Batman Begins Soundtrack Review
By: Joe Tracy, Publisher
While the instruments and feel of the music on the Batman Begins
soundtrack does do the movie justice, a stronger ongoing theme
would have added a great deal to the quality of the score.
Soundtrack Composer: Hans Zimmer and James Newton
Howard
Length of Soundtrack: One hour and 30 seconds
Rating: 3 out of 5
Tracks:
1 - Vespertilio
2 - Eptesicus
3 - Myotis
4 - Barbastella
5 - Artibeus
6 - Tadarida
7 - Macrotus
8 - Antrozous
9 - Nycteris
10 - Molossus
11 - Corynorhinus
12 - Lasiurus
When it comes to composers, you can rarely go wrong with Hans
Zimmer and James Newton Howard, both highly regarded within the
industry. With Batman Begins, both composers took on the battle
of bringing the caped crusader back from the dead in the form
of a strong accompanying music score for the movie. And in the
end, that is about all you receive - a score that does the movie
justice, but is just standard on its own. And that's unfortunate
because it dispels the rumors that two heads are better than one.
There are two main problems with Zimmer and Howard's score. First,
there is no underlying theme. Music helps people identify with
a superhero. John Williams Superman score is perhaps the most
highly regarded superhero theme ever created. You hear the score
and you think "Superman" with a capital "S".
Spiderman has a theme that carries from one score to another and
helps you identify with him. However, Batman Begins is missing
that and it is a huge oversight. Music is vital to any movie and
so is developing a well-regarded theme. Jurassic Park has a theme
that nicely carries from score to score. When you listen to John
William's powerful "Imperial March" you instantly feel
the power of Darth Vader invading your mind. Batman Begins misses
that altogether.
A second problem, and one that is so nitpicky that I didn't deduct
any points for it, is that the labeling of the songs is too "unique".
Instead of giving each score a title appropriate to it, you are
given names of mostly different types of bats. And at first that
may seem neat, but several titles mean the exact same thing. For
example, look up Vespertilio in the dictionary and you see it
means, "A genus of bats." Look up the second score,
Eptesicus, and it means, "a genus of Vespertilio."
On the plus side, the score does the movie justice. Each instrument
conveys the dark tone of the movie. The swirling bats you hear
(and see) in the movie aren't a sound effect, but rather part
of a nicely executed score that takes some real life elements
and melds them into a number that helps move the movie forward.
This works amazingly well in the movie, which is the intention.
However, as a strict musical score that you listen to with your
eyes closed, it can become somewhat of a distraction.
Batman Begins is an awesome movie. And part of what makes a movie
great is the musical score. Just look at the terrible score for
Tomb Raider and it's easy to see why that movie got such a bad
rap. A bad score can pull a movie down whereas a good one can
propel it to new heights. Batman Begins is one of the best movies
of 2005 and both Zimmer and Howard played a role, even if the
soundtrack fails to meet the listening standards of someone not
viewing the movie while taking in the score. Track 6 (Tadarida)
is a perfect example of this.
And there is one question that many may be asking. We all know
that James Newton Howard and Hans Zimmer are outstanding standalone
composers who rank up there close to (but not on the same level
as) John Williams. So why were both of them tasked to collaborate
on Batman Begins? Collaborative efforts can sometimes stifle the
creative mind of an outstanding artist. After all, Leonardo DiVinci
didn't collaborate with Michelangelo to do the Mona Lisa. Doing
such would create a loss of individual creative freedom. One can
only hope that when Christopher Nolan directs the next Batman
movie (and hopefully he does as he did a much better job than
all past Batman directors), he will task one artist with the job
of creating the satisfying musical journey and allow a theme to
nicely develop so that fans can better identify with the world's
best and most human superhero - Batman.
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