SUPPORT FILMTRACKS! WE EARN A
COMMISSION ON WHAT YOU BUY:
Amazon.com
Amazon.co.uk
eBay
Amazon.ca
Glisten Effect
Editorial Reviews
Scoreboard Forum
Viewer Ratings
Composers
Awards
   NEWEST MAJOR REVIEWS:
     1. Weapons
    2. The Naked Gun (2025)
   3. Dracula: A Love Tale
  4. Fantastic Four: First Steps
 5. Superman (2025)
6. Jurassic World Rebirth


   CURRENT BEST-SELLING SCORES:
       1. Top Gun (2-CD)
      2. Avatar: The Way of Water
     3. The Wild Robot
    4. Gladiator (3-CD)
   5. Young Woman and the Sea
  6. Spider-Man 2 (3-CD)
 7. Cutthroat Island (2-CD)
8. Willow (2-CD)
   CURRENT MOST POPULAR REVIEWS:
         1. Spider-Man
        2. Alice in Wonderland
       3. The Matrix
      4. Gladiator
     5. Wicked
    6. Batman (1989)
   7. Raiders of the Lost Ark
  8. The Wild Robot
 9. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice
10. Doctor Strange: Multiverse
Home Page
Barbie
(2023)
Album Cover Art
Composed and Produced by:
Mark Ronson
Andrew Wyatt

Co-Orchestrated and Co-Conducted by:
Matt Dunkley

Co-Conducted by:
Ben Parry

Co-Orchestrated by:
Brandon Bost
Labels Icon
LABEL & RELEASE DATE
WaterTower Music
(August 4th, 2023)
Availability Icon
ALBUM AVAILABILITY
The score-only album is a commercial digital release, with a vinyl option.
Awards
AWARDS
The score was nominated for a Grammy Award.
Also See Icon
ALSO SEE





Decorative Nonsense
PRINTER FRIENDLY VIEW
(inverts site colors)



Availability | Awards | Viewer Ratings | Comments | Track Listings | Notes
Buy it... on the score-only album if you intend to pair it with the songs in the film, the two connected too closely for the score to be appreciable on its own.

Avoid it... if you expect the composers to devise a score that tells the story independently, its adequate extension of the songs supplying an insufficient and wayward narrative.
Review Icon
EDITORIAL REVIEW
FILMTRACKS TRAFFIC RANK: #2,071
WRITTEN 8/13/23
Shopping Icon
BUY IT

Barbie: (Mark Ronson/Andrew Wyatt) In the age of woke progressivism, writer and director Greta Gerwig managed the impossible: adapt Mattel's Barbie fashion dolls into a billion-dollar grossing cinematic phenomenon. With no lack of the color pink, 2023's Barbie navigates the minefields surrounding the concept by making it ponderously self-aware. The titular character, perfect in her fantasy Barbieland with the hopeless Ken doll, suddenly experiences an existential crisis, and the two leads travel to the real world and interact with actual Mattel employees to help them discover new purposes in life. The comedy is filled with enough sociopolitical controversy to stir unrest in audiences at both ends of the belief spectrum, but ultimately the movie's left-leaning tilt is a defining characteristic. Men dragged into watching the event were met with an equal amount of commentary about patriarchal mores, as the movie affords Ken no less of a journey. The soundtrack for the stunningly successful film proved to be a popular powerhouse itself, mainly because Gerwig sought a wide range of popular artists to write and perform new songs specifically tailored to specific scenes in the movie. While the Ken character does receive musical numbers to himself, Barbie is more of a third-person, song-driven narrative rather than a musical for on-screen singing. The director employed seasoned songwriter and producer Mark Ronson to coordinate these songs, co-writing several of them along with collaborator Andrew Wyatt. The two had won an Academy Award for composing the super-popular "Shallow" from A Star is Born a few years earlier. Interestingly, Gerwig had originally hired composer Alexandre Desplat to write the score for Barbie. The two had collaborated successfully on Little Women, but Desplat bowed out of Barbie at some point. In retrospect, it's not difficult to see that the project was one completely ill-suited to Desplat, though it would have been humorous to hear him adapt his trademark sound into that which ultimately succeeded him in the film.

Rather than hire another veteran film composer for Barbie, Gerwig asked Ronson and Wyatt to write the underscore for the film themselves. The task was largely new for the pair, and they were initially quite nervous about handling the task. Fortunately for them, the bulk of the film's running time, and certainly all the most obvious scenes featuring music, is handled by the songs. The situation was similar in ways to the comedic approach facing Leo Birenberg and Zach Robinson for Weird: The Al Yankovic Story the previous year, though the parody element is diminished in the equation here. Ronson and Wyatt had two strategic options for the not-insignificant amount of score material required in between the song placements: write music serving as a straight instrumental extension of the songs or attempt to create a narrative within the score alone. Birenberg and Robinson had selected the latter approach for their parody, but Ronson and Wyatt instead got lost halfway in between. Their score can't decide the extent to which it uses the songs' melodies and instrumental personalities as a guiding beacon, which leaves some cues dripping with song connections while other stumble in their attempt to define a distinct, score-only narrative. Some of the better (and appropriate) song melodies don't make it into the score while others are over-utilized. Motifs largely unique to the score, meanwhile, don't have enough character on their own to serve an overarching purpose. The score is adequate at every moment, and it's even quite clever at times, but it fails to really live up to the potential that it could have enjoyed if the songs had more cohesively driven its spotting. The songs co-written by Ronson and Wyatt are more likely to be included in the score, and, as to be expected, some of them have more malleable and memorable melodies to adapt. Five or six of the roughly twenty songs featured in the film are considered tentpoles of the musical overall. They don't really have much to do with each other because of their disparate creation process, but the soundtrack as a whole enjoys a positive, somewhat 1990's-driven demeanor with only the three Ken songs providing a dose of toxic masculinity to steer away from the target demographic.


Ratings Icon
VIEWER RATINGS
215 TOTAL VOTES
Average: 3.16 Stars
***** 35 5 Stars
**** 56 4 Stars
*** 62 3 Stars
** 34 2 Stars
* 28 1 Stars
  (View results for all titles)

Comments Icon
COMMENTS
1 TOTAL COMMENTS
Read All Start New Thread Search Comments
Pink Pussy: A Barbie Parody - with John Debney music??
GK - August 17, 2023, at 9:24 a.m.
1 comment  (873 views)
More...


Track Listings Icon
TRACK LISTINGS
Total Time: 44:34
• 1. Creation of Barbie (2:02)
• 2. Pink (Barbie Opening Theme) (2:58)
• 3. Beach Off (1:48)
• 4. Ken Thinks (0:59)
• 5. Stairway to Weird Barbie (1:48)
• 6. Thoughts of Death (1:58)
• 7. Send Me Through the Portal (1:30)
• 8. Ken Makes a Discovery (1:34)
• 9. Bus Stop Billie (1:33)
• 10. Mattel (2:13)
• 11. Meeting Ruth (2:23)
• 12. Lose These Chuckleheads (2:10)
• 13. You Failed Me! (3:38)
• 14. Alan vs Kens (1:38)
• 15. Deprogramming (5:13)
• 16. Warmth of Your Gaze (3:52)
• 17. An Ending (2:26)
• 18. I Don't Have an Ending (3:37)
• 19. What Was I Made For? (Epilogue) (1:33)

Notes Icon
NOTES AND QUOTES
There exists no official packaging for the digital version of this album.
Copyright © 2023-2025, Filmtracks Publications. All rights reserved.
The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten
or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from Barbie are Copyright © 2023, WaterTower Music and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 8/13/23 (and not updated significantly since).
Reviews Preload Scoreboard decoration Ratings Preload Composers Preload Awards Preload Home Preload Search Preload