
This sync is also pretty cool. It uses Pink Floyd's 1977 album "Animals" and the 1966 movie classic "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly." All you have to do is start up "Animals" right after the credits at the beginning of the movie. Pretty simple. The music of animals and the lyrical content flows pretty well with the movie. The sync, like The Dark Side of Oz theoretically could have been "intended" since TGBU came out ten years before "Animals" did. Here's an account from Scott Goia who discovered this sync: (Source: The Synchronicity Arkive)
"The inspiration for this was itself very synchronistic.... last year I went to the mall with a gift certificate (Xmas or something) and got meself two items: the widescream video version of Sergio Leone's masterpiece "The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly", and Pink Floyd's underappreciated CD "Animals".
After the Oz/DSOTM hullaballo, I wanted to see what results I'd get doing other "synch-ups", to see if any old CD would match any old movie. I scoured my video and music collections and came up with: zip. Nada. Zilch. It just didn't work!! I mean, you do get the occasional synch-up, but NOTHING went on as long, or worked as consistently as the original: Oz/DSOTM.
I was about to give it up and go out and try and get a life, but then I noticed, right on top of my TV: Animals and The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly. That's when it hit me.
This one "feels" as right as any of the other synchs I've tried, and I convince myself at times I've acciedentally stumbled onto an INTENTIONAL Pink Floyd synchronization (you're almost guartanteed to get similar queer flashes if you try this). It IS theoretically possible, unlike some synchs, like Blade Runner/ WYWH... G,B,U, was made in 1963, plenty before Animals in '77. Not only that, but I hear G,B,U was a phenomenon in Floyd's port-of-call, merry 'ol England. AND, consider: Three things: Good, Bad, Ugly :: Three things: Dogs, Pigs, Sheep. And, IMHO, they convey extremely similar tones.
Not just A/V matches here... the whole scale of eerie coinqidinks, very much like Oz/DSOTM: thematic, lyrical, musical, song lengths/scene lengths, etc."