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Superman
(2025)
Album Cover Art
Composed and Produced by:
John Murphy
David Fleming

Conducted by:
Jasper Randall

Orchestrated by:
Stephen Coleman
Edward Trybek
Jonathan Beard
Henri Wilkinson
Andrew Kinney
Tommy Laurence
Geoff Lawson
Michael J. Lloyd

Additional Music by:
Forest Christenson
Andrew Kawczynski
Jake Boring
Halli Cauthery
Labels Icon
LABEL & RELEASE DATE
WaterTower Music
(July 8th, 2025)
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ALBUM AVAILABILITY
Commercial digital release only.
Awards
AWARDS
None.
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   Availability | Viewer Ratings | Comments | Track Listings | Notes
Buy it... to be reminded that John Williams' legacy themes are classy, emotive, and sophisticated, traits confirmed once again by the contrasting trailer-appropriate trash forced from the loins in this hideous, "modern" interpolation.

Avoid it... and revisit John Ottman's 2006 score for Superman Returns to appreciate a truly respectful and superior treatment of the original Williams themes in a new context.
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EDITORIAL REVIEW
FILMTRACKS TRAFFIC RANK: #2,050
WRITTEN 7/9/25
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Murphy
Murphy
Superman: (John Murphy/David Fleming) What started as yet another sequel to the Man of Steel lineage on screen, 2025's Superman ultimately became yet another reboot of the franchise. By the insistence of filmmaker James Gunn, the film sought to pay homage to the 1978 original on screen, from the story adaptation to the artwork and even the music. It's yet another fresh telling for Clark Kent, re-establishing his roots, rural family life, job at a metropolitan newspaper, and crush on Lois Lane. As usual, master criminal Lex Luthor is the antagonist with all the wrong ideas about humanity's future, but this story throws in additional superheroes to start Kent off with some companions, including his dog, Krypto. Absolutely none of this was necessary, but the studio's assumption is that the movie was destined to generate over half a billion of dollars in revenue, so thus we have yet another redundant entry in the concept. To its credit, initial critical response was surprisingly positive. One area that sought to straddle the line between new and old is the music for Superman. Gunn, who had created the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise, dialed back the number of song placements in this film, but a handful still made it into the equation. Trickier was the original score, to which he once again turned to his prior collaborator, John Murphy. The director insisted that John Williams' iconic theme from the 1978 movie factor into the new score, and Murphy set forth very early in the production process to generate ideas on how to supplement Williams' famous material with new secondary themes. At some point in the process, the Hans Zimmer conglomerate, Remote Control, waded deeply into the project, and some of the famous composer's ghostwriters ended up providing music for Superman as well. Leading that group is David Fleming, who has shown promise in his work with and without Zimmer, notably on Damsel the prior year. While Murphy and Fleming handled different cues, they interchanged themes and interpretations of the surviving Williams identities, with the Fleming portions utilizing most of the additional writers familiar to countless Zimmer productions.

Ultimately, you can usually distinguish the difference between Murphy and Fleming's styles, the former hip and contemporary in a rock sense and the latter infusing the ultra-masculine Zimmer synthetics, orchestra, and choir. How you interpret the end result of their "modernization" of the music depends on your opinion about its concept's history. The 1978 Williams score is no doubt a classic, but it harkens back to a brighter time in the public's view of the world. Zimmer and his crew of ghostwriters provided a completely different, electronically oppressive and critically lambasted take on the character in 2013's Man of Steel. Several scores have emulated the Man of Steel model through the years since, but only one really nailed the Williams technique, and that was John Ottman's superb Superman Returns in 2006. On the surface, listeners may think that Murphy and Fleming were attempting to walk a fine line between the Williams and Zimmer approaches, which would seem sensible given studio and audience expectations. But the problem with that strategy is that Williams' material is simply incompatible with Zimmer's popular sound on a very basic level. Even though Superman Returns was the model for total success in this adaptation, the 2025 movie ignored that precedent and instead made a totally futile attempt to actually fuse the two sounds together. The harrowing result is on par with the quality of Man of Steel but is awful in different ways. Zimmer's score was simply terrible on its own merit. This time, you hear Williams' music crucified, and that emotional gut punch is arguably worse. What you hear is like Williams' music run through a Zimmer artificial intelligence filter to make it bigger, heavier, and more bad-ass in every cue of any significant volume. Weighty brass, string ostinatos, electric guitars, synthetic enhancements everywhere, and some manipulation all greet the wary listener, with acoustic guitar for lesser character cues. As usual in this model, the strings seem fake as they are written for and recorded, the mix sounding inauthentic at every turn. The outright explosions of rock are about as different from the original concept's intent as possible, signaling the ultimate dumbing-down of this sullied franchise.


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VIEWER RATINGS
230 TOTAL VOTES
Average: 1.83 Stars
***** 9 5 Stars
**** 13 4 Stars
*** 30 3 Stars
** 58 2 Stars
* 120 1 Stars
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COMMENTS
1 TOTAL COMMENTS
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It isn't the worst music, but the Williams theme is plain wrong
Allen - July 19, 2025, at 2:35 p.m.
1 comment  (225 views)
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Track Listings Icon
TRACK LISTINGS
Total Time: 76:58
• 1. Home (David Fleming) (2:02)
• 2. Last Son (David Fleming) (2:46)
• 3. Hammer of Boravia (David Fleming) (3:02)
• 4. LuthorCorp (John Murphy) (1:37)
• 5. The Daily Planet (David Fleming) (0:54)
• 6. Lois & Clark (John Murphy) (1:08)
• 7. Eyes Up Here (David Fleming) (2:22)
• 8. Justice Gang vs. Kaiju (David Fleming) (3:23)
• 9. Intruders (David Fleming) (3:25)
• 10. The Message (David Fleming/John Murphy) (2:43)
• 11. Secret Harem (David Fleming/John Murphy) (2:20)
• 12. The Real Punk Rock (John Murphy) (1:29)
• 13. Pocket Universe (David Fleming) (1:55)
• 14. 5 Years Time - performed by Noah & The Whale (3:34)
• 15. Something Like a Sun (David Fleming/John Murphy) (2:19)
• 16. Jailbreak (David Fleming) (1:06)
• 17. The River Pi (David Fleming) (3:25)
• 18. Take the T-Craft (David Fleming/John Murphy) (1:38)
• 19. Your Choices, Your Actions (David Fleming) (2:55)
• 20. Raising the Flag (John Murphy) (1:49)
• 21. The Rift (David Fleming) (4:53)
• 22. Bases Loaded (David Fleming) (3:07)
• 23. Speeding Bullet (David Fleming) (2:02)
• 24. Remote Control (David Fleming/John Murphy) (3:02)
• 25. Upgrade (David Fleming/John Murphy) (1:13)
• 26. Driven by Envy (David Fleming/John Murphy) (2:04)
• 27. Look Up (David Fleming) (2:45)
• 28. Being Human (David Fleming) (1:57)
• 29. Luthor the Traitor (John Murphy) (1:51)
• 30. Metropolis (David Fleming/John Murphy) (1:17)
• 31. Walking on Air (John Murphy) (1:34)
• 32. Punkrocker - performed by Teddybears/Iggy Pop (4:07)
• 33. The Mighty Crabjoys Theme - performed by The Mighty Crabjoys (1:16)

Notes Icon
NOTES AND 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 Superman are Copyright © 2025, WaterTower Music and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 7/9/25 (and not updated significantly since).
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