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Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom (Rupert Gregson-Williams) (2023)
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Average: 2.97 Stars
***** 20 5 Stars
**** 38 4 Stars
*** 53 3 Stars
** 41 2 Stars
* 21 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:
Rupert Gregson-Williams

Co-Orchestrated and Co-Conducted by:
Alastair King

Co-Conducted by:
Jasper Randall
Ben Parry

Co-Orchestrated by:
Paul Campbell
Thomas Bryla
Evan Rodgers
Alec Roberts

Additional Music by:
Steffen Thum
Joshua Pacey
Total Time: 52:29
• 1. Deep End* (3:01)
• 2. Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom (1:59)
• 3. Manta on the Bridge (3:39)
• 4. Call From the Deep (1:50)
• 5. The Real Superheroes (1:11)
• 6. Not Normal (1:37)
• 7. Necrus Rises (3:01)
• 8. Only Child (2:57)
• 9. Grasshoppers (2:44)
• 10. Mera Joins the Chase (1:54)
• 11. Orichalcum (3:45)
• 12. Black Manta (2:04)
• 13. Swamp Walk (1:31)
• 14. Promise Me (1:21)
• 15. You Wanted Your Revenge (1:35)
• 16. My Eternal Night is Ending (3:31)
• 17. Go and Feast (2:29)
• 18. Necrus Arrival (3:16)
• 19. Your Blood Will Do (1:37)
• 20. Cave In (2:13)
• 21. A True (2:52)
• 22. The Next Chapter (2:22)

* performed by X Ambassadors
Album Cover Art
WaterTower Music
(December 22nd, 2023)
Regular U.S. release.
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,045
Written 1/14/24
Buy it... if you appreciated the style, themes, and personality of the original Aquaman, its sequel reprising much of the same material in similar incarnations.

Avoid it... if you require compelling new development in this franchise's music, because Rupert Gregson-Williams struggles to find solid new footing amongst the plethora of lesser references to the first score's themes.

Gregson-Williams
Gregson-Williams
Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom: (Rupert Gregson-Williams) Sometimes, the best choice is to not make a sequel movie, or to at least wait until better inspiration for a story comes along. That was the dilemma for several years with DC's Aquaman property on screen. Questions about the direction of the story and which actors to include swirled after the studio couldn't resist pushing for any money grabbing continuation of the 2018 DC adaptation. Friction surrounding James Mamoa and Amber Heard's roles caused the plot of Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom to morph into an odd buddy flick for Arthur Curry and his vanquished brother, Orm, and the two are forced to reconcile their distrust to defeat a returning Black Manta and Kordax, both of whom tied to a lost kingdom of Necrus and artifacts that cause all sorts of hell when badly used. Along the way, Arthur's own familial duties come into focus and give Aquaman more to defend than just a kingdom aspiring to join the world community by the end. In this case, the sequel not only confuses audiences with its fairly obvious indecision about how much of Arthur's wife, Mera, to feature in the final cut, but it tries to balance the added comedy with an eye-rolling underlying message about global climate change. Audiences were largely indifferent to Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, its own deficiencies compounding upon general discontent with the superhero genre to extend studio disappoint with these universes. The music provided by Rupert Gregson-Williams and his extended team for Aquaman was a surprising guilty pleasure, its rather simple regurgitation of 1990's Hans Zimmer power anthem basics, blended with Vangelis techniques on synthetics and a variety of rather unique mannerisms, gave the score a distinctive character even if it largely lacked much structural intelligence. In its favor was a tendency of its many themes to provide for easy listening in the Remote Control Productions era of mindless Zimmer emulation. The same team returns to supply a continuation of that music for Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, this time aided by a different, arguably inferior credits song, "Deep End" by X Ambassadors, that doesn't serve the story as well as "Everything I Need" in the prior entry.

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