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Babe (Nigel Westlake) (1995)
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Average: 3.45 Stars
***** 21 5 Stars
**** 35 4 Stars
*** 28 3 Stars
** 15 2 Stars
* 7 1 Stars
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Composed, Co-Conducted, and Produced by:
Nigel Westlake

Co-Conducted by:
David Stanhope
Carl Vine

Performed by:
The Victorian Philharmonic Orchestra

The Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
1995 Varèse Album Tracks   ▼
2015 ABC Classics Album Tracks   ▼
2021 Varèse Album Tracks   ▼
1995 Varèse Album Cover Art
2015 ABC Classics Album 2 Cover Art
2021 Varèse Album 3 Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(August 15th, 1995)

ABC Classics
(July 8th, 2015)

Varèse Sarabande
(January 8th, 2021)
The 1995 Varèse Sarabande album is a regular U.S. release. The 2015 ABC Classics re-recording is also a commercial release but less readily available internationally. The expanded 2022 Varèse product is limited to 1,500 copies and available primarily through soundtrack specialty outlets for an initial price of $20. It was also made available digitally.
The insert of the 1995 album includes no extra information about the score or film. That of the 2015 and 2021 albums offer notation about both.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,265
Written 8/9/22
Buy it... if you forgive blatant and overwhelming infusions of classical music in your film scores, Babe an exercise in substantial editing and rearrangement to yield a somewhat effective standalone score.

Avoid it... if your tolerance of cute classical pomposity equals your disdain for talking pigs, Nigel Westlake finding the appropriately overwrought tone but assembling a stylish narrative mess for the story.

Babe: (Nigel Westlake) Talking animal movies can range from lovably charming to abysmally laughable, and 1995's Babe mostly manages the former. The adaptation of a 1983 novel pushed the limits of special effects at the time to show an alternative to "Animal Farm" tendencies by barnyard creatures not keen on letting humans eat them. An orphaned piglet is won at a rural county fair in a storybook-like setting and brought home to be raised by a motherly Border Collie. The animals suffer all the usual loss of family as some are eaten or sold off, and the pig, Babe, ultimately makes himself famous by becoming a master sheep herder. It helps, of course, that the animals can all talk to one other. Also of interest is that sheep have passwords, apparently, so that any dog (or pig) trying to herd them can use vocalized commands rather than simply chase them around. (For the sheep that belong to this farm, the password is "Baa Ram Ewe," a far cry from the sheep that follow Donald J. Trump, which respond to the password "Lock Her Up" but might be just as compliant with "Baa Ram Ewe.") While Babe is a comedy aimed at children, it does have some darkly dramatic passages, and the combination generated massive box office returns and countless awards nominations. A sequel and resulting video game were met with derision, however. The situation behind the scenes with Babe wasn't all that pretty, producer George Miller and director Chris Noonan not leaving the project on speaking terms, and the latter not asked to return for the sequel. Nor was the project one to remember for veteran composer Jerry Goldsmith, who was so tickled by the film's story that he managed to squeeze it into his busy schedule. The composer was eager to produce music for lighter fare at that juncture, and he had written about 80% of the score and was within a week of recording Babe when the filmmakers had an allergic reaction to his demo recordings. They asked Goldsmith to re-write much of the score, but the composer couldn't fit that time into his schedule and bowed out.

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