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The Brothers Grimm (Dario Marianelli) (2005)
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Average: 3.86 Stars
***** 298 5 Stars
**** 153 4 Stars
*** 97 3 Stars
** 57 2 Stars
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Strange score but I really like it..
dts - October 8, 2006, at 9:08 p.m.
1 comment  (2869 views)
A masterpiece
Sheridan - September 24, 2006, at 5:26 a.m.
1 comment  (2775 views)
New Review at ScoreStats
Derek Tersmette - August 30, 2006, at 1:20 a.m.
1 comment  (2897 views)
Hollow Man?   Expand
Joe de Man - May 31, 2006, at 6:57 a.m.
2 comments  (4509 views) - Newest posted August 1, 2006, at 9:02 p.m. by Thom
Well, I really love it
huntress - February 28, 2006, at 4:47 p.m.
1 comment  (2394 views)
Nope. Don't agree....
Lyell - December 23, 2005, at 11:33 a.m.
1 comment  (2569 views)
More...

Composed and Produced by:

Orchestrated and Conducted by:
Benjamin Wallfisch
Audio Samples   ▼
Total Time: 71:41
• 1. Dickensian Beginnings (3:23)
• 2. Shrewd Thespians (0:42)
• 3. Red Riding Hood (3:56)
• 4. The Queen's Story (5:13)
• 5. The Forest Comes to Life (9:14)
• 6. Jake's Pledge (2:03)
• 7. Muddy (3:08)
• 8. Inside the Tower (3:12)
• 9. The Queen Awakens (6:25)
• 10. The French Arrive (2:52)
• 11. Burning the Forest (2:24)
• 12. The Eclipse Begins (6:52)
• 13. A Slice of Quiche Would Be Nice (4:37)
• 14. It's You: You Know the Story (8:02)
• 15. Sleeping Beauties (3:50)
• 16. And They Lived Happily Ever After (3:40)
• 17. End Credits (2:08)

Album Cover Art
Milan Records
(August 23rd, 2005)
Regular U.S. release.
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #588
Written 11/12/05
Buy it... if the time is right to finally hear a completely fresh, if not overbearingly brutal orchestral action score that is as harmonically fascinating as it is rhythmically brutal.

Avoid it... if you prefer the more easily enjoyable fluff being written for fairy tales by the average American composers of the modern age.

Marianelli
Marianelli
The Brothers Grimm: (Dario Marianelli) Whenever you approach a Terry Gilliam film, whether you're a film reviewer, a soundtrack reviewer, or an everyday moviegoer, you have to expect yourself to be transported into a macabre world of fantasy where terrible things happen simply because they're funny and unexpected. There has been a significant time since Gilliam's last project, and while The Brothers Grimm showed much promise in its long evolution, the film will be placed like many of his other efforts on the back burner of cult status. Since working with Michael Kamen on Brazil and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen, Gilliam has rarely put forth much attention to the quality of the scores for his films, nor have those films really needed spectacular musical accompaniment. But the big screen interpretation of the fable for The Brothers Grimm proved to be an exception. To describe the plot of this tale would do too much injustice to the film, but in a nutshell, two brothers who scam villagers by posing as 19th Century European ghostbusters are at a loss when they are suddenly thrust into the task of solving a real mystery. Needless to say, plenty of horrible things happen (it makes you wonder what would turn out if Gilliam and Tim Burton collaborated) and a menace lurks in every dark corner of their journey. Originally to be scored with gypsy music provided by Goran Bregovic, The Brothers Grimm eventually became a project too demanding of a large-scale orchestral score, and Italian scoring veteran Dario Marianelli was hired to write his first Hollywood feature score. Listening to Europeans --and especially the Italians-- write these kinds of scores is a refreshing change from the same old Hollywood popcorn scores provided by American composers these days. Elliot Goldenthal would be an exception, but an artist like Marianelli seems better equipped to combine the intelligence and complexity of Goldenthal's writing with the romantic, Mediterranean sensibilities often expected out of Western orchestras. For The Brothers Grimm, Marianelli would certainly not disappoint.

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