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The Survivor (Hans Zimmer) (2022)
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Average: 2.82 Stars
***** 21 5 Stars
**** 32 4 Stars
*** 47 3 Stars
** 40 2 Stars
* 32 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:

Additional Music by:
Heitor Pereira
Steven Doar
Total Time: 40:35
• 1. There is Always a Choice (4:39)
• 2. Harry Haft (3:15)
• 3. Leah (2:38)
• 4. Welcome to Jaworzno (4:50)
• 5. Jew Animal! (4:53)
• 6. Avinu Malkeinu (2:19)
• 7. Walk to the Ring (5:25)
• 8. The Survivor (5:13)
• 9. Thank You for Loving Me (5:03)
• 10. The Story of the Cap (2:20)


Album Cover Art
Milan Records
(April 29th, 2022)
Commercial digital release only, with high-resolution options.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,053
Written 4/30/22
Buy it... if there is more room for sorrow in your heart, Hans Zimmer's often challenging and gloomy but respectfully melodramatic tendencies offering grace to this score's highlights.

Avoid it... if you cannot tolerate Zimmer's inability to escape distracting synthetic applications or his often simplistic, repetitive structures, both nagging flaws to this otherwise effective exploration of melody and mood.

Zimmer
Zimmer
The Survivor: (Hans Zimmer) Director Barry Levinson has never been shy to tackle character dramas involving the more unique personalities of the previous hundred years, tackling everyone from Dr. Jack Kevorkian to Bernie Madoff, Joe Paterno, and, in his fourth such venture distributed by the HBO channel, boxer Harry Haft. While debuting briefly in 2021, The Survivor finally received its full release in 2022, Levinson providing an unexpectedly divergent look at the life of Haft, a survivor of Auschwitz concentration camp in World War II who, after being spared death because of his gladiatorial entertainment purposes for the Germans as a capable fighter, ultimately moved to America and had a brief boxing career there. The film concentrates on Haft's preparations for a 1949 fight with Rocky Marciano that he ultimately lost, causing him to retire and enjoy a peaceful life until 2007. Subplots include a romantic element of search for a childhood crush and the flashbacks to his parasitic use by a particular German officer at the camp. Levinson's movies of this type are all about conversational intrigue, and the film was applauded for its intelligent character examinations, though actor Ben Foster's inappropriate age defied his frightening weight loss for the lead role. Levinson had collaborated with composer Hans Zimmer three times before, dating all the way back to Rain Man, and The Survivor represents a reunion a decade in the making. Zimmer has toiled with the subject matter of German history in the past, and he likely approached it here with similar internalization with which Cliff Eidelman considered on the highly similar Auschwitz boxing film, Triumph of the Spirit of 1989. The techniques applied by Zimmer to The Survivor are a little less dramatically appealing than Eidelman's rather obscure but impressive score for the same general topic, though enthusiasts of Zimmer's early music will find much to like in his respectfully smart take on his usual, gloomy, melodramatic sensibility.

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