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The Little Prince (Hans Zimmer/Richard Harvey) (2015)
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Average: 3.2 Stars
***** 20 5 Stars
**** 31 4 Stars
*** 35 3 Stars
** 21 2 Stars
* 13 1 Stars
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Co-Composed, Co-Orchestrated, and Co-Produced by:
Richard Harvey

Co-Composed and Co-Produced by:

Conducted by:
Nick Glennie-Smith

Co-Orchestrated by:
Bill Connor
Adam Langston
Philip Klein
Stephen Coleman
Andrew Kinney

Additional Music by:
Ed Buller
Dominic Lewis
Nathan Stornetta
Czarina Russell
Benjamin Wallfisch
Total Time: 70:05
• 1. Preparation (2:09)
• 2. Suis-Moi* (3:26)
• 3. The Life Plan (1:12)
• 4. Driving (1:40)
• 5. Equation* (2:03)
• 6. The Interview (2:15)
• 7. Le Tour de France en Diligence* (1:16)
• 8. Plan B (0:36)
• 9. Getting On With It (1:43)
• 10. Amongst the Coins (2:36)
• 11. Top Floor Please (0:57)
• 12. Ascending (3:14)
• 13. Parachutes (3:48)
• 14. Draw Me a Sheep (3:39)
• 15. Stars (0:26)
• 16. The Fox (0:54)
• 17. The Journey (2:35)
• 18. The Absurd Waltz (4:07)
• 19. Suis-Moi (Reprise)* (3:09)
• 20. Recovery (1:47)
• 21. Trapped Stars (4:00)
• 22. Farewell (1:58)
• 23. Escape (3:13)
• 24. Finding the Rose (4:22)
• 25. Growing Up (4:17)

Bonus Tracks:
• 26. Suis-Moi (French Version)* (3:26)
• 27. Equation (French Version)* (2:03)
• 28. Suis-Moi (Reprise) (French Version)* (3:09)

* performed by Camille
Album Cover Art
WaterTower Music
(August 6th, 2015)
Regular U.S. release.
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,243
Written 9/27/22
Buy it... for ten to fifteen minutes of lovely, largely singular highlights in an otherwise insubstantial and dainty fantasy score.

Avoid it... if you're looking for Hans Zimmer's fingerprints on this soundtrack, its somewhat meandering tone and disjointed structures more often resembling the bevy of composers that actually wrote the bulk of the score.

Zimmer
Zimmer
The Little Prince: (Hans Zimmer/Richard Harvey) With an abundance of charm and whimsy, the French 2015 adaptation of a 1943 French novel combined digital and stop-motion animation to tell its fantastic tale of imaginative escapism. Although some core elements of the story were modernized for The Little Prince, its heart remained intact. A little girl is subjected to a joyless existence of rigorous school study by her mother, and she befriends an elderly aviator who shares with her the other-worldly stories of his young adventures with a "Little Prince" in the Sahara who actually lives on an asteroid and interacts with all sorts of exotic species and locations. In fits and starts, the precocious girl defies her mother to seek out adventures that are largely of her imagination, ultimately reconciling with the mom and helping the aviator back into the same fantastic realm himself. Talking animals and wildly inventive destinations await, and the film's blend of animation styles was highly commended by critics, as was its adapted storyline. A star-studded vocal cast and carry-over crew from the Kung Fu Panda movies helped propel the project. Despite Paramount's botched American distribution of the film, ultimately selling the rights to Netflix but then having the film withdrawn from that platform a few years later, The Little Prince became the most successful French aminated movie of all time internationally. Among the Kung Fu Panda collaborators of director Mark Osborne to return was composer Hans Zimmer, though the project's schedule unfolded in such a way that the score became a frantically rushed job involving a slew of additional composers. While Zimmer's reliance upon associate composers and ghostwriters was certainly not new, the extent to which it affected The Little Prince is notable, even down to temp track annoyances bleeding though in the final product. The soundtrack was also destined to feature three songs by French singer Camille Dalmais, known professionally as simply Camille, who had previously contributed her voice to Pixar's Ratatouille. Zimmer and Camille handled the composition of the songs, which retained strong French stylistic elements and were performed in both English and French. The Little Prince doesn't really qualify as a musical, though, the songs functioning as an accompaniment to the narrative rather than an integral part of it.

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