One cannot blame time as being a major factor in the
disaster that is the soundtrack for 2025's
Superman, as both
composers and their crews reportedly had been involved so early in the
project that they wrote themes based on nascent concepts prior to
shooting. When not punching you in the face with one of the thematic
identities, the score often defaults back to mindless Remote Control
action with manipulated synths, as heard in "Hammer of Boravia," "Bases
Loaded," and "Upgrade." If that's not enough, you also receive mindless
Remote Control fantasy vocals with deep thumping stingers for
realizations in "The Message," "Pocket Universe," "Something Like a
Sun," "Speeding Bullet," and "Driven by Envy." The Williams
interpolations are everywhere but they're typically shallow.
(Incidentally, some of the Williams-credited cues don't have any
discernable Williams passages in them). Only two of the classic 1978
main theme's parts survive here, and there's a cameo for the Kent family
identity as well. From there, Murphy is reported to have led the new
themes for the Lois and Clark romance and Lex Luthor while Fleming
helmed the ideas for the new Justice Gang, the Daily Planet, and
everything related to Krypton, including the dog. None of Williams'
other themes were retained, and not even the entirety of the main one is
accessed, which makes the remaining pieces sound orphaned and weird in
this context. The composers clearly got hung up on the main, eight-note
Williams brass fanfare, and while both composers adapted it, Fleming
handles it most frequently. Its renderings are atrocious, an insult to
the noble heroism of Williams' structures and orchestrations. You hear a
Williams theme in trailer-trash mode, all of it pounding and
overemphasized as if a whole score was fashioned like the bloated music
of a two-minute preview. The composers often just repeat the first two
phrases without moving on to the second two for resolution, which is
immensely dissatisfying as well. With the underlying rhythmic
formations, connective interludes, and the original love theme all
absent, the remaining phrases sound annoyingly repetitious. The
underlying harmonics are adjusted to give it an increasingly dumber
anthemic feel as well, an effort to supply as much melodrama to each
turn of the phrase as possible because the melodic line alone is
apparently no longer enough to retain interest of the average
movie-goer.
The interpolations of Williams' eight-note fanfare from
1978 start at the beginning of "Home" on solitary horn and close the
cue, later appended to the Williams Kent family theme cameo in "Last
Son." From there, the melody is destroyed, forced into masculine bravado
twice in "Eyes Up Here" without any class whatsoever, the first phrase
obnoxiously repeating over and over without going anywhere. It's
reharmonized at the end of "Justice Gang vs. Kaiju" to inject more
testosterone into it and explodes with even more testicular power in the
middle of "Jailbreak." The fanfare pounds its way through the end of
"The Rift" with stupid, percussively slapping attention and persists
repeatedly without any variation in its bloated masculine form in "Look
Up." It finally carries some lofty trumpet lines above the ruckus late
in "Being Human" but recedes in the score from there. The actual main
melodic lines of Williams' theme appear separately, initially reduced to
solo electric guitar plucking at 0:20 into "Home" and building intensity
with the intent of generating excessive coolness. It attempts some
chime-banging importance over booming bass and choir late in "The River
Pi." An electric guitar takes the theme to
Top Gun territory in
"Raising the Flag," in which the orchestral and choral accompaniment
sounds completely artificial and horrendously shallow. This score fails
if only because of this wretched cue alone. The main Williams theme is
later very slight in the early, bland fantasy choir of "Remote Control"
and recurs on brass with thumping percussion and choir at 1:17 into
"Look Up." As mentioned before, Williams' theme for the Kent family is
offered one token moment in the middle of "Last Son" that then bleeds
into the main theme's performance. From there, the new themes take over,
and they are a miserable lot. Fleming's new Krypton theme is a simple
repetitive phrase largely built upon three-note phrases that are the
modern equivalent of Williams' alternative and seem inspired by it to
some degree. (Why not simply adapt the original?) Heard in full glory at
1:28 into "Home," this idea opens "Last Son" with more distant whimsy
and choral accompaniment, emulating Williams' "The Planet Krypton" cue
in its large crescendo but in this case ejaculating in full form at the
end of the cue. Subtle on keyboards in the middle of "Your Choices, Your
Actions," this identity erupts on childish electric guitar in the latter
half of "Look Up," takes the inspirational fantasy route with choir at
the start of "Being Human," and cameos during part of the love theme
performance in "Walking on Air."
Fleming's new theme for the Daily Planet newspaper is
an upbeat rhythmic beat with melodic woodwind lines that don't really
grab much attention. Defined throughout "The Daily Planet" in pleasant
but substanceless form, this theme returns rather abruptly in similar
shades during the first half of "The Rift." His Justice Gang theme,
meanwhile, is an anonymously rising figure of moderate heroism opens
"Justice Gang vs. Kaiju" and is passed around later in the idiotic,
pounding action cue. Returning without any joy or excitement in
"Jailbreak" and "The River Pi," this idea is sharpened in the overblown
minor mode late in "Bases Loaded," brightens again during the action of
"Speeding Bullet," and tries to emerge in the melodrama at the end of
"Driven by Envy." On Murphy's part, the new love theme is about as big a
letdown from Williams' identity as one could imagine, with no warmth or
romance. It's a truly awful replacement that has no importance to it
whatsoever. A subtle acoustic guitar melody of meandering pointlessness
in "Lois & Clark," this theme meanders without purpose again in "The
Real Punk Rock," the strings too processed here for any heart. It still
struggles to ineffectual ends on the guitar in "Take the T-Craft" but
finally discovers some actual romantic footing in "Metropolis" with the
orchestra prior to pushing back to its guitar origins in "Walking on
Air." Murphy's identity for Luthor uses grungy minor third alternations
of rhythmic simplicity over harmonic shifts and a somewhat melodramatic
melody that stews over the top. It isn't memorable, though, despite
trying to correct one true flaw of seriousness from Williams' original
score. The underlying rhythm dominates "LuthorCorp" with the theme
emerging at 0:52 and 1:19, the cartoonish idea with choir offering no
sophistication at all. The Luthor theme blasts on synths and drum kit
with oppressive malice in "Intruders," reduces to solo cello tones of
sinister mystery in "Secret Harem," vaguely informs the suspense of
"Pocket Universe," and conveys no actual menace in the massively
formulaic rendition in the second half of "The Rift." The idea lets
loose in full rock bravado in "Upgrade" but broods on strings and choir
in "Luthor the Traitor" without any of the elegance of the adversary.
These new themes for
Superman are ineffective and dumb in their
expression, and only the director and studio can be blamed for this
travesty. What does Williams think of what the industry has become? Does
the style of his music suck too much for modern ears? This score takes
Williams' history and forces it through Zimmer's
F1 methodology,
and the result sounds childish and cheap. Unlike anything here,
Williams' themes have class.
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