Os dejo la bso de El regreso de la pantera rosa.
Compositor: Henry Mancini
Año: 1975
Procedencia: U.S.A.
Formato: MPEG a 128 kbps / 44,100kHz
Tamaño Archivo: 35,8 Mb (Comprimido)
CONTENIDO:
01. The Pink panther theme
02. The greatest gift (instr)
03. Here's Looking at you, kid
04. Summer in Gstaad
05. So smooth
06. The return of the Pink panther (Part I and Part II, includes The Pink panther theme)
07. The greatest gift (voc)
08. The orange float
09. Dreamy
10. Disco
11. Navel maneuver
12. Belly belly bum bum
13. The wet look
Link Info de la peli de Wikipedia:
The Return of the Pink Panther is the fourth film in the Pink Panther series, released in 1975. The film stars Peter Sellers in the role of Inspector Clouseau in his third Panther appearance, after the original The Pink Panther (1963) and A Shot in the Dark (1964).
Herbert Lom also reprises his role as Chief Inspector Charles Dreyfus. The film also features the return of the character Sir Charles Lytton (the notorious Phantom), now played by Christopher Plummer rather than David Niven, who was unavailable but would later return for Trail of the Pink Panther. The Pink Panther diamond once again plays a central role in the plot.
Richard Williams did the animated open and close titles for this picture and The Pink Panther Strikes Again, due to DePatie-Freleng's work on the Pink Panther shorts and other cartoon projects for TV and film.
In the first two Pink Panther films, Peter Sellers played Clouseau with a straight French accent. With this film, he began using the exaggerated accent that has become associated with the character.
Catherine Schell can be seen laughing on at least two occasions in the film - once when Clouseau impersonates a telephone repairman to infiltrate her home, and again when he meets her in a restaurant and pretends to be "Guy Gadbois", a ladies' man. This magnifies the impression that Lady Lytton sees Clouseau as "cute" rather than as a real threat. These scenes are frequently proferred as classic examples of corpsing, and it was not uncharacteristic of Sellers to goad his fellow actors to break character, but Schell has maintained in various interviews that she always considered it in character for Lady Lytton to be amused at Clouseau's antics.
The scene in which Sir Charles Lytton arrives at his hotel in Lugash is an obvious homage to the film Casablanca. The song "As Time Goes By" can be clearly heard playing on a piano in the background. As Sir Charles meets with his contact he also asks for "The Fat Man" (a reference to the rather large Sydney Greenstreet, who played Señor Ferrari in Casablanca), and tells the contact to have a drink of Renault (the name of Claude Rains' French police prefect character).
A disfrutar!!