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Army of Thieves (Hans Zimmer/Steve Mazzaro) (2021)
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Average: 3.7 Stars
***** 137 5 Stars
**** 78 4 Stars
*** 47 3 Stars
** 41 2 Stars
* 36 1 Stars
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Great music of German power and brains!
ZimmerFan1 - December 26, 2021, at 9:32 a.m.
1 comment  (429 views)
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Co-Composed and Co-Produced by:

Co-Composed, Orchestrated, and Co-Produced by:
Steve Mazzaro
Total Time: 68:57
• 1. Army of Thieves (2:08)
• 2. The Test (5:25)
• 3. Hans Wagner (2:40)
• 4. Good Samaritan (1:17)
• 5. A Life Less Ordinary (3:11)
• 6. Cathouse (5:08)
• 7. Here's the Plan (2:09)
• 8. Warming Up My Instruments (2:18)
• 9. It's Already Done (1:26)
• 10. Interpol (2:41)
• 11. Longing for More (3:08)
• 12. The Robbing of a Bank (1:58)
• 13. Creating a Diversion (2:51)
• 14. Safecracker Extraordinaire (4:05)
• 15. According to Plan (1:56)
• 16. That's My Bike (4:37)
• 17. Long Walk Home (1:05)
• 18. Transferring the Safe (2:53)
• 19. Gwendoline (1:03)
• 20. Escape in Switzerland (4:34)
• 21. Ludwig Dieter (7:49)
• 22. Firewall* (2:34)
• 23. Goin' Crazy* (2:02)

* performed by Stephanie Olmanni
Album Cover Art
Milan Records
(November 12th, 2021)
Commercial digital release only, with high resolution options.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,040
Written 12/6/21
Buy it... if you can open your mind to a rambunctious, energetic, and humorous combination of electronic/dance action propulsion and heavier, Richard Wagner-inspired melodrama in Hans Zimmer's comfort zone.

Avoid it... if you have no patience with the brazenly electronic pilfering of the heist genre, especially by the time cute sound effects and outrageous vocals make you evaluate your sanity.

Zimmer
Zimmer
Army of Thieves: (Hans Zimmer/Steve Mazzaro) As a standalone diversion in the Army of the Dead franchise created by Zack Snyder, the late 2021 streaming film Army of Thieves serves as a prequel to the earlier, initial entry about zombies taking over Las Vegas. The purpose of Army of Thieves is to explain the backstory of the safecracking Ludwig Dieter character, establishing why the defeat of the safe in Army of the Dead represented the culmination of his efforts to thwart the famed safes of German locksmith Hans Wagner. Before becoming Dieter and joining the doomed Las Vegas gang of thieves, the man lives a mundane life as a bank teller in Germany but is recruited by a different group of thieves to help bust into Wagner's other three safes. Achieving success in his plight comes at the expense of his relationships and, in the next film, his life, and there's something dissatisfying about spending so much time establishing a character in such a circumstance when his rather unhappy destiny is already known. From a musical standpoint, the film leans heavily on German composer Richard Wagner's "Der Ring des Nibelungen" operas to explain the motivation of the story's Hans Wagner locksmith and his safes. As the protagonist breaks into each of the ring cycle safes, he plays music from the operas and rambles through a commentary on how the music is significant to that particular target. The story of the Rhinegold informs the first job, while the Valkyrie and Siegfried follow. (Twilight of the Gods is saved for Army of the Dead, "Siegfried's Funeral March" playing in that film.) The stories of the operas inform Dieter's own journey over these pictures, the music of the Ring Cycle thus playing an outsized role. For the rest of the music in Army of Thieves, Tom Holkenborg was originally slated to return. To nobody's surprise, however, Hans Zimmer and his current, prime Remote Control Productions associate, Steve Mazzaro, stepped in to provide the prequel's score instead. Zimmer is, naturally, an immense enthusiast of Wagner's work, so this project likely ticked his fancy. There are no early indications about the breakdown of duties between Zimmer and Mazzaro on this score, though the amount of other crew involved was surprisingly minimal given the typical breadth of a Zimmer work.

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