Among the later Shyamalan films, Knock at the Cabin has one of the clearest collector pieces in the Waxwork Records vinyl release of Herdís Stefánsdóttir’s score. This is more than a standard digital soundtrack. It is a physical edition designed to appeal to people who collect horror and thriller vinyl as objects as well as albums.

Waxwork’s edition gave the score a stronger collector identity with packaging and vinyl presentation that made the release feel deliberate, not generic. That matters for a film like Knock at the Cabin, which already has a devoted score following and one of the more distinctive late-period Shyamalan sound worlds. A physical soundtrack release helps the movie live beyond the theatrical run and beyond streaming.
That is a big part of the appeal. Knock at the Cabin is a film built on dread, sacrifice, and atmosphere, and the Waxwork release gives that atmosphere a physical form. For soundtrack collectors, it is an easy item to understand: a strong score, striking presentation, and a movie whose mood survives outside the screen.
