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Review of Captain Phillips (Henry Jackman/Hans Zimmer/Various)
Co-Composed and Produced by:
Henry Jackman
Al Clay
Jack Dolman
Co-Composed by:
Hans Zimmer
Label and Release Date:
Varèse Sarabande
(October 8th, 2013)
Availability:
Regular U.S. release.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you seek to punish yourself for your sins or are merely curious about what a frustrating disaster of an ensemble film scoring project sounds like when finished.

Avoid it... if you have no interest in supporting any music that results from an insatiable director who demands that cues be re-written dozens of times and then the output is miserable, droning muck.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
Captain Phillips: (Henry Jackman/Hans Zimmer/Various) Even Barack Obama has made wise-cracks about the last thing he expected to deal with while being the President of the United States: pirates on the high seas. The impoverished nation of Somalia has brought piracy on those seas back to life in the 21st Century, their youth boarding large merchant vessels and demanding insurance money ransoms for them and their crews, sometimes successfully. Thanks to a rescue operation involving the U.S. Navy and written accounts of the event after the fact, the American container ship Maersk Alabama has become the most famous of these. When the vessel was hijacked in 2009, Obama gave authorization for an American destroyer and a team of Navy SEALs to execute the pirates when the Maersk Alabama's crew came under extreme danger, Captain Richard Phillips in the most precarious position as a bartering chip aboard a lifeboat. Remarkably, the crew survived and Maersk Alabama was attacked by Somali pirates again in 2010 and 2011. Merchant vessels have been blasting Britney Spears music at approaching pirate skiffs to ward them off more recently. Equally effective, perhaps, would be some of the music from the 2013 movie adaptation of Phillips' novel about the event, Captain Phillips, directed by action and suspense veteran Paul Greengrass. Receiving tremendous critical acclaim, the film did come under some fire for historical inaccuracies, especially in light of conflicting accounts about the SEAL kill shots that ended the crisis. Tom Hanks was widely praised in the titular role, however, and a massive box office preceded expected awards recognition. One aspect of the film that was a total disaster, however, was its soundtrack. A handful of source songs were employed in the film without issue, but rumors started flying when the original score became a significant headache for those in Hans Zimmer's Remote Control operations. Greengrass had collaborated successfully with John Powell on a number of occasions in the past, though with difficulties between them on Green Zone and Powell taking a break from film scoring in 2013, Greengrass turned back to Zimmer's clone factory and ended up with Henry Jackman, who, throughout his career, has proven to be something of a Powell clone himself. What followed was a mess created by Greengrass, with demands for re-writes that were so plentiful that Zimmer himself had to very reluctantly enter the frustrating endeavor and write a handful of cues to satisfy the difficult director.

Who actually deserves credit for the Captain Phillips score remains murky. Jackman's material was eventually altered and supplanted by a host of others, only two of which officially credited. That doesn't include Zimmer and Lorne Balfe, the latter reportedly involved in a lesser role. Over the better part of a year, cues were endlessly rewritten, some dozens of times, until the nightmare forced Zimmer to dedicate a couple of days of work to finishing the score. The composers may not have even known how to accurately attribute the cue sheets after all was done. The irony of this situation? The music is hideously awful in final form, barely functional for this context and painful to tolerate on album. It's a synthetic score from start to finish, with a few string soloists heavily processed to give the ambience a foreign sound. Percussionists and synthesizers round out the ensemble, none of these contributors shining in an atmosphere of droning, banging muck. The ethnic tilt is insultingly generic, the rhythms are so basic that a first-year composing student could program them, and the droning sound design portions are insufferable. In no way does this collection of boring, emotionless bouts of noise compete with the complexity and nuances of Green Zone. Beginning with "Seals Inbound," however, and culminating in "High-Speed Maneuvers," you start to hear what sounds like Zimmer's writing break into more conventional synthetic mode, at least harmonically. And with "Safe Now," you hear a light version of "Time" from Inception, the "Journey to the Line" influence from The Thin Red Line still obvious. That pseudo-theme is the only motif to come out of this score, and there is little recurring material of value in the remainder, making it a truly divergent ensemble composing effort. In its entirety, this is cheap, ridiculously awful musical treatment for a film of this quality, and Zimmer and his crew are known to be incredibly frustrated by it. Who knows where Jackman fit into the equation at the end, if at all. Greengrass did finally go ahead and license "The End" from Powell's United 93 for use in Captain Phillips, and perhaps he would have been better off simply making his Powell temp track the whole soundtrack for this movie. A more interesting point of discussion is the potential future of the Powell/Greengrass collaboration. In a humorous way, this experience serves as payback to Zimmer for his controversial production house methodology, because this is precisely the worst kind of nightmare to result from that process. That said, Greengrass, by all accounts, is responsible for this particular mess, and given how putrid the final result ultimately was, he deserves a public flogging for his handling of this score.  *
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 42:56

• 1. Choose Your Crew (1:36)
• 2. Maersk Alabama (2:42)
• 3. This is Not a Drill (5:42)
• 4. Second Attack (4:53)
• 5. I'm the Captain Now (3:44)
• 6. Do We Have a Deal? (2:09)
• 7. Entering the Lifeboat (2:46)
• 8. USS Bainbridge (2:07)
• 9. End This Peacefully (2:43)
• 10. Failed Attempt (0:56)
• 11. Two in the Water (4:19)
• 12. Seals Inbound (0:23)
• 13. Negotiation (1:23)
• 14. Initiate the Tow (2:17)
• 15. High-Speed Maneuvers (2:03)
• 16. Safe Now (3:12)
NOTES & QUOTES:
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
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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 Captain Phillips are Copyright © 2013, Varèse Sarabande and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 12/26/13 (and not updated significantly since).