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The slightly uneven but solicitous soundtrack for the Mel Gibson/Alan Alda flick What Women Want features hits from popular music's golden era, when Frank Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr. headlined huge Vegas shows and martinis were the drink du jour. Like the When Harry Met Sally soundtrack -- which established nouveau jazz singer/pianist Harry Connick Jr.'s career -- this album relies on its connections to the past, but makes more of an effort to give the music a post-millennial update, which results in an awkward generation gap. Still, you'll revel in Sammy Davis Jr.'s take on the Johnny Mercer classic "Something's Gotta Give" and Tony Bennett's pop standard "The Good Life." Bobby Darin delivers Sinatra-style crooning on his classic "Mack the Knife," and Sinatra himself performs "Too Marvelous for Words," the playful "I Won't Dance," and the intensely vulnerable ballad "I've Got You Under My Skin." But the soundtrack changes course with the inclusion of rocker Meredith Brooks' angry, but passionate track "Bitch" and the teeny-pop of Christina Aguilera's "What a Girl Wants." As it turns out, classic Vegas-style crooning clashes with the gritty electric guitars and slick production of MTV-era pop. Even so, all of the tunes here play into the theme of romance and individuality, even while straddling the gap between 1950s glitz and shiny 2000 pop. Kevin Giordano, Barnes & Noble