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Review of M3GAN (Anthony Willis)
Composed and Produced by:
Anthony Willis
Conducted by:
Zoltan Pad
Péter Illényi
Bálint Sapszon
Orchestrated by:
Tommy Laurence
Samuel Read
Thomas Bryla
Jack McKenzie
Label and Release Date:
Back Lot Music
(January 6th, 2023)
Availability:
Commercial digital release only.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... for the unique, momentary highlights of humorous fantasy in this score and its brief song performances, with decent but sometimes highly obnoxious thriller elements in tow.

Avoid it... if you expect the spectacular use of songs for the titular android's performances to sustain the soundtrack, for they and their interpolations into the score are far too short and infrequent.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
M3GAN: (Anthony Willis) If you're one of those people who thinks that your smart home devices are destined to try to kill you someday, then the 2023 horror comedy M3GAN may not be for you. Or maybe it will be. Audiences love a psychotic android doll, it seems, especially if it's eerily cute, sings lullabies, kills troublesome neighbors, and engages in mortal combat with other machines. Such is the sick humor of this resounding box office success, its premise stoking the worst fears about artificial intelligence and plundering standard horror genre methods along the way. The fact that "M3GAN" is an android that imprints upon a person like something out of A.I. Artificial Intelligence isn't the attraction; instead, it's the fact that the female doll sings like a Disney princess with a bad attitude and eventually kills humans and animals without remorse, atrocities that appeal to ungodly and sick-minded viewers. There is a nice family in the story, too, the main adult being the roboticist who creates these fucking abominations and decides to imprint one upon her young, grieving and orphaned niece. Sensible minds wonder if typical homeowners' insurance covers damages by raging princess androids, assuming you survive the encounter to collect. A sequel was immediately given the green light, hopefully with the intelligence chips installed in garden variety sex toys next time. One reason for M3GAN's financial triumph is the film's soundtrack, which opted to show the doll singing a couple of tunes that integrate to a marginal degree with the surrounding underscore. Composer Anthony Willis was noticed by M3GAN director Gerard Johnstone because of Willis' BATFA-nominated music for the film Promising Young Woman a few years earlier. He earned entry into the industry through grunge work as one of many assistant writers for John Powell and Henry Jackman in the 2010's, and M3GAN represents a major breakthrough for his career. There are atmospheric and orchestral elements in Promising Young Woman that carry over to M3GAN, but Johnstone pressed the composer to stretch his imagination to take the music for this project in unexpected directions. The result is a score that is certainly interesting to behold but one that lacks a soul, and perhaps that's the point.

Willis' score for M3GAN is a fascinating and engrossing listening experience with some truly impressive moments, but it's the kind of work you won't find yourself compelled to revisit apart from the picture. The recording is largely organic, but a fair amount of it sounds digitally processed, with synthetics factoring more and more as the killer robot takes over the story. Willis carries the primary motif with a blend of traditional piano and what sounds like a vibraphone used to sound like synth keyboarding, the latter tones seemingly supplanting the piano in the latter half. Many of the early cues are vaguely positive in tone, and the material for the Bruce robot is borderline charming. Willis has a knack for writing superior string lines, and these techniques offer the appeal of these more tonal or lightly suspenseful passages. The horror elements in the score are functional but tiring, sounding like Benjamin Wallfisch synthetic shrieking with conventional stingers. The ambient synths and then striking dissonance of "She's Still Plugged In" is truly unlistenable, and nice brass lines late in "Workshop Duel" are wasted by obnoxiously wild string lines. The climax improves, though, as symphonic action without synth interference becomes more tonal in "Two Titans" and entertaining, advanced string and brass techniques for horror triumph in "Model 3 Generative AN-droid." The narrative of the score dwells upon one central motif, but the secondary ideas overshadow it in memorability. By the director's insistence, there is a fluffy and airy, faux-innocent side to the score that inhabits one subtheme and the related "The Perfect Algorithm," and he and the composer called this the "Disney" side of the soundtrack. The titular robot sings two songs in M3GAN as part of its increasing self-awareness, the aspiring princess tone of these songs meant to sound both innocently childlike and sickeningly scary. These two songs, "Tell Me Your Dreams" and "Titanium," are by far the most memorable aspects of the soundtrack, and yet they are both incredibly short. Willis only wrote parts of songs for these two performances, and the melody deconstructions are not obvious enough in the rest of the score to be truly satisfying. Ideally, he would have created fuller versions of these songs as either source or end credits pieces, because otherwise they are simply teases without a poignant punchline at the end.

Defining the melodic core of M3GAN is a main theme representing the concepts of life and death, though mostly the latter. It's a rather unattractive series of descending three notes, off kilter over shifting harmonies but occasionally striving for tonal appeal. The composer naturally chose three notes for the phrases because of "3" in the robot's name. This death theme debuts at 0:16 into "A Message From Oregon" on uneasy piano over string suspense and dominates the cue, subsequently meandering late in "Those Aren't Toys." It returns at 0:06 into "On the Subject of Death" on piano with fantasy female vocals above, building momentum and a slight sense of menace as the realization experienced by the android progresses. The theme is tentative in the middle of "Calibrated Response" on glassy tones, menacing at the start of "Bully in the Forest" on the female voice, and turns to action mode on brass and slamming percussion at 1:59 into "Bad Boys Equal Bad Men." Taunting fantasy vocals take it at the beginning of "Angel of Death," and what sounds like a vibraphone carries the theme through the rest of the cue. Tentative strings explore the death theme at 0:38 into "Approximately 5 Feet Deep," shifting to brass action at 1:43 in stalker/killer mode. It is fragmented early on low strings in "Detectives & Missing Data Reports," consolidating to the keyboard or vibraphone later in the cue, and returns after the action at 0:14 into "A Message From Elsie" with compelling lyricism. The keyboard/vibraphone tones recur at 0:30 into "Life & Death (Suite From M3GAN)" with the female vocals on top once again; the voice steals the theme in the middle of the cue, aided by tense string echoes, but Willis returns it to the keyboard at the end. In the bonus track, "Bruce's Dream," the death theme is a little warmer near the cue's conclusion and leaves the album on a fleetingly upbeat note compared to the prior material. This theme doesn't explode into as much of the action music as hoped, Willis seemingly content to meander in different directions during some of the actual fight scenes. Rather, the theme seems most at home in the subtly alluring but undeniably creepy "On the Subject of Death," which ultimately highlights the score and emulates some of the more effective John Ottman genre works of the 2000's. Scores like Hide and Seek and Orphan provide a blueprint for Willis in how he textures his theme for this score, with about equal results.

The two mini-songs in M3GAN are definitely highlights, and they're actually quite funny and creative, but they're also too short to help the soundtrack overall, especially on album. The "Tell Me Your Dreams" theme borrows alternating note figures from James Horner's "Somewhere Out There" in An American Tail and is keyboarded early in "Tell Me Your Dreams" and then sung as a children's lullaby. The "Disney-like" flourishes will induce a smirk, but the song passes quickly. Its melody is shifted to suspense at the start of "Attachment Theory," and the alternating note figures take a dark position in the middle of "Departing Funki" before it sounds like both songs' melodies attempt unsuccessfully to break through early in "Megan's Fantasy." That other song is the highly alluring and increasingly confident "Titanium," its melody aspiring to pop song mannerisms with a lovely secondary sequence. It's also far too brief by design, but its melody does inform the brass malice early in "Two Titans" though in barely recognizable form, finally emerging for a clearer moment on flute at 2:01. That theme also opens "A Message From Elsie" tentatively. The score has a couple of other themes, both related to the robot technology and supplying the lighter, almost comedic shades to the experience. The theme for the Bruce robot is benevolent and a bit wondrous, the tonal highlight of the score and heard in "Meeting Bruce" and "Bruce's Dream." This idea carries over to the start of "The Perfect Algorithm" in fragments but unfortunately doesn't clearly translate into the action music for the climactic duel between Bruce and M3GAN. More overtly eye-rolling is the lounge-appropriate, vintage light rock of the corporation that creates these robots in "Funki Headquarters" and "Funki Redux." This material is also alluded to at the start of "Life & Death (Suite From M3GAN)." Ultimately, the soundtrack for M3GAN is a worthy fantasy thriller venture with some rousingly intriguing ideas. The two songs are far too brief, and their melodies don't inform the surrounding score as clearly as necessary. The remainder of the score provides soothingly appreciable material in its first half and some wretch horror passages prior to brief glimpses of symphonic force for the final fight. Willis shows tremendous potential in his instrumental and vocal handling, and while the rather soulless end result for M3GAN may turn off plenty of score collectors, there's much to like in the constructs and execution. That is, until the nasty android decides to kill something, at which point your ears will beg for forgiveness.  ***
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 62:18

• 1. Funki Headquarters (1:09)
• 2. A Message From Oregon (1:50)
• 3. Those Aren't Toys (2:43)
• 4. Reluctant Guardian/Meeting Bruce (3:40)
• 5. Prototype (1:09)
• 6. The Perfect Algorithm (2:27)
• 7. On the Subject of Death (2:16)
• 8. A Hole in the Fence (1:14)
• 9. Calibrated Response (3:19)
• 10. Corporate Misdeeds (0:48)
• 11. Tell Me Your Dreams* (1:11)
• 12. Attachment Theory (2:49)
• 13. Bully in the Forest (1:50)
• 14. Bad Boys Equal Bad Men (2:21)
• 15. Angel of Death (2:07)
• 16. Titanium* (0:59)
• 17. Approximately 5 Feet Deep (2:12)
• 18. Detectives & Missing Data Reports (4:06)
• 19. True Guardian (2:05)
• 20. She's Still Plugged In (2:56)
• 21. Departing Funki (1:25)
• 22. Megan's Fantasy (2:44)
• 23. Workshop Duel (1:45)
• 24. Two Titans (2:36)
• 25. Model 3 Generative AN-droid (1:41)
• 26. A Message From Elsie (1:05)
• 27. Funki Redux (0:53)
• 28. Life & Death (Suite From M3GAN) (5:16)
• 29. Bruce's Dream (Bonus Track) (1:53)
* performed by Jenna Davis
NOTES & QUOTES:
There exists no official packaging for this album.
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The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from M3GAN are Copyright © 2023, Back Lot Music and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 1/5/23 (and not updated significantly since).
The porno parody of this film will be hilarious.