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Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning (Max Aruj/Alfie Godfrey) (2025)
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Average: 3.01 Stars
***** 18 5 Stars
**** 30 4 Stars
*** 39 3 Stars
** 28 2 Stars
* 18 1 Stars
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Composed by:
Max Aruj
Alfie Godfrey

Conducted by:
James Seymour Brett
Ben Parry

Orchestrated by:
Adam Price
Gabriel Chernick
Jack McKenzie
Aaron King

Additional Arrangements by:
W.F. Smith Leithart
Logan Gammill
Steffen Thum
Stuart Michael Thomas
Jeremy Earnest

Produced by:
Cécile Tournesac
Total Time: 124:29
• 1. We Live and Die in the Shadows (0:44)
• 2. Another Sunrise (2:28)
• 3. Come Home Ethan (2:27)
• 4. Main Titles (1:07)
• 5. Martial Law (3:07)
• 6. Enter Paris (2:31)
• 7. Origins (3:28)
• 8. It's Only Pain (1:42)
• 9. It Will Change You (Ça te Changera) (1:57)
• 10. The Entity (4:06)
• 11. The Entity's Future (3:11)
• 12. I'll Be Waiting (2:48)
• 13. This is Where You Leave Me (3:08)
• 14. I Know You (5:23)
• 15. Mt Weather (2:07)
• 16. Checkmate (3:11)
• 17. I Have No Regrets (1:25)
• 18. The Eye of the Storm (2:03)
• 19. Nothing is Certain (4:37)
• 20. Firefight (4:04)
• 21. The Icecap (3:57)
• 22. The Sevastopol (5:33)
• 23. Ascending (2:31)
• 24. I Owe You My Life (7:21)
• 25. Consequences (3:23)
• 26. Your Final Reckoning (5:17)
• 27. We'll Figure It Out (2:04)
• 28. Liftoff (1:28)
• 29. Decisions (2:22)
• 30. This is Not Good (1:10)
• 31. Problems (1:31)
• 32. Tailstrike (1:04)
• 33. Ten Seconds... Maybe (2:27)
• 34. Good Luck (1:58)
• 35. Descending (2:19)
• 36. A Light We Cannot See (9:14)
• 37. Curtain Call (1:52)

Bonus Tracks: (13:00)
• 38. For Those We Never Meet (5:01)
• 39. The Arctic (1:44)
• 40. This is My Mission (3:17)
• 41. Encore (0:59)
• 42. Final Reckoning - Sacrifice Teaser (1:59)

Album Cover Art
Sony Classical
(May 23rd, 2025)
Digital commercial release with a CD option to follow later in the year.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,161
Written 5/29/25
Buy it... to hear the anthemic muscularity and themes of Lorne Balfe's prior music in the franchise without the abrasive manipulation and synthetic edge that came along with him.

Avoid it... if it's precisely that edgy, mechanical personality that attracted you to Balfe's music, the livelier mix and more enthusiastic performances in this entry likely to achieve crossover appeal with older fans of the Lalo Schifrin themes.

Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning: (Max Aruj/Alfie Godfrey) Perhaps eight will be enough Mission: Impossible movies, especially with star Tom Cruise now in his 60's, but one can never bet against a massively successful, multi-billion-dollar franchise. The 2025 entry, Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning wraps the action witnessed in the now-inconveniently named Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One from 2023. A rogue artificial intelligence called "The Entity" becomes sentient and decides to unleash the world's nuclear arsenal on humanity, which had not been an original concept for decades but apparently still appeals to people. The government agents of Impossible Missions Force and the terrorist in league with the AI spend this entire movie doing much the same as in the prior one: chasing. The protagonists have to stop the nuclear holocaust while also trapping the AI so it can't join forces with Elon Musk next. All the evidence an informed mind needs to identify these films as drivel comes from the casting of Angela Bassett as the American president, because, as the whole world is well aware, there's no chance that a distinguished and buff black woman would ever be elected to lead that bigoted country. Viewers just want to see Cruise do his stunts, however, and they are highly praised in Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning, helping push the movie towards continued box office riches. The music for the eight films in this franchise has never enjoyed much consistency outside of the legacy of Lalo Schifrin's surviving themes from the original television series. Those provided by Danny Elfman, Hans Zimmer, and Lorne Balfe tended to underachieve for differing reasons, while the two by Michael Giacchino were middling at best. None could compete with Joe Kraemer's masterful score for 2015's Mission: Impossible - Rogue Nation, which remains easily the best music in the concept. Although Balfe was originally slated to return for Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning to logically extend the sound of the prior film's music, the new score is credited to Max Aruj and Alfie Godfrey, who have been regular Balfe ghostwriters.

When you have a composer like Balfe emulating Zimmer and essentially running a very well-staffed production house for film music, one never knows who wrote exactly what in a particular score, and situations in which some of the secondary writers were contractually forced to take primary credit on a score have occurred. On the other hand, it's possible that Balfe did bow out of significant duties for this assignment. Regardless, the end product is pleasantly surprising. Aruj, Godfrey, and their crew manage to work within the guardrails of both Balfe's general sound and Schifrin's continued influence, improving upon the tone of Balfe's music especially. Certainly, Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One was a stylistic improvement over the tiresome Balfe anonymity for Mission: Impossible - Fallout, and the general movement between those scores to more organic tones continues with good results. This music sounds like Balfe as expected, but its rendering cleans up the detrimental aspects of that composer's methodologies and provides a more palatable presentation of the same ideas. Most importantly, the presence of synthetics is dialed back, with outright, obnoxious manipulation almost absent, and this decision allows the throwback Schifrin sequences to carry more authenticity. The well-harmonized orchestral presence in Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoning is enhanced by a more generously acoustic mix that flourishes minus unnecessary amounts of processing. The actual instrumentation is similar, the brass especially muscular but conveyed with a jazzier inflection in the main theme's retro performances. The use of flutes is improved after the prior score finally allowed woodwinds at all in the Balfe mould. Mandatory tom-tom drums for the concept return to better form this time, and the marching band-like percussion that was mercilessly hyped with the prior score is restrained to more sensible levels here. New accents for this entry include throat singers for the Arctic setting and balalaikas for the Russian ones. These specialty instruments and the many choral applications throughout are seemingly buried in the mix in many instances, however, the brass and strings afforded preference at almost every moment when percussion isn't outwardly showcased. Still, the presence of these sonic colors is appreciated.

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