Thematically, Giacchino makes some positive strides in
Spider-Man: Far From Home, particularly in the strength of
Mysterio's material above and beyond Vulture's from the previous film.
The two primary themes return in fully glory, one for the superhero and
the other for Peter Parker. Joining it is the developing love theme for
MJ. The end credits arrangement by Giacchino, "Far From Home Suite
Home," is a fantastic highlight of the work, conveniently parading all
of the score's themes out for listeners. The three returning themes come
first, the superhero anthem opening the suite and the nimble
spider-inspired movement at 0:35 doing its best to emulate similar
techniques by Elfman. At the one-minute mark, Giacchino segues into the
Parker motif and continues to alternate between the two themes. (It
should be noted that this passage was split apart on screen to
accommodate "And Now This....") The full rendition of the MJ love theme
that follows is appropriately tender but is a devoid of truly genuine
depth. Giacchino's attempts to address the emotional gravity of the
familial and romance elements in these works cannot compete with either
Elfman or Horner. At the four-minute mark in "Far From Home Suite Home,"
he shifts into his theme for Nick Fury and S.H.I.E.L.D. that is clearly
an adaptation of Silvestri's main "Avengers" concept theme. Giacchino
uses this idea several times throughout the score, and although the
progressions are altered a bit, Silvestri's theme does receive formal
credit for most of them. The suite continues into a massive and
excellent presentation of the Mysterio theme. His rhythmic,
octave-hopping intro arrives at 4:58, and his primary theme follows on
brass at 5:05. His subtheme for deception (alternately for his holograms
or "elementals") is heard at 5:36 and consists of a repetitive series of
rising, ominous chords with blasting trumpet figures above. These two
parts of the subtheme rarely overlap in the actual score, which is a
shame, but they both return individually, the brass figures often paired
with the underlying rhythmic intro sequence. By the main Mysterio
theme's rendition at 6:22, it's appropriately shifted into minor mode.
The suite concludes with a return to the two themes for Spider-Man and
Parker. For many casual listeners, this suite will suffice as a musical
representation of
Spider-Man: Far From Home. The score itself is
one of those endeavors that starts remarkably well, the first half
exhibiting solid, four-star quality. The second half unfortunately
devolves into the territory of mundane action along with the
aforementioned moments when Giacchino simply misses the mark with his
overexuberant tone.
The handling of the main Spider-Man and Parker themes
is a mixed bag, the heavy-handedness of their applications sometime
obnoxious. Giacchino has better luck at times when he shifts into the
softer moments of staccato intrigue or intimate contemplation, as in
"Change of Plans." In some of these passages, the composer seems intent
upon providing a solo cello as the main instrument of the heart. There
are times when his fanfare applications are expected and fine, and the
end of "Tower of Cower" is a good example of such a moment. By "Swinging
Set," however, the obligatory scene of Spider-Man swinging between
skyscrapers at the end simply begs for Elfman's theme, whether arranged
by Elfman himself or Christopher Young or John Debney. We've seen these
types of visuals before, and the music for them worked so well before
that Giacchino's re-do is superfluous here, especially as it utilizes
some of the same swirling structures on strings. The final note of
"Taking the Gullible Express/Spidey Sensitive," with its dramatic
crescendo and harp, is especially Elfman-like, though. The MJ theme is
tepidly reprised throughout, including "It's Perfect" and "Personal
Hijinks," before the composer tries to crank up the intensity with
marginal success in "Bridge and Love's Burning." Just as the physical
chemistry between these actors seems lacking compared to the initial
trilogy, Giacchino's music for them also doesn't quite click. By
comparison, the Silvestri-inspired material always works, and it's great
to hear the Marvel franchise maintaining the "Avengers" theme as its
connective tissue. Doubling for Nick Fury, this theme opens "Multiple
Realities," punctuates an important moment at 1:52 into "Who's Behind
Those Foster Grants," rises to the occasion late in "Taking the Gullible
Express/Spidey Sensitive," and briskly joins the action at 0:16 into "An
Internal Battle." The idea only really shines with the full major-key
glory of Silvestri's original intent in the "Spidey Sensitive"
performance, an important moment of rescue of sorts in the story. Also
to be appreciated is Giacchino's handling of the various Quentin Beck
and Mysterio themes in the score. Since this film, like the prior one,
only exposes an ally as the villain partway through the story, the
composer aptly supplies the Mysterio theme as just another superhero
identity in bright, major key armor in the first half of the score. He
scores the character from Parker's perspective, which is a brilliant
decision. From the action of "World's Worst Water Feature" to the
sensitivity of "Who's Behind Those Foster Grants," Giacchino could truly
fool the listener with the sincerity of this material, At times, it's
more attractive than even the main franchise theme.
So enamored is Parker with Mysterio that he inevitably
joins the fight alongside the newcomer against perceived common enemies.
In "Mr. One Hundred and One," Giacchino provides keen counterpoint
between the two themes, overlapping them with ease. The relaxing
electric guitar and cello solos for the theme in "Change of Plans"
extend the sense of false comfort, as does the grieving solo horn for
the idea in the latter half of "Prague Rocked." As Mysterio is revealed
to be the villain of
Spider-Man: Far From Home, the electronic
rhythms that made him cool suddenly become sinister and mysterious. The
turning point of the score is "Power to the People," a transformation
cue that is outstanding in many ways but also pushes Mysterio's main
theme towards the wildly overblown villain's theme of caper origins in
The Incredibles. The rendition at 2:08 into "The Magical Mysterio
Tour" especially suffers from this connection. Always welcome is the
hidden highlight of the score: the secondary Mysterio theme for
deception. In "Power to the People," "Praguenosis: Bad," and "Gloom and
Doom," the repetitive motif of suspense really drives the bad-ass nature
of the villain's plans. The composer provides a soft foreshadowing of
this transition from coolness into darkness during "Multiple Realities."
Interestingly, while Giacchino utilizes the blasting trumpet portion for
this theme in a few of the action scenes involving the Mysterio
illusions, the composer doesn't make as much use of the idea as he
should. In fact, the absolutely shameless rip of Gustav Holst's "The
Planets" in the place of this superior, original material for the
concept during "World's Worst Water Feature" is totally baffling. That
cue may ruin the score for some listeners the same way Hans Zimmer's
Gladiator rubs folks the wrong way; Giacchino is better than this
and should be flogged for, one must assume, succumbing to pressure from
the filmmakers for that blatant and ridiculous emulation. On the whole,
the score's narrative begins to fall apart after Mysterio is exposed,
"The Magical Mysterio Tour" and beyond exhibiting some creative
instrumental techniques and outright dissonance at times but losing the
lineage of the themes in the process. Cues like "High and Flighty,"
"Happy Landings," and "Tower of Cower" bang the chimes and roll the
cymbals in between their basic expressions of the main themes, but they
fail to really generate interest apart from the film. Still, the
strength of the Mysterio themes elevates this work beyond
Spider-Man:
Homecoming, and its loyalty to maintaining the themes from that film
is admirable even if they continue to trail Elfman's unmatched identity
for the concept. As such, Giacchino ekes out a four-star rating for this
sequel despite its web of nagging ills.
**** @Amazon.com: CD or
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