Compared to Beltrami's prior to action efforts of 2013,
A Good Day to Die Hard and
World War Z,
The
Wolverine will test your tolerance for orchestral abrasiveness. Each
of these three scores has progressively moved away from tonal action
accessibility towards an environment in
The Wolverine that is
downright unpleasant in its demeanor. Undoubtedly, the turmoil in the
titular character merits a fair dose of this dissonant, in-your-face
attitude, but it somewhat degrades any humanity remaining in him. This
is, simply put, a very harshly rendered score, one that serves
Logan/Wolverine with only one dimension while doing the same for the
Japanese elements, which are represented by an equally stereotypical
musical presence. The orchestra is joined by Taiko drums, ethnic
woodwinds, and koto to this end, their presence battled literally by the
awkward tones of a harmonica, of all things, in the soundscape. The
fight sequences are handled with percussion rhythms backed by a
continued orchestral haze of dissonance and these passages are nearly
unlistenable. There are carryover glimpses of instrumental intelligence
from
World War Z, but not many, "Sword of Vengeance" an
exception. The softer portions of the score are sadly non-descript,
especially early on, when solo strings have difficulty generating any
warmth for the character's troubles. In fact, there is practically no
warmth or humanity to be found anywhere in this score, very few respites
allowed by Beltrami on the otherwise bleak canvas. Dramatic flair is
rare in
The Wolverine, the highlight of the score's few
awe-inspiring moments coming in the tonality of brief portions in "The
Hidden Passages." This cue builds of off three-note phrases of dramatic
origin in "Abduction," this motif existing as the score's only thematic
development until the final cues. The easing of tensions in "Goodbye
Mariko" is too little, too late to save this score from being a mind
numbing experience on the whole, though don't discount the seeming nod
to Gregson-Williams in "Where To?" This score will be challenging for
listeners to appreciate outside of context, roughly five minutes of
material expressing engaging action tones or melodic development, not
enough to compensate for what is heard elsewhere on the laborious,
nearly hour-long album. As if to concede its gains, the album ends with
a meandering atmospheric cue, "Whole Step Haiku," that completely
deflates whatever satisfaction the listener was rewarded with in "Where
To?" It's difficult to recommend the
X-Men Origins: Wolverine
score over this one, because it wasn't a stellar work itself, but
Beltrami fails to really adopt any kind of superior narrative approach,
forcing ambient brutality upon us rather than continued growth for the
character. Be prepared for a depressingly futile battle of cultural
stereotypes if you choose to explore Beltrami's take.
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