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A Cure for Wellness (Benjamin Wallfisch) (2017)
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Average: 3.44 Stars
***** 29 5 Stars
**** 38 4 Stars
*** 30 3 Stars
** 18 2 Stars
* 11 1 Stars
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Composed, Co-Orchestrated, and Co-Produced by:

Conducted by:
Gavin Greenaway
David Temple
Ben Parry

Co-Orchestrated by:
David Krystal
Matt Dunkley

Co-Produced by:
Gore Verbinski
Chris Craker
Total Time: 49:51
• 1. Hannah and Volmer (4:34)
• 2. Nobody Ever Leaves (1:49)
• 3. Bicycle (1:59)
• 4. The Rite (3:42)
• 5. Feuerwalzer (3:44)
• 6. Magnificent, Isn't It (2:11)
• 7. Actually I'm Feeling Much Better (1:59)
• 8. Clearly He's Lost His Mind (2:49)
• 9. Our Thoughts Exactly (1:04)
• 10. Volmer Institut (3:02)
• 11. Terrible Darkness (3:18)
• 12. Lipstick (4:21)
• 13. Waiting (0:56)
• 14. Zutritt Verboten (3:38)
• 15. There's Nothing Wrong With You People (1:25)
• 16. Lockhart's Letter (2:12)
• 17. Volmer's Lab (3:32)
• 18. I Wanna Be Sedated* (3:38)

* performed by Mirel Wagner
Album Cover Art
Milan Records
(February 17th, 2017)
Regular U.S. release, but the CD is out of print and difficult to find.
The insert includes a note from the director.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,246
Written 9/29/22
Buy it... if you're a sucker for gorgeously alluring, lyrical themes of sadness and foreboding in your horror scores, this one strikingly accessible for much of its length.

Avoid it... if you tire of horror scores that dissolve into abrasive electronic effects and other stock techniques in their most frightful passages, Benjamin Wallfisch needlessly abandoning his music's outstanding, waltz-driven personality for cheap thrills.

Wallfisch
Wallfisch
A Cure for Wellness: (Benjamin Wallfisch) Despite the immense pre-release hype generated for the Gore Verbinski film, 2017's horror romp A Cure for Wellness earned the distinction of suffering one of the worst box office collapses in theatrical history. Its sudden disappearance from screens after much initial puffery followed surprising rejection by audiences and critics who failed to find much interest in the plot and its length despite lovely, gothic imagery. A sickly twisted version of 1994's A Road to Wellville, the movie postulates that people uncared for by others gravitate to a castle-like sanitarium in the Swiss Alps that focuses on healing through unusual water therapy. The doctor running the facility is, of course, a madman seeking everlasting life through the ingestion of water sweat from his clientele after they are fed particularly special eels. When the CEO of a big corporation gets lost to this sanitarium, a young executive is tasked with retrieving him, only to find himself trapped in the ghastly experiments of the doctor and struggling to learn how to escape with a singular teenage girl who happens to be key to the doctor's plans. Gore fetishists, especially those intrigued by horrific dental scenes, appreciated A Cure for Wellness, though there's also plenty of dark religious connotations and more than enough incest and rape elements to keep the perverts happy. While the film either bored or grossed out audiences, it did provide multitudes of eye and ear candy, and the latter is aided significantly by Benjamin Wallfisch's gothic and often intoxicating score. Verbinski had replaced Alan Silvestri with Hans Zimmer as his regular collaborator in the early 2000's, and it's most likely that Zimmer recommended the talented English composer and promising Remote Control Productions ghostwriter to the director for this assignment. Wallfisch was in the process of establishing himself as a capable and unusually excelling horror genre composer at the time, his music for the such films striving to find balance between wretched dissonant textures as required and romantically alluring suspense and drama that typically wasn't. In these regards, he was writing in the 2010's what Jerry Goldsmith and Christopher Young had once provided stylistically for the industry.

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