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Batman & Robin (Elliot Goldenthal) (1997)
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Average: 3.12 Stars
***** 203 5 Stars
**** 212 4 Stars
*** 259 3 Stars
** 175 2 Stars
* 159 1 Stars
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Mitchell Kyler Martin - December 29, 2016, at 8:33 p.m.
2 comments  (1404 views) - Newest posted February 5, 2017, at 6:43 p.m. by Freddyfrito
Not bad...
Richard Kleiner - July 27, 2012, at 10:09 p.m.
1 comment  (1665 views)
Batman & Robin Formula
Bruno Costa - December 2, 2010, at 11:46 a.m.
1 comment  (1856 views)
Batman & Robin score
Tim Ockenden - June 26, 2010, at 3:07 a.m.
1 comment  (2654 views)
WHERE?!
Mitchell Hanson - December 11, 2009, at 1:47 p.m.
1 comment  (2190 views)
Batman and Robin Score 2 CD Download   Expand
Bat Freak - January 24, 2007, at 3:16 a.m.
2 comments  (8363 views) - Newest posted July 24, 2007, at 1:54 p.m. by jill
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Composed by:

Conducted by:
Jonathan Sheffer

Produced by:
Matthias Gohl
Audio Samples   ▼
Variation #1 Tracks   ▼
Variation #2 Tracks   ▼
Album Cover Art
Bootlegs
(1999)
No commercial release of the score is available. Several varying 2-CD bootlegs exist.
No official cover or insert exists for the bootlegs.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #239
Written 5/4/03, Revised 3/24/09
Buy it... if you were unsatisfied with the wild inconsistencies of Batman Forever and want to hear a better focused version of Elliot Goldenthal's sound for the caped crusader.

Avoid it... if you threw away your Batman Forever score CD and used its jewel case to replace the one you cracked on your Batman album.

Goldenthal
Goldenthal
Batman & Robin: (Elliot Goldenthal) By 1997, the Batman concept that had once captivated audiences with its elegantly bleak vision of good versus evil had dissolved into a MTV light show with an excess of characters and total lack of consistency and common sense. Director Joel Schumacher's return to the franchise after his monumentally ridiculous (but still fiscally viable) Batman Forever drove the final nail into coffin of the Batman series, at least for several years until audiences shook off bad memories of Batman & Robin and Christopher Nolan could resurrect the concept in the mid-2000's. Suffering from the same overdose of wild eye candy as Batman Forever, the predictable and repetitive Batman & Robin introduced two new villains, a bat girl, another Bruce Wayne flame, and, of course, another different actor as Batman. The entire project was a disastrous example of franchise stupidity, and like Poison Ivy's garden, the film was overgrown in size and lacking in substance. Despite calls by thousands of upset fans for a return of Danny Elfman to the franchise (which was never going to happen), Elliot Goldenthal returned with many of his devices from Batman Forever (which had, at the very least, used Elfman's most famous, rising two-note major key progression liberally). Disgruntled fans were treated to another Batman production which used Elfman's theme in the trailers but forced Goldenthal's less coherent music on the viewers of the film. Due to a cold reception by fans to every aspect of Batman Forever (except for fans of the Seal song that highlighted its pop album), the fourth installment would never experience a score-only album release. The shame of this reality is the fact that Batman & Robin is a better effort by Goldenthal than its predecessor. His debut into the Batman series had been a wishy-washy mess of carnival cues, with several lengthy sequences of unlistenable garbage sprinkled throughout heroic orchestral music that never sustained itself long enough to make a lasting difference in the film or on album.

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