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Filmtracks Recommends: Buy it... only if you're prepared to hear a merging of Jerry Goldsmith's action and Elliot Goldenthal's instrumental arrangements for the purposes of wildly frenetic and creative action romps. Avoid it... if mere instrumental creativity alone cannot sustain your interest in a score that has no cohesive goal or thematic identity. Filmtracks Editorial Review: Soldier: (Joel McNeely) The only reason Soldier existed in the first place was to show actor Kurt Russell kick ass in his usual stoic fashion, and unfortunately for him and everyone else involved with the film, audiences weren't interested. Russell's act had worn, and the director of Mortal Kombat gives us a film in Soldier that is so trite and predictable that you're just begging for some of those wicked one-liners that Russell had performed in similar roles of yesteryear. The film lost a horrendous amount of money for Warner Brothers, with a return on investment so outrageous that you don't even see the film on late night cable re-runs. In this post-apocalyptic tale of military change, Russell is the outdated soldier of a previous generation, being replaced with a new batch of genetically enhanced clone soldiers that will go out into space and kick even more ass. As the discarded underdog, he defends some helpless citizens from the wrath of the army on a waste planet and reminds viewers that the one-liners aren't necessary to prove that those old sturdy products can sometimes get the job done better than the newest gizmos. Given the story and the film's predictable failure at the box office, Soldier would have seemed like a perfect match for composer Jerry Goldsmith, whose career at the time was littered with projects like Executive Decision, Chain Reaction, and Deep Rising. Instead, the assignment went to a composer who proved that a single year could define both his arrival and departure from the mainstream with just a pair of disastrous films. In his scores for The Avengers and Soldier, Joel McNeely finally scratched at that mainstream barrier that many score collectors had waited for him to burst through for several years. But both films failed so miserably that almost a decade later, McNeely would still be making a career off of films that most people never hear about. In the case of Soldier, the disappointment on screen as not due to a lack of effort by McNeely, who infused a devilish amount of creativity into a score that ultimately wouldn't matter. That's life, no? Clearly evident to any regular film score listener is the connection to Goldsmith in Soldier. McNeely had finished the score for Air Force One a few years earlier with an easy translation of Goldsmith's sound, and he obviously uses it as a basis in Soldier. At the outset of "New Soldiers vs. Old Soldiers," McNeely immediately pours on the rhythmic brass and percussion that had become trademark Goldsmith action material in the mid-1990's. With the lack of a distinct theme, McNeely stops short of violating copyright, but everyone in the room knows what he was up to. But he doesn't stop there. His almost non-stop bombast from the orchestra uses techniques from the books of Elliot Goldenthal and Bernard Herrmann to spice up the personality of a potentially stale product. So frenetic is the action music in Soldier that you can't help but admire the performances and recording. The brass section in particular is directed with a different approach, utilizing eighteen horns, twelve trumpets, twelve trombones, and six tubas arranged so that the trumpets in particular would feature a unique sound. McNeely mutes them for shrill, dissonant tones and splits them into three groups through the orchestra, allowing their ripping, ostinato-paced performances to tear over the highly percussive rhythms back and forth between the front two speakers. An outrageously large percussion section hammers home the point, with the amount of noise from the combined performances so brutal that they're almost mesmerizing. McNeely borrows influences from a few other places as well: John Barry progressions in "Todd is Exiled," Goldenthal horn techniques in "The Final Battle," and a finale inspired by John Williams' Spacecamp in "Redemption." The wailing mid-range brass elements in James Horner's Star Trek III Klingon music are presented later in the score as an accent to the mind-boggling rhythms. None of these references are particularly bothersome in Soldier, if only because McNeely is so relentless in his brutally layered variants on those concepts. There is no central theme in the score, with fragments in "Todd is Exiled" and "Redemption" never developed with any satisfaction; these ideas are not integrated into the frantic action pieces, either. As such, Soldier is a score of technical marvel but little overarching effectiveness. The same could be said about the film, of course, but you can't help but wonder how McNeely could spend so much time in the process of creating a unique sound for the score and simply brush aside the basic issues of cohesion. At some point, the more mainstream Goldsmith-like aspects of the score become freakishly extravagant, and the mass majority of listeners won't be able to tolerate it for great lengths. Indeed, with the trumpet battles in "The Chain Fight," your friends will flee the room, the neighbor's dog will start barking, and babies down the street will wail in distress. The outrageous arrangements in the score will impress you, but between their quickly tiresome antics and the score's lack of a coherent theme, Soldier is a tad overrated by other film music critics. Appreciate it if you can, but even the most avid fan of film score deconstruction could be beaten by the majority of this music. *** Track Listings: Total Time: 29:08
All artwork and sound clips from Soldier are Copyright © 1998, Varèse Sarabande. 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 11/2/98, updated 4/1/07. Review Version 4.1 - PHP (Filmtracks Publications). Copyright © 1998-2013, Christian Clemmensen. All rights reserved. |