Cover is VG+++ (sealed: undone along top and a section on the lower right front, corner cut-out)
Record is M (untouched)
Labels are M (untouched)

Visually Graded

Tracklist

Side 1
1    Joe Cocker    Love Lives On    3:49
2    Bruce Broughton    Main Title    3:05
3    Bruce Broughton    Some Dumb Thing    2:28
4    Bruce Broughton    Irene!    1:26
5    Bruce Broughton    Harry In The House    4:20
6    Bruce Broughton    Harry Takes Off    3:20

Side 2
1    Jimmy Walker    Your Feets To Big    3:15
2    Bruce Broughton    Drawing Harry    1:49
3    Bruce Broughton    Taking Harry Home    2:57
4    Bruce Broughton    Foot Prints    4:19
5    Bruce Broughton    Goodbyes    4:07
6    Bruce Broughton    "Harry And The Hendersons"    3:28

Harry and the Hendersons is a 1987 American fantasy comedy film directed and produced by William Dear and starring John Lithgow, Melinda Dillon, Don Ameche, David Suchet, Margaret Langrick, Joshua Rudoy, Lainie Kazan, and Kevin Peter Hall. Steven Spielberg served as its uncredited executive producer, while Rick Baker provided the makeup and the creature designs for Harry. The film tells the story of a Seattle family's encounter with the cryptozoological creature Bigfoot, partially inspired by the numerous claims of sightings in the Pacific Northwest, California, and other parts of both the United States and Canada over three centuries. In conjunction with the film's setting, shooting took place at several locations in the Cascade Range of Washington state near Interstate 90 and the town of Index near US 2, as well as Seattle's Wallingford, Ballard and Beacon Hill neighborhoods and other locations in or around Seattle.

Harry and the Hendersons grossed $50 million worldwide. It won an Oscar for Best Makeup at the 60th Academy Awards, and inspired a television spin-off of the same name.  In the United Kingdom, the film was originally released as Bigfoot and the Hendersons, though the television series retained the American title. The DVD and all current showings of the film in the UK now refer to the film by its original title.