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.

Knock at the Cabin vinyl soundtrack product image

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.