The primary new thematic identity of
Indiana Jones and
the Dial of Destiny belongs to Helena, the quasi-heroine with an eye
for cash and mere tolerance of Jones' nobility. It's a lushly romantic
golden age throwback theme that strives to combine a bit of demeanor
from
Sabrina with spirit from
The Adventures of Tintin: The
Secret of the Unicorn and the prior
Indiana Jones scores.
Williams aptly translates the idea into an action identity, though it
struggles to lose its anchoring romanticism at times. The theme plays an
outsized role in this score, taking on much of the conversational load.
Interestingly, its secondary phrasing features a touch of
Superman love theme remnants. Williams was clearly enamored with
the character, as he adapted this theme into two distinct suite
arrangements and applied it at the start of his summary track featuring
all his new themes. The end credits and regular concert arrangement in
"Helena's Theme" are redundant and emphasize the romance of the idea
without any of the character's spunk or energy. An extended concert
treatment in "Helena's Theme (For Violin and Orchestra)" is a lovely
track, but the solo violin seems out of place with the character of the
score. The composer loves concocting these pieces for live performance,
but this one really doesn't represent this work at all. The theme opens
lightly on celeste in "Prologue to Indiana Jones and the Dial of
Destiny" and immediately shifts to dramatic low strings for a minute,
but don't expect to hear this passage in any obvious place within the
film itself. Helena's theme emerges tentatively in the middle of "To
Morocco" and flourishes by the end of the cue. After slight allusions at
the opening of "Voller Returns," it is pitted against dancing "Raiders
March" phrasing late in "Auction at Hotel L'Atlantique." In whimsical
action mode at 0:52 into "Tuk Tuk in Tangiers" and thereafter, the theme
alternates with its softly romantic mode heard early in "To Athens,"
during which the idea soars for the transitional scene. Her theme
struggles in the middle of "Perils of the Deep" while pieces define
early ambience in "Water Ballet," and it lends phrasing to early
"Polybius Cipher" optimism against the Voller/Dial material. Worried
portions open "The Airport" but increase in intensity later against the
villains' music, regaining its full action stance at 3:23 for her
motorcycle airplane stunt. It reiterates its romanticism to the urgent
start of "Centuries Join Hands" and follows the Marion material at 1:50
into "New York, 1969" with spritely dashing.
The next three thematic groupings share interesting
relationships in
Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, the Nazi
themes mingling with the Voller/Dial material and that latter music
connecting directly to the Archimedes theme. There's definitely a
connective arc in these ideas, and they are often intertwined in
complicated fashion outside of their most transparent renditions at
either end of the emotional spectrum. The Nazi material is largely a
fresh take on an old concept for Williams. There are hints of his music
for the Nazis from
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade built into
the new themes, but he chooses not to outright restate the rather
pompous 1989 theme intact. There are two Nazi motifs in
Indiana Jones
and the Dial of Destiny, the first a comic-book fanfare of glory
heard only twice in the movie and the second a more robustly ominous
force that sometimes includes a final phrase that resurrects the final
three, descending notes from the
Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade equivalent. The brass fanfare opens the movie in a passage
that can be heard at 1:07 into "Prologue to Indiana Jones and the Dial
of Destiny." Notably, a resounding bass thump at 1:24 here shakes the
floor with power, a technique not utilized elsewhere in the work. This
fanfare returns at 1:06 with snare triumph in "The Airport" as a Nazi
plane is prepared for flight, confirming the motif as one of glory for
Nazi infrastructure. The actual theme for the Nazis in this score
follows Voller's group of thugs as they terrorize and kill, lending
arrogance through its ascendant brass formations. This rising figure
repeats several times after 1:55 into "Prologue to Indiana Jones and the
Dial of Destiny" and returns with more suspense at 2:58. It lends subtle
militarism at the start of "Germany, 1944" before revealing the full
rising figure at 3:26. The idea consolidates at 2:10 into "Voller
Returns" with confidence, becomes sinister at 4:16 into "Water Ballet,"
and formally adds the
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade Nazi
phrasing to the end of its performance at 2:20 into "Polybius Cipher."
It frantically figures into the crescendo late in "The Grafikos" but
gains stature as uniforms are donned once again in "The Airport,"
blazing in full at 1:32 against the Voller/Dial motif and achieving even
more confidence at 2:12. It's engrained in the action at 2:20 into
"Battle of Syracuse" as the Nazis humorously and inexplicably mow down
ancient Romans with modern weaponry. Ultimately, the best of this
material is housed in "Prologue to Indiana Jones and the Dial of
Destiny" and "The Airport."
Frequently factoring in the mystery and action of the
story is Williams' theme for the Dial itself and Voller by association
of his obsession with the object. Voller's criminal conduct receives the
Nazi theme, but his heart lies with the Dial's theme. Its snarled,
descending main phrasing emulates villain tones from the first two
Harry Potter scores and debuts at 1:48 into "Prologue to Indiana
Jones and the Dial of Destiny," where it is also appended at 2:29 to the
Nazi material and then meanders a bit. Its main phrase glory develops at
3:28 before toning back to mystery duties in fuller form at 3:44 in that
suite-like track. The Dial/Voller theme opens "Germany, 1944"
militaristically, at 0:34 on muted trumpets and in suspense at 2:20 and
3:07 before a quick burst at 3:37. It recurs in the middle of "Voller
Returns" and supplies reminders at the end of that cue. Williams
translates the idea into the humorously stately waltz in "Auction at
Hotel L'Atlantique" and brings back "Basket Chase" inspiration from
Raiders of the Lost Ark in subsequent light chasing. Frantic
pieces are placed against the pursuit rhythms early in "Tuk Tuk in
Tangiers," and the theme informs the creepy start of "Perils of the
Deep," stewing for a while. The Dial/Voller theme is partial at 0:56
into "Water Ballet" with tingling piano and celeste support, but it
clarifies at 0:41 into "Polybius Cipher" and later in lighter shades. It
contributes early in "The Grafikos" around the periphery, adopting its
boldest form yet at 1:38, mingling with the Archimedes theme and
transitioning into that ascending piano motif later. While barely
cohesive at the outset of "Archimedes' Tomb," it consolidates at 1:55 on
flutes in quiet suspense mode. The idea interjects into Helena material
early in "The Airport" and is pinpointed at 0:46 into "Battle of
Syracuse," extending to become more fluidly broad later, yielding
massive statements at the end of the cue to denote the time travel
achieved with the artifact. A full version of the Dial/Voller theme
enjoys one final moment at 0:23 into "Centuries Join Hands." At this
point, the secondary phrasing of the theme reveals itself as officially
representing Archimedes himself, appended over rousing percussion. The
Dial theme then returns to flute and harp in mystery mode thereafter.
Some listeners may find Williams' applications of the Dial/Voller theme
to be somewhat obtuse, especially as they relate to the Nazi material on
one side and the Archimedes theme on the other. There's definitely a
wide spectrum of emotions associated with the Dial, and Williams seems
to apply these various thematic variants to the object depending on the
intentions of its potential users.
The twisted, ominous nature of Williams' theme for the
Dial, especially in the object's descending phrasing, is mostly a
reflection of Voller while the secondary ascending phrases better
represent Archimedes' more hopeful intentions for the device. The idea
is literally resolved by removing its descending main phrase to reveal
Archimedes' motif, previewed at the closing of the "Prologue," where its
ascending phrasing is heard on dramatic strings at 4:38 and soft
woodwinds at 5:18. In the film, it intertwines with the Dial/Voller
theme in "The Grafikos" around 1:38, is suggested early in "Archimedes'
Tomb" and then explicitly at 1:12, and conveys some muted heroism at
1:25 into "Centuries Join Hands." Expect some vibes from late cues in
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade during these parts, especially
as French horns handle Williams' sense of honor. The only other
recurring theme in
Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
represents the Roman's attack on Syracuse. The composer handles this
sudden oddity with a thumping bass rhythm and rather clunky motif on top
that has some vague connections to the rising portions of Helena's theme
but not obviously so. It starts "Battle of Syracuse" and drives much of
cue alongside aggressive references to the Dial theme. This material
continues early in "Centuries Join Hands" and almost sounds like
something Williams would have written for an attack of old Ray
Harryhausen monsters from yesteryear. All together, these new themes for
the 2023 film are highly effective at their task. Helena's theme
completely dominates the score's motific balance on album while the
Dial/Voller theme defines much of the remaining personality.
Interestingly, though, neither identity has an equivalently powerful
sway when heard within the film. The two Nazi themes and lingering ideas
from
Raiders of the Lost Ark provide the music's most prominent
placements in the movie, with "The Airport" a particularly impactful cue
for a major plot reveal. There is not much to quibble about with the
spotting of the film, though the absence of any hint of Mutt's rather
nebulous material from
Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal
Skull in "Perils of the Deep" (and replacement with Marion's theme)
is telling. The initial album presentation and its 2024 re-issue as part
of a useless and expensive franchise set are too short, certainly by
Williams' direction, especially with the redundant Helena's theme
concert arrangements. Still, it goes without saying that any new
Williams
Indiana Jones score is an especially gratifying treat
and immense pleasure to hear in the 2020's. It extends the quality of
the prior two works and continues to espouse the uniquely superior
aspects of Williams's writing from decades past.
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