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Giacchino |
Lightyear: (Michael Giacchino) If you spend too
much of your time explaining the premise of your movie ahead of time,
then you're losing the box office battle. Such is the lesson reaffirmed
by Disney and Pixar's 2022 disappointing
Toy Story spin-off,
Lightyear, an attempt to peacefully co-exist with other Buzz
Lightyear-related backstories and tell of the animated movie that
spawned the creation of the toy seen in the primary franchise. With
animation inspired by science-fiction depictions of yesteryear, the film
tells of Lightyear's adventures as a Space Ranger in Star Command, the
kind of outlandish actions that the toy was bragging about in the
Toy
Story entries. His story here is actually quite convoluted and
unpleasant in several ways, becoming embroiled in time and character
paradoxes that witness the character as something of a failure overall.
A plot twist involving Lightyear and the evil Emperor Zurg induces
eye-rolling from audiences seeking relative simplicity, and the comedic
element inherent in Tim Allen's performance of the titular character is
lost in Chris Evans' interpretation of Lightyear at his prime. The
concept didn't seem to appeal as much to audiences as a direct sequel
would have, the theatrical opening of
Lightyear among the poorest
grossing of any Pixar film. While the music of the
Toy Story
franchise has long been defined by Randy Newman, Pixar veteran Michael
Giacchino did score a pair of television specials for the franchise in
2013 and 2014, so he was a logical composer to select for this
assignment. With the film's purpose in rooting its look and feel in
old-school science-fiction, Giacchino saw the opportunity to draw upon
vintage genre music from his own youth, and
Lightyear is thus
styled around early 1980's and earlier influences in its score. Perhaps
the most important decision made by Giacchino and director Agnus MacLane
was the total abandonment of any Newman material, citing a lack of
connectivity between the two parts of the concept.
While Newman did provide the Buzz toy with his own soaring
motif when he "flies" in the
Toy Story films, nothing of that
music survives in
Lightyear. The lack of a creative or even
subtle allusion to that music in this score is a disappointment, because
the audience knows the connection already. The personality of
Giacchino's score is otherwise predictable, playing to genre stereotypes
and offering no surprises. With an orchestral ensemble of upwards of 90
players and around 40 singers, the composer adds occasional electronic
elements for hints of coolness. A slight electric bass presence at times
is a good choice, giving the score a touch of Danny Elfman in a few
places, but Giacchino saves outright electric guitar coolness for the
conclusive highlight of the work, "Infinite MOEtion." The themes of
Lightyear are fairly static, and the action material is extremely
generic despite being very well executed, striving at times to access
John Williams'
Star Wars music more often than expected, the "Oh,
Hover" cue throwing a few Jerry Goldsmith nuggets in with that Williams
inspiration. That cue arguably contains the score's best action rhythms
and unique motifs of the moment. The rest of the heightened material
isn't quite as engaging, pure filler action completely devoid of
thematic material heard in "Initial Greetings" and "Afternoon Delight
Speed" offering a non-descript, long, rhythmic crescendo without much
appeal. Some of these passages are quite decent in their rhythmic
ruckus, including "Light Speed at the End of the Tunnel" and "Relative
Success." Interestingly, parts of "A Good Day to Not Die" sound like
leftovers from Michael Kamen's
The Iron Giant. These cues don't
allow Giacchino's set of themes for the film to breathe, leaving them in
generally static development that neglects to push them to any direct
conflict or adversity. The emotional posture of a theme in its first
performance generally dictates how it will be incorporated in each
instance thereafter. You don't hear the serial adaptations of these
ideas into interesting variations as often as expected, with adversity
or suspense often tackled instead with generic devices not related to
the themes.
The composer provides Lightyear himself with a fanfare
identity that understandably disappears in the middle of the story to
coincide with the character's lack of victorious heroics in that third.
He then devises separate themes for Lightyear's sadness and romanticism,
leaving the only other major idea for the villain, Emperor Zurg, whose
presence is restricted to the second half of the story. The main theme
for Buzz Lightyear is a basic set of two climbing, four-note, major-key
phrases after a militaristic march provides introductory rhythmic
anticipation. The rhythms sometimes occur on their own early in
Lightyear. Giacchino begins the score in "Mission Log" with the
theme on solo horn, light snare, and synthetic rhythm, developing it
into mild suspense in the latter half of the cue. The theme receives a
slower, pompous performance to start "Lightyear," with somewhat humorous
woodwind and light percussion accompaniment to the theme and rhythm
later on. The idea occupies all of "The Best Laid Flight Plans of Space
and Men" with gusto, shifts to a pounding minor mode for heightened
conflict in "Blown on Course," and is tentative on flute at the outset
of "Mission Perpetual" before building to confident renditions. The
theme struggles to maintain its personality at that point, being danced
around in the exuberant "Operation Surprise Party" and trying to emerge
with flight late in "Zurg-onomics" but only stuttering. It finally
returns after a long break at 0:35 into "Improv-Izzy-tion" and is
layered with the rhythmic flourishes at 1:25 into "Back to Buzzness."
Its original noble form dominates throughout all of "Home on Space
Range," and the theme receives a somewhat corny, television series-like
rendition in the cool "Infinite MOEtion." The composer's standard suite
format follows in "One Suite Buzz;" the Lightyear fanfare opens that
recording on piano, building to several heroic statements for four
minutes. The theme's lack of an interlude sequence really inhibits this
longer presentation. Essentially, those four minutes have to be anchored
by the same eight notes over and over again without any deviation to a
different melody. The tiring nature of this repetition isn't as
obnoxious as Giacchino's handling of his main theme in
The Batman
earlier in 2022, but it may still leave the listener somewhat
dissatisfied.
The lengthy "One Suite Buzz" track does return to the
main fanfare at 8:14 to close out the score with
Star
Trek-informed flair. While the repetitive fanfare may be devoid of
any intellectual prowess for tired listeners, it does serve its purpose
of memorability, being extremely simple to recall for even the most
detached movie-goer. In this respect, it anchors the film well and
maintains the right personality even if it fails to impress beyond that
purpose. The most interesting thematic explorations in
Lightyear
are the character's two secondary ideas, but they are sparsely applied.
The composer frustratingly refuses to apply these themes in some
situations that could call for them, negating some of their purpose and
prominence in the closing suite. Lightyear's romantic theme is exactly
the interlude that Giacchino needed for the main fanfare, but he only
uses it as such in "Infinite MOEtion." Its ascending, hopeful tone
debuts at 1:34 into "Mission Perpetual" over rollicking snare rhythms;
there is a bit of John Barry influence here, even down to the repeated
phrases. But that idea doesn't return until 0:26 into "Infinite
MOEtion," with enhanced confidence over guitars and electric bass
reprised with great choral and guitar layers at 1:21. The idea is
revisited twice (6:38 and 7:46) in "One Suite Buzz" with cooing choir.
In that suite, Giacchino mingles the romantic theme with Lightyear's
sadness identity, which consists of repeating three-note phrases, mostly
descending. It's heard slowly at 1:04 into "Lightyear's Behind" on
solemn piano and with even more deliberation during all of "The Lone
Space Ranger" on that very contemplative instrument. The sadness theme
tries but fails to take hold in the middle of "Mistake It All In" and is
replaced by a different identity with the same purpose in "To Infinity
and Be Gone." Its overstated place in "One Suite Buzz" comes at 5:59
and, with a heroic tilt, at 7:17. The theme for Zurg is a truly
cartoonish villain tune, always overblown and with little variance. It
stews at 0:59 into "Zurg Awakens" with deep male choral tones and
explodes in all of "Zurg's Displeasure," accompanied by a formal,
bloated introduction on brass and chanting choir. The idea stomps
suddenly at 2:46 into "Space Afraiders," enjoys explosive bursts for
choir at 0:16 and 1:44 into "Zurg-onomics," and takes on
Godzilla-like proportions, even with banging gong, in "Buzz, Meet
Zurg."
The Zurg theme briefly interrupts the fluffy military
rhythms of "World's Worst Self-Destruct Sequence," reprises the same old
bloviating at 0:19 into "Time to Space Your Fears," blurts on brass in
the middle of "Hiding from Yourself" with a massive choral conclusion,
and interjects for a moment at 0:12 in "Improv-Izzy-tion." The theme's
tone thrashes around at times in "Back to Buzzness" and stomps as a
stately march on brazen brass at 4:42 into "One Suite Buzz." That end
credits suite once again shows Giacchino's inability to write good
bridge sequences between his ideas in those long recordings, each major
theme existing separately after a fade to near silence. (This issue has
gotten worse for the composer in the 2020's; while these suites are a
great throwback in concept, their execution isn't up to Williams or
Goldsmith standards.) Likewise, as in the concurrent
Jurassic World:
Dominion, Giacchino offers his softer themes in more developed forms
during the suite than in the score proper, which begs for explanations
as to why they existed at all. If a theme doesn't really have any
significant impact on a score, why give it minutes of air time in the
suite? In the end,
Lightyear is totally sufficient for its
purpose and wears its heart in plain sight. The recording is average for
Giacchino, with a relative absence of interesting percussive layers
compared to his norm. The album experience, at 76 minutes, seems longer
than it actually is. There is a lack of dynamic spirit and excitement in
the orchestration and performances of this score that saps much of its
potential appeal. This "anonymous music effect" happens to Giacchino at
times, and it causes an otherwise proficient adventure score to oddly
neglect the fun factor. As a composer (and crew), if your performers
don't sound like they are having fun performing the score... if they
simply sound as though they're earning their studio musician pay for the
day and nothing more, then that lack of enthusiasm will be conveyed in
the end result. That's the biggest issue with
Lightyear. There's
nothing technically wrong with it, but it still fails to endear itself
to you. Part of the issue here may be that Giacchino's somewhat retro
orchestral stylings alone are struggling to hold interest. As the lone
standout cue in the work, "Infinite MOEtion" has more contemporary
spirit and some semblance of suave coolness and enjoyment, and that
style works better than anything in the rest of the score. That
remainder is truly fine, but it falls one dead battery short of infinity
and beyond.
@Amazon.com: CD or
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- Music as Written for the Film: ****
- Music as Heard on Album: ***
- Overall: ***
Bias Check: |
For Michael Giacchino reviews at Filmtracks, the average editorial rating is 3.46
(in 43 reviews) and the average viewer rating is 3.21
(in 23,476 votes). The maximum rating is 5 stars.
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There exists no official packaging for this album.