with Alyx's ending. "We got work to do" so obviously connotates more to come, and this next agonising wait may be what kills me
I'm kinda late with my comment, but Gordon's canny video in my opinion much better than uncanny... You know, his glowing glasses and absolutely serious face makes sense. Love your works in s2fm, my computer just can't launch this program, lol
This is from Epistle 3. Was written a few years ago by Mark Laidlaw, the *ex* lead writer for ValvE and the man behind Half Life's story. It was an unofficial "end" to the series, written as a letter from gordon to the player, mainly as a form of closure for the fans that had to wait so long. Some people accept it as what happened, but valve does not recognise it, and therefore neither do I. Still an amazing piece of writing though.
Next stage: Gordon finds out that the Borealis can time travel and goes back in time to eliminate the source of the combine
actually goes back to prevent Dr. Magnussons food exploding in the microwave
actualy goes back to drink a beeer whit Barney.
gordon kills himself
Gordon decides to fight whit gman but in the process kills alix
goes back to steal the crystal
I love the episode 3 script ending cause it shows that Gordon is so fuckin well-spoken. (As an MIT physic graduate should be.) I can't wait to actually see what he says to end things.
@GoTi4No Wait. Are you capable of seeing voices??
@GoTi4No Ross's Freeman is his canon voice and I accept no other alternatives.
@@medicindisquise4271 SAME!
@@medicindisquise4271 is the one from freemans mind?
@@SamPaste928 damn G-man is really powerfull
Whoever started the Mr. Incredible Canny meme trend is a legend
this comment will get 1k likes in a day, mark my words, if iam wrong, piss on my grave
@@Unknown-tx1gj i doubt that
I saw first ghisuncanny memes first in Spanish and now even videos like this exists B)
Anomalous 😭😭😭
can you like, go and use your animation skill to make Content instead of spamming this everywhere?
Freeman over here ascending all cause he was late for work one day
Meanwhile we probably would just get fired lol
You know what this meme teached us? Even in a dire situation, we must find the positive side that will benefit us. Gordon Freeman is one of the best videogames characters ever created, and his story is amazing.
Yup! Always think something positive ;3
and he is just a mute guy that functions as a stand in for the player
I agree
You can basically say that about every single protagonist
i wasn't ready to overthink life O_O
Canny Freeman Hypothesis:
I think even Laidlaw underestimated the effect an unstable teleportation device like the Borealis would have on a star. Teleporting away a part of a star's Corona could easily destabilize it and cause it to supernova. And if the Combine have their invasion portal open, that could send the supernova across dozens of dimensions, destroying multiple nexuses and crippling the Combine's ability to invade new worlds. It might kill whatever is left of numerous subjugated species in those dimensions, but prevent future subjugation of other worlds. Considering the amount of time and resources even an advanced civilization like the Combine would have to commit to building a Dyson Sphere or Dyson Swarm, it would be a while before they could invade Earth and other worlds again. By then, Earth *should* be more than ready for them.
I think, actually, you missed the point. Laidlaw was highlighting how massive the Combine empire truly was that even all of that would be a mere blip to them.
Huh?
@@AbandonedVoid so maybe next time we can go for 8 hours.
@@AnimatedTerror dont be silly 7.5 at best
Didn't kliener say that the citadel network and any technology connected to it is already disabled due to the destruction of the earth one. So if the home system got destroyed, earth and any species that's still on their world has a fighting chance. It depends on how centralized the combine is and if their portals can connect to worlds without an established connection.
If they aren't very centralized and have more hubs the size of the dyson sphere they would start recapturing worlds pretty quickly, only needing to get over the confusion and lose of information the lost of their home world would cause.
If they cantered their power mainly in that one sphere that would have caused enough damage to splinter the combine. And any occupation force off world would have to survive their subjects and then try to regroup with any remaining part of the combine.
So it's either get them off earth and hope you don't do anything that would allow the combine to rediscover your location or reduce them to a still overwhelming but beatable foe.
this video is just gordon becoming more gordon, no one can ever be cooler then the one free man in my eyes. he is the very definition of badass, perhaps awesomeness incarnate
Isaac Clarke is pretty damn awesome too
And Doom Slayer... and Master Chief...
@@DesolateLavender They were designed for being badass. Gordon became badass while being a scientist, starting from a crowbar.
@@agrastiOs True, true.
Although, they're still all badass.
@@agrastiOs Unless you consider Gordon to have always been destined to become the one free man
This is how I imagine Freeman looks like after getting some of that [ M O R P H I N E A D M I N I S T E R E D]
He got way too much and he became the most powerful scientist i ever seen
Gordon's slow realization that he is actually the universe's ultimate badass
1:05 *You destroyed the Combine and the Citadel, and you're left in its remains, but you've done your job freeman, You've freed everyone from the suffering. Its time to rest.*
but that was just one city though.
@@neferpoyaz4037 it was the main city
*destroyed Combine's weak forces left on earth
still a victory.
_No one is more deserving of a rest._
It's really something when you can go beyond the meme and use it as a means of storytelling.
That's a cute photo did your husband take it for you?
@@isomericgamer6644 I missed the part where that's my problem.
@@backtoformula8558 stings doesn't it?
@@backtoformula8558 gonna cry?
@@FatFingerJoe363 gonna put some dirt in your eye.
I mean, with how wide his smile gets, I'd say he's still getting uncanny, just in the other direction.
Power plant roleplay
@@VirgilCorium Sus Roleplay
Super canny.
0:35 cp violation is absolute fire
YNSTBH (Your not supposed to be here) is also fire 0:40
I wasn’t ready for the fucking extract from epistle 3 at the end XD
Ah, good ending now, I see
Freeman, a former Black Mesa employee: *Literally saving the world, proving the resilience of humanity*
Meanwhile at Aperture Science: *Insert lyrics from "Still Alive" bashing Black Mesa*
Anyway, this cake is great.
The cake is a lie
It's so delicious and moist
@Cherno29 when i look up there it makes me glad I'm not you
caik
@Cherno29 for the people who are still alive
I guess Freeman has become Cannyman.. *IT'S PURE BADASS*
this is really good, to go from 9 out of 10 to 10 out of 10 you would only need to switch the music from "You put on your HEV suit" to the Klaxon Beat
Gordon Freeman: a legendary scientist, the master of crowbar and aliens worst nightmare.
Half-life is amazing. And even now one of the best games ever.
I like how the HEV suit updates with each game
Half-Life but Gordon is a very optimistic person.
Imagine being late for work and not even a fucking week later youre on a ship floating through space towards a enigmatic super dimension spanning empire's dyson sphere.
Damn man, the epistle 3 ending hits fucking hard
Gordon Freeman is the combine Unforeseen Consequences.
I love how his attire changes depending on where he is
Good video.
Now all we need is to combine the two videos and have it jump drastically back and forth between becoming canny and uncanny.
Ah yes, an optimistic look on Gordon's life. Next step: some beer with some buddies 😎🍺
You forgot: The boss you hate has finally terminated your contract
This brings up a good point. The fact that Gordon is just a scientist who has barely used a gun and managed to plough through hordes of metropolice shows how poorly trained they are and how instinctual Gordon is. I think the next Half-Life VR game (if it isn't a HL3) should be a spin-off featuring Adrian Shepherd in City-17 at the same time as Gordon's journey, around the time that the rebellion starts. Since Adrian is a trained combat veteran who just returned from combat minutes ago from his perspective, he would be able to kill and outmaneuver metropolice about as good as Gordon, but more tactical instead of instinctual. I'm imagining a scene where a metropolice is bullying a citizen, and the player has the opportunity to run up and beat them up and steal their baton, absolutely decimating them with his superior abilities in hand-to-hand combat, and would teach the player about meelee attacks, something that was lacking in HL:A. It would be interesting to see Adrian join the resistance effort during the week period that Gordon and Alyx were teleporting, to give more background info into how it started, maybe having Adrian be part of one of the first raids on a Combine checkpoint or something, then slowly showing the downfall of the Combine's grip over time. A clever way to jump time would be for Adrian to enter a resistance base and show the rebels settling down in their makeshift barracks, and skipping time once the player interacts with the bed to sleep. It would be a good way to show the rebel's dire living conditions and how tough their life is while also showing their determination to their cause, no matter how helpless it may seem.
Rule8766: if it exists there is a SFM version of it, no exceptions
I was left alone, riding the weaponized research vessel into the heart of a Combine world. An immense light blazed. I caught a cosmic view of a brilliantly glittering Dyson sphere. The vastness of the Combine’s power, the futility of our struggle, blossomed briefly in my awareness. I saw everything. Mainly how I saw the Borealis, our most powerful weapon, would register as less than a fizzling matchhead as it blew itself apart. And what remained of me would be even less than that
I fear no mann... But that thing,
*sees a Ravenholm word*
It scares me..
The ending is just... Incredible.... ❤️
As cool as Epistle 3 is, and as important as I think it is, I feel it was made primarily to rid the burden of the story, to close it off before it became even more of a burden. It's good, but it's not what I'd call a true end to the half-life story.
Its not supposed to be the ending of the Half-Life story.
The whole borealis thing will probably still happen with the Arctic.
@@inktheone5933 And Eli will be the one going bonkers instead of Alyx. Also, we don't know the specifics of Azian's fate. All Eli says is that Alyx and that picture were all he could carry out of BM. For all we know, G-man could also be holding Azian in limbo as leverage for Eli. Just food for thought.
I feel like the biggest teller of this is also the reason why I disliked the Epistle 3 ending so much: it completely uproots the central themes of the story that have been building up this entire time, not just through plot and characters, but through gameplay itself. That feeling of satisfaction you feel every time you get out of a tight spot in combat or solve a particularly tricky physics puzzle is there because you’ve shown an ability to innovate, to adapt, to problem-solve and overcome challenges that seemed, at first glance, impossible. The Resistance is lead by a tightly knit group of people. They behave like family, and arguably the most important people in the Resistance before Gordon’s arrival are actually father and daughter. Despite the extremely miserable state of the world, these people are still able to look at things in a hopeful light. Just listen to Alyx’s dialogue in episode 1: she makes jokes, cheers you on and appreciates the small victories. Had that hope, that desire to try anyway, that unquestionably human “why not” feeling in the face of something so marginally greater than ourselves not been there, the Resistance would have never existed. We would have just given up and submitted after the first seven hours, yet our nature pushes us to keep trying, to unite and find a new solution, regardless of how dire the situation becomes. You, as Gordon, as ‘the right man in the wrong place’, are a symbol of that hope because you represent humanity as a whole. You are one ordinary man, caught in a conflict far greater than yourself by chance, who adapts and survives with everything he’s got out of a burning desire to live. Humanity is, just like Gordon, a seemingly helpless victim of forces outside its comprehension, and it, just like Gordon, persists through innovation and a determination to be free once more. The main antagonist of the game, Wallace Breen, actively rejects his humanity, and in his many speeches, tries to convince others to do the same. He resides in his Citadel, looming over the rest of us as though he is superior for joining the Union, for he sees the very things that have taken Gordon and the Resistance as far as they’ve come so far as signs of weakness. He taunts you relentlessly as an effort to make you lose hope, and the very moment you bring his Citadel, the symbol of the Combine’s oppression and his supposed superiority for enabling it, down to the ground, one thought persists in your mind as you head towards the continuation of the story: “It’s time to prove him wrong.” And this is where we get into the problems with the nihilistic nature of Epistle 3. Because everything I’ve talked about so far is that Half Life 2 is a game about the greatest strengths of humanity. It’s a game about how we can overcome challenges that seem impossible with our unity and ability to problem-solve. It’s a game about how we should never lose hope because somewhere out there is always a solution we just haven’t quite found yet. The very central themes of the game disprove the idea that accepting our fate is the only solution, by ending the game like this, with the thought that our efforts amounted to nothing in the end, all of that is essentially thrown out of the metaphorical window. One of the series’ most iconic quotes, ‘the right man in the wrong place can make all the difference in the world’, is made meaningless by this ending because in Epistle 3, the right man in the wrong place made no difference at all.
Add how out of character Alyx acted and the metric ton of plot threads left completely untied and we get an ending that truly could have only been written out of desperation to end the story in some way, for only out of this desperation can a story written to make one proud to be human make you feel so ashamed of it.
@@m0stpecul1arway yeah no I'm not reading all that
This was way more positive than I expected
This is hyper lore accurate wtf
"epistle 3 is not canon, there is still work to do"
*gordon's eye glow turns blinding red*
I really appreciate you mentioned all the tracks in the video. I''m a diehard Half-Life fan and I want more fans to get into the OST
Same
gotDAMN that was a happy-ass exceptionally satisfying payoff of an ending
Mix the uncanny and canny and you'll get perfection
POV: Valve finished your model
What about the part where Freeman wakes up from the Epistle 3 dream where Eli is yelling at him that he wants to kill Gman?
Valve: *hits blunt* "Epistle 3? nahhhhhh, Fuck that laidlaw shit, here's a REAL cliffhanger"
I feel like they did us even more dirty with Alyx's ending. "We got work to do" so obviously connotates more to come, and this next agonising wait may be what kills me
@@HoppingSkipper valve is so not self aware its agonising, VALVE PLZZ
@@HoppingSkipperI can imagine Gabe hitting the blunt and saying this
Criminally underrated
Freeman really is a Chad.
Can't wait for HL3!
Excellent use of the Half Life 3 ending script
Epistle 3 was not official or canon. Still a damn good way to end half life tho, don't get me wrong
Godlike level: Gordon embarks on his next adventure in Half-Life 3!
I love this meme, and I love the use of the fitting music!
I've seen both the canny and the uncanny Gordon Freeman. Sure would be nice if they combined (no pun intended) into one video. Great video.
I love the fact that you made the HEV suit change between HL1 and HL2
what a positivity, freeman! keep it up!
I feel like a combination between this one and the Freeman becoming uncanny would be a hit, sort of a "that's good, that's bad" kind of thing.
0:40 is rendered creepy by the clipping teeth
Gordon has a very positive outlook on the events of half life lmao
This video and the uncanny Gordon video is two ways of looking at the same situation.
This just makes me wish we got half-life 3 even more.
We now must wait 30 years for hl3 if it ever comes out
“We will not allow the Freeman to die this day.”
This reminded me how good the hl2 soundtrack is
I fucking LOVE Vortal Combat
last stage: HIRE - You go to fight the fucking G-Man
I said be quiet faɠɠot 🤐
@@АндрогинЙао stop stalking me?????? reported
@@PebsBeans did I hurt your feelings 😟😥? Dumbass
Half-life 1 Events: 0:00
Half-life 2 Events: 0:30
Half-life 2:Episode Two Events: 0:55
Half-life 3:Episode Three (Gordon's phrase from script) 1:05
Great video Dr. Freeman…
0:45 why do I feel that render references the ubercharged profile pics of the TF2 classes?
Fun fact, this perfectly syncs in between the uncanny video
Can't believe none of these were "Morphine Administered"
the lore in 2 minutes
This is perfect. No words
Just noticed the detail of only using songs from the game where the event happens, neat
LG Orbifold was a nice touch. Love that song
Supression field is down and Eli wants grankids: 😈
good ending
You forgot the one where the experiment is cancelled and you have a perfectly normal day at Blapature Science.
I'm kinda late with my comment, but Gordon's canny video in my opinion much better than uncanny... You know, his glowing glasses and absolutely serious face makes sense.
Love your works in s2fm, my computer just can't launch this program, lol
You missed the part when he takes a nice nap in stasis for 20 years
How to design a good character: make them be unable to speak
And let them possesed by a punk nerd soul that wants to become hero, villain or both
Yeah seems like mute protagonist is the way to go. I'd argue that it ain't even a character at that point. It's simply an avatar for the player
Mr freeman is happy
these are the stages of ross while he voices the inner thoughts of gordon freeman
Gordon is highly trained professional he doesn't need to trained to be professional
Imagine one day going to work, being late and after that, leading an revolution and becoming a demigod.
10/10 Would watch again.
Freeman is a realy free man
How funny that I was just watching the uncanny one
The next stage was defeating every single force that’s on earth, (zombies, ant lions, headcrab s, combine, and maybye more)
Imagine 0:40 freeman with his glowing glasses is coming towards you and you are a combine soldier
This is looking at the glass half full, gentlemen.
The metro cop forces part is legit the best
That last one hit like a truck, unironically
The episode three script reads like cosmic lovecraftian horror without the racism
I find it funny that the canny and uncanny both has fighting the metrocops
...then arrived the hallucinations caused by malnutrition.
Now you just made that depressing.
I fucking wept when I was reading the last lines of Epistle 3.
The ending sounded like a real ending to the franchise
This is from Epistle 3. Was written a few years ago by Mark Laidlaw, the *ex* lead writer for ValvE and the man behind Half Life's story. It was an unofficial "end" to the series, written as a letter from gordon to the player, mainly as a form of closure for the fans that had to wait so long. Some people accept it as what happened, but valve does not recognise it, and therefore neither do I.
Still an amazing piece of writing though.
Gordon has entered the avatar state
This video Is fantastic 0)))
I love this
I wish Freeman would stop all the nightmares of the multiverse cauze hes the Badass Hero
Lmao beautiful as always
These OST Just so nostalgic....
Final stage: Eli’s final wish was for Gordon to have children with Alyx
this video additionally serves as a great sampler of the HL soundtrack