Oliver Twist (Rachel Portman) - print version
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• Composed, Orchestrated, and Produced by:
Rachel Portman

• Conducted by:
David Snell

• Performed by:
The City of Prague Philharmonic

• Label:
Sony Classical

• Release Date:
September 20th, 2005

• Availability:
  Regular U.S. release.



Filmtracks Recommends:

Buy it... if your interest could be captured by a significantly ominous, minor key variation on Portman's usual string and woodwind leanings.

Avoid it... if no variation on Portman's lush, upbeat styles (which make an appearance here as well) will cause you to expand your collection of her works.


Filmtracks Editorial Review:

Oliver Twist: (Rachel Portman) Charles Dicken's first full novel was published in 1838, and as such, Oliver Twist is among the author's better known stories about early 19th-century London. It has been put onto the big screen several times, including most notably Sir David Lean's classic 1948 version and the Academy Award winning musical adaptation of the stage hit Oliver! in 1968. There are subthemes that not only connect the 2005 version by Roman Polanski to his previous film, The Pianist, but also to the director's own childhood. Polanski's intent in remaking Oliver Twist once again was to place an emphasis on the humor and eccentricities of the larger-than-life characters rather than get caught up in the doom and gloom of the destitute side of life in London at time. The usual score collaborator for Polanski, Wojciech Kilar, has taken a leave of absence from film music, which is unfortunate, given that Kilar's often dark sensibilities would seem to suit the Dickens story quite well. If you immediately turn and see that romance-writing veteran Rachel Portman has replaced Kilar, a certain amount of head scratching is warranted. But if you take Polanski's words to heart (that he wanted to make his Oliver Twist a profile of quirky characters), then perhaps a more sinister variation on Portman's Addicted to Love is exactly what's needed. Portman's career has been steadily retaining its strength since her initial Academy Award win almost a decade ago, with her first Emmy nomination coming earlier this year and several feature scores that maintain the status quo of her viability in Hollywood. While Oliver Twist hasn't proven to be the success that Polanski always has the potential of producing, Portman's score (performed with intent by the impressive City of Prague Philharmonic) is predictably solid in its intended place. For experts of Dickens' sour tales, the important thing to remember here is that Polanski and Portman met Dickens in the middle, so the assignment is not quite as awkward as one might first believe.

The opening sequences of London feature Portman's title theme for Oliver Twist in the typical positive, fluid string manner, and although this brighter vision of London might be more appropriate for a Jane Austen story, Portman abandons this lighthearted theme between the opening and closing cues. Structurally, this is the same old Portman; she is capable of producing truly unique horror and suspense music, as heard in The Manchurian Candidate last year and especially The Truth About Charlie a few years earlier, but that's not how she went about Oliver Twist. Her string and woodwind sensibilities are intact, but think of this score as a significantly heavier variation on Addicted to Love. The frenetic action sequences in that comedy score have been turned into a dramatic minor key the likes of which Portman hasn't shown us yet. Her preference to operate in lengthy rhythmic sequences once again makes her music appealing on album, even though she does her concerted best to provide ominous tones throughout. From the eighth track on album, these rhythms combine with a subtheme best described as the either the Fagan or "bad Oliver" representation. Rooted in uncharacteristically strong bass strings, Portman provides a simple, alternating theme in "The Robbery" remarkably similar to the theme John Williams conjured for Lord Voldemort in his first two Harry Potter efforts (and it goes all the way back to Toto's title theme for Dune, if you want to stretch it that far back). By the sixteenth cue on album, the woodwinds have descended so far into the bass regions that the music is a barely recognizable mutation of Portman's styles. A rousing, positive finale pulls the score from these depths for fans of the syrupy Portman norm. But the darker side of Portman is on display here, and her ventures into the minor key with bass strings and bass bassoons are an intriguing variant for fans tired of her usual upbeat writing. One significant flaw is that she does not provide a recognizable maturation of any musical idea for the boy himself, leaving the emotions of the story as a whole as her inspiration. Despite critics' appraisal of Oliver Twist as "the same old Portman," give the second half of the score a good listen and you'll hear a worthy variation on that tune. ****



Track Listings:

Total Time: 53:18
    • 1. Streets of London (2:01)
    • 2. The Road to the Workhouse (3:03)
    • 3. A Kind Old Woman (2:05)
    • 4. Oliver Runs Away (2:31)
    • 5. The Artful Dodger (1:49)
    • 6. Fagin's Loot (2:55)
    • 7. The Game (2:15)
    • 8. Oliver Learns the Hard Way (5:39)
    • 9. Watching Mr Brownlow's House (2:17)
    • 10. The Escape from Fagin (1:13)
    • 11. Prelude to a Robbery (1:49)
    • 12. The Robbery (5:09)
    • 13. Toby and the Wounded Oliver (1:20)
    • 14. Nancy's Secret Journey (2:29)
    • 15. The Murder (2:28)
    • 16. Wanted: Bill Sykes and a Fierce Dog (2:50)
    • 17. The Death of Bill Sykes (6:12)
    • 18. Newgate Prison (5:21)




All artwork and sound clips from Oliver Twist are Copyright © 2005, Sony Classical. The reviews and notes contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Filmtracks Publications. Audio clips can be heard using RealPlayer but cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 11/12/05, updated 11/13/05. Review Version 4.1 - PHP (Filmtracks Publications). Copyright © 2005-2013, Christian Clemmensen. All rights reserved.