film franchise has never been destined to achieve the status of high
art, but its five entries from 2019 to 2023 secured an immensely
faithful following. Essentially one long story of a tumultuous love
affair between an attractive young duo, the concept explores endlessly
familiar staples in romantic dramas. By the culmination of the five
films in 2023's
, the leads, Tessa and Hardin,
finally realize that the two of them are the inevitable couple that
audiences realized long ago, but not before the young man is forced to
reconcile with the demons of his past. The successful author seeks
forgiveness from an old flame, Nathalie, in Portugal, and the peace
between the two of them allows Hardin to finally approach and propose to
Tessa, making young women around the world weep with joy. The financial
grosses of the five films declined with each entry in a mirror
reflection of worsening critical reception, but
enthusiasm
persisted in its fan base. The music for the films remained consistent
in style and tone during the first four entries, contemporary light
drama and suspense atmospheres provided by Justin Caine Burnett for
(2022). Perhaps in part due
to the countless song placements utilized in these films, the scores
struggled to enunciate a central identity throughout the first four
entries. Both Burnett and Kallis developed core themes, especially as
representing the Tessa and Hardin relationship, though these ideas never
seemed to take flight. Anonymous washes of keyboarding, strings,
electric bass, and synths tended to exude a wet, dreamlike fog for a
fair portion of these scores, with poignant thematic moments only
occasional. That equation is significantly upended by Kallis for
, a marked refocusing and general improvement on
the presence of the franchise's score material.
Over the course of his career, Kallis has shown a knack
for conjuring lyrical appeal in his film scores, obscure works like
Lev Yashin, the Dream Goalkeeper conveying remarkable melodic
grace without the need for sizable performance ensembles. Melancholy
piano performances in particular are a specialty. These tendencies
culminate in the maturation of the composer's
After-related
material in
After Everything, a more optimistic and generally
positive work than his prior two. Cues like "You Taped It" and "Cliff
Diving" return to the earlier scores' electronic darkness and turmoil as
Hardin continues to struggle with his past, but these moments are
relatively brief. Instead, the whole mix of Kallis' music is brightened
for a far more crisp and organic sound from the strings and piano in
this work. The 40-piece string group is augmented primarily by that
piano, but Kallis also applies guitars (both acoustic and electric) to a
better end here as well. Solo string accents are embellished at times,
too. These elements are afforded a more classically inclined tone of
clarity rather than the dreamy, slightly electronic haze that guided the
same instruments before. That said, the composer's slight, barely
noticeable use of synth vocal effects in a few places could have been
more prominent to maintain the quasi-fantasy aspect of this particular
romance. Still, the personality of
After Everything is, despite
its diversions into source-related pop infusions, so sincerely heartfelt
and even ebullient at times that it elevates the narrative immensely for
this closure to the story. Part of this success owes to Kallis' much
better development of his themes, taking a few recurring ideas from his
prior scores and expanding upon them to revelatory new ends. Fresh
melodic material is also introduced, some of it dedicated to single
scenes, and this accessible technique extends the same impressively
heartfelt and extroverted emotional appeal. The earlier scores in the
franchise, while more than adequate for their task, never tended to
maintain a coherent narrative by themselves, but Kallis's approach to
After Everything is remarkably different.
The heart and soul of the franchise's theme is the one
representing Tessa and Hardin that has slowly emerged over the prior two
scores and thrives here. This love theme was initially vaguely similar
to ascending figures from Burnett's main theme for the start of the
franchise. In Kallis'
After We Fell, this idea emerged in "We Are
All Fools in Love" on dreamy keyboarding, a piano joined by cello in
"Pain" before the idea shifts to a hopeful string fragment in "Random
Homeless Man" and becomes faint in "Tell Me What." By
After Ever
Happy, the theme reprised its wet keyboarded mode in "Love is Love"
and, to a lesser degree, "So Proud" and "The Rain." In
After
Everything, a more traditional presentation of piano expresses this
theme more than anything else, though it is explored in full on nicely
layered strings in "Love is Patient" before dissolving into more somber
piano and solo cello-driven contemplation by the end. The love theme
fights against dissonance early in "Flashback at the Club," reprises the
previous score's more ambient demeanor in "Visiting Natalie," and
disintegrates during "We're Over" while defiantly surviving late in "You
Taped It." In the critical "Remembering Tessa," the theme meanders on
piano before a lovely ensemble performance of the descending secondary
phrase at 1:02, a cello then exploring that phrase further. This B
phrase of the theme is where Kallis truly earns his money in this score,
this portion occupying many of the most prominent moments of romance in
the work. The remainder of "Remembering Tessa" slowly builds momentum
again with the theme on piano, a subtle driver of Hardin's persistence
of yearning. The theme's primary phrasing then gains courage throughout
"That is Success" before restraining itself tentatively in the second
half of "Without Your Consent" and during moments of hope to "Natalie's
House." It very carefully navigates "Go and Talk to Her" on piano with
subtle electronic choral backing, adopts the wet, synth-like atmosphere
from before in "Hardin's Best Man Speech," and is finally more clearly
carried by piano before a rousing ensemble rendition in "The Proposal,"
the overflowing romance of the descending secondary phrasing serving as
the payoff for the entire franchise's music.
Another returning motif in
After Everything is
one of vulnerability that doubles for adversity, a rising cello figure
against other strings that prominently gained fandom after its use in
"It's Not OK" from
After We Fell. This tool can be used for
different characters as necessary, and here it shifts to Hardin. The
solo cello resumes the identity in "It Was Our Story," adding full
strings for depth. More interestingly, however, Kallis smartly
translates the motif into a faster, sunnier version for better days
early in "Beautiful Memories." The secondary phrase of the love theme
interjects at 1:35 with subtle acoustic guitar accent before strings
provide a more recognizable version of the vulnerability theme to close
the cue. For the character of Nathalie, the composer offers a very
pretty new theme with quietly propulsive energy. Shades of its structure
inform "Visiting Natalie" without a direct reference despite some nice
guitar work in the cue, but the theme itself evokes the dreamy
atmosphere of previous scores in "Without Your Consent" and at the
outset of "Natalie's House." Kallis opts to explore a host of other
singular dramatic ideas in the score, starting with a touchingly
dramatic posture with acoustic guitar in "Visiting Natalie" and "I'm
Trying." Compelling string layers for a lovely pensive moment in
"Christian's Advice" are joined by an offshoot of the love theme for the
highly redeeming "I Love You Son" with female vocal effect. A cheery and
buoyant idea flows out of ambient haze in "A Lot of Bravery," and the
wedding scene aligns the formality of a "Nora and Landon's Wedding"
motif with on-screen violin performances. On the opposite side of the
score are the location-related diversions of contemporary coolness,
lively strings, guitar, and drums bursting in "Portuguese Coast" while
less attractive synthetic light rock manipulation of keyboard, electric
bass, and strings prevails in "Sailing." An awkward remix at the end of
the album is best avoided; it almost sounds like rear channel sound
effects intrude. That 47-minute album released by Kallis himself
includes a suite arrangement, "After Everything," which opens with the
upbeat version of the vulnerability theme in "Beautiful Memories,"
combines the large string portion of "Love is Patient" with the
culmination in "The Proposal," and finishes with the highlight of
"Remembering Tessa" and a neatly edited conclusion. Altogether,
After
Everything is an impressively lovely and thoughtful maturation of
Kallis' music for this franchise, and it makes for an effortlessly
relaxing listening experience.
**** @Amazon.com: CD or
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