The album includes only Talking Heads studio recordings of songs from the film; an
original cast recording from the film was planned, but was not released at the time, although some actors' performances were featured on the
B-sides of
singles of songs drawn from the album. Later that year, Byrne released the album
Sounds from True Stories containing
incidental music from the soundtrack. In 2018, a complete film soundtrack album was finally released, combining cast performances from the film and tracks from the two previous albums; only those three performances by Talking Heads from the first
True Stories album that are actually heard in the film were included. The single "
Wild Wild Life" became the most prominent hit from the album, accompanied by its
video airplay on
MTV. The "Wild Wild Life" video won two
MTV Video Music Awards in 1987: "
Best Group Video" and "
Best Video from a Film" (the video is in fact an extended sequence lifted directly from the film itself). A video for "Love for Sale" was created for use in the film (during a sequence when a woman, played by
Swoosie Kurtz, watches the video on a television), and an extended version was later released as a video in its own right. In 2006, the album was re-released and
remastered by
Warner Music Group on their
Warner Bros./Sire Records/
Rhino Records labels in
DualDisc format, with three
bonus tracks on the
CD side (an extended mix of "Wild Wild Life", "Papa Legba" with lead vocals by
Pops Staples, and "Radio Head" with vocals by
Tito Larriva). The
DVD-Audio side includes both stereo and 5.1 surround high resolution (96 kHz/24bit) mixes, as well as a
Dolby Digital version and the music videos of "Wild Wild Life" and "Love for Sale". In Europe, it was released as a CD+DVDA two disc set rather than a single DualDisc. The reissue was produced by
Andy Zax with Talking Heads. == Critical reception ==