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Balfe |
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves: (Lorne
Balfe/Various) Since its invention in the 1970's, the "Dungeons &
Dragons" role play game has helped craft definitions of modern geekdom
and influenced countless other concepts on screens big and small. After
a series of films inspired by the game failed to take hold in the
2000's, the property languished in courtrooms as entities fought over
its rights. Eventually, the suitors came together to solve these legal
woes, and development of a new reboot yielded the 2023 movie,
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves. Critically acclaimed,
the film struggled to gain a foothold with audiences beyond young males,
the hordes of geeks in the world failing to generate the expected
response in theatres. The humor and careful loyalty to the source
material were widely praised, the story's generally campy tone seeing a
variety of characters teaming together to use wit, bravery, and magic to
steal artifacts necessary to defeat the villains of the imaginary land.
The Middle Earth vibes from
The Lord of the Rings are
unmistakable, but along with hearty character profiles comes funny plot
devices that keep
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves far
lighter on its feet. Many members of the crew on the film were professed
lovers of the original concept, and one such loyal player was composer
Lorne Balfe. The immensely busy Balfe professed that he was thrilled
about the chance to work on this film. That didn't stop him, however,
from sharing the experience with an absolute army of collaborators to
carry much of the load. Between nine ghostwriters and arrangers, five
orchestrators, and six music editors, Balfe's adherence to his standard
methods of producing scores more than truly composing them doesn't
indicate that
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves was a
particular labor of love for him personally. Not surprisingly, the
resulting score sounds like the usual combination of a barely coherent
thematic narrative and unique moments that are clearly evidence of too
many cooks in the kitchen. Luckily, the work is saved by its strangely
applied Celtic flavor and a handful of lovely cues for character
development.
At its core, the music for
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor
Among Thieves is a typical Remote Control Productions entry of Hans
Zimmer influence with Celtic elements like whistles, bagpipes, and light
voices on the lyrically ethnic side balanced by heavy percussion,
domineering chorus, and synthetic embellishments. At times, the Celtic
portions and other related melodic passages are so lovely that they
cannot be disregarded. At other times, the Lorne Balfe of
Ambulance and
Luther: The Fallen Sun decides to lay waste
to an action cue and challenge your tolerance for sheer noise. The
former grouping is concentrated in the first third of the score but does
sprinkle highlights throughout the work. This softly alluring, lyrical
material strives to combine Howard Shore's
The Lord of the Rings
trilogy with John Powell's
How to train Your Dragon trilogy in
its handling of tonally easy fantasy expressions for orchestra and
choir. The triumphs of this emulation are numerous, led by "Finding
Zia," "Thick as Thieves," "Journey to Neverwinter," "Forge Begins," "Be
Gone," the latter halves of "Owl Bear" and "Wizardry," "Swim to the
Beach," "Remembering You," "A Red Wizard's Blade," and "The
Reawakening." The sensitivity and beauty of moments in these cues rival
the prettiest character moments of a Balfe score like
Home.
Countering these attractions, however, are times when the composer's
team infuse the worst of Balfe's suspense and action techniques into the
work. The stereotypical sinking bass effect makes eyes roll in the
middle of "Korrin's Keep." Electronic textures and pitch manipulation
emerge abrasively in "The Underdark," though these techniques are
orchestrated better and sound more natural in "Unlock the Helmet." The
worst Balfe thriller effects ruin the narrative in the awful "The
Ruckus," and yelled and whispered vocals over terrible electronics in
"Into the Castle" make this cue completely unlistenable. Most of "The
Maze" and parts of "Beneath the Maze" are contain totally generic action
muck, and grating
Terminator-appropriate tones at the start of
"Final Battle" lead to whining pitch slurs at the cue's end. These
modern influences become increasingly prevalent as the score progresses,
only yielding for the final seven minutes of mostly orchestral
resolution.
Thematically, Balfe and his team establish many of the
right pieces for
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, but
their execution is exactly what you'd expect when a team this large
loses focus on spotting and coordination. A main adventure theme
doubling for the lead character, Edgin Darvis is handled adequately, but
every other theme coined by Balfe, including a villain's identity with
much unrealized potential, is applied haphazardly and without much
satisfying arc. A bevy of secondary character themes is poorly developed
despite some really fantastic structures and instrumentation behind
them. A lack of distinguishing enunciation and similarity in
progressions between the various Celtic-oriented melodies leaves
associations vague. Still, for many listeners, the existence of a
dedicated main theme is what matters most, and for his standard heroic
fanfare, Balfe has earned acclaim for his work here. There's nothing
really rousing about this main theme, its swashbuckling and fantasy
nature adequate but not particularly unique. Structurally, it's fine;
the nagging issue with the theme is the difficulty with which Balfe's
team integrates it into narrative beyond the most basic expected
placements. The theme debuts in the latter half of the action in "Escape
the Tower" but makes its prominent entrance at 0:25 into "Dungeons and
Dragons" on brass, followed by bagpipes and percussion. A contemplative
version exists in "Swear to It" while it does battle with the villain's
theme in the latter half of "Themberchaud." The theme is translated to
redemptive choir and bagpipes in "Swim to the Beach," helps build
momentum in the pleasing "Never Stop Failing," prevails over a
suspenseful moment in the middle of "Simon Does It," and guides the
nervous and dark tones in the middle of "Entering the Arena." It offers
fleeting heroism early in "The Maze," builds to a victorious choral
explosion late in "Sorry Forge," briefly accompanies the percussive
momentum and hope at 0:55 into "Turn the Ship Around," and receives a
standard heroic brass moment at 3:05 into "Final Battle." For the
finale, the main theme is reworked in "Fallen Foe" for a short moment of
triumph and offers an affable flute rendition in the middle of "Forge's
Tale." The score does not supply the necessary ballsy, tonally
magnificent moments of bravado for this theme, though, leaving it
without a desirable impact on your memory.
Aside from the aforementioned alternation between
lovely lyrical cues and atrociously obnoxious responses in
Dungeons &
Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, Balfe's team provides a slew of
uniquely diverting moments that suggest the pull of specific
ghostwriters. Among these singular cues is "Magic Show Melee,"
exhibiting a dose of maddening harpsichord, strings, percussion, and
choral chanting. An unpleasant dissonant vocal crescendo in "Szass Tam's
Story" leads shortly thereafter into uniquely rattling percussive
effects in "Down at the Cemetary" over annoyingly pounding brass. Organ
and voices dance with more palatable mystery in "Helmet Attuning" while
fiddle, chanting, and clicking percussion sets the pace in "The Heist,"
this mode streamlined for strings in the following "Forge's Speech."
While some of these moments in the score are interesting and fulfill the
purpose of each scene at the very least, they don't always advance the
narrative intelligently. In the end, the score for
Dungeons &
Dragons: Honor Among Thieves serves the film well enough to
recommend, with sufficient highlights to combine into a vaguely Celtic
adventure suite. But be careful when you approach this score on album.
At over 90 minutes in length, the score-only presentation is slowed by
incidental cues of little value, not to mention the full slate of really
obnoxious action material. On the other hand, all the snippets of the
score's alluring lyrical highlights can be assembled apart from the
detractions. High resolution options for the score do illuminate the
creative percussive elements and Celtic-flavored soloists, but this
benefit dwindles once electronic manipulation and other enhancements
ruin the soundscape. The album situation for
Dungeons & Dragons:
Honor Among Thieves is a potentially frustrating one with some
silver linings. The primary album does not contain Tame Impala's end
credits song, "Wings of Time," and is also missing the source songs
"Juice of the Vine" and "When the Battle is Over" co-written by Balfe
and the directors and performed by the two lead characters, not to
mention a slew of other songs written by the trio and recorded for the
film. The product also contains several misspelled track titles, as you
might have noticed in this review. Interestingly, the credits for the
film cite two additional Balfe cues, "Armory Fight" and "Treetop
Tavern," separately from the score proper, and no tracks with those
titles appear on the album, either.
Two additional albums of music "inspired by the film"
were released during the subsequent months in 2023 for
Dungeons &
Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, and both help illuminate the breadth
of Balfe's score and songs as heard in the film even if they don't
explicitly expand upon the score formally. Some of the aforementioned
missing music remains absent even after these two relatively short
supplemental products. The first album, "Book of the Bard," concentrates
on the tavern songs and associated Celtic music of the soundtrack, often
spirited and filling in as an excellent souvenir for enthusiasts of the
film. Some of its later entries trend towards the obnoxious, however,
and the quality of each song is hit-and-miss. A few purely instrumental
tracks are sprinkled amongst the tavern songs, though, and will mix well
with the score material on the other two products. The second album,
"The Dungeon Master's Jukebox," will likely serve the interests of film
score collectors better, as it assembles ten suites of character themes
that Balfe wrote prior to the filming. Though inspired simply by
storyboards and characters, these themes ultimately informed the score,
so it's a pleasure to hear each idea conveyed individually. The
redemptive, Celtic-flavored "Holga Kilgore" material is perhaps the
highlight, and it bookends the presentation along with heroic variants
in "Friendship Forged." Crucially, these are not basic demo recordings
like you hear in association with Hans Zimmer's albums; they are
full-fledged performances with satisfying instrumental and choral depth.
As such, "The Dungeon Master's Jukebox" is an solid companion to the
score album and provides a far more consistent listening experience.
Don't be surprised if this is the album of the three that you find
yourself returning most frequently to for your
Dungeons & Dragons:
Honor Among Thieves music fix. It's clear from these additional
albums that Balfe was passionate about this project, as the amount of
effort that went into the creation of the suites, the songs, and the
final score was immense. It wouldn't be surprising if he was the
propulsive force behind the additional albums, even if their sum still
doesn't supply all the music from the soundtrack. Overall, the score for
Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves owes much to Shore and
Powell when not regurgitating Balfe's basic action fare, its lovely
melodic portions for secondary themes compensating for an otherwise
decent but uninspiring adventure narrative. Especially with the multiple
albums available, prepare your best culling strategy for this one.
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- Music as Written for the Film: ****
- Music as Heard on the Albums: ***
- Overall: ****
Bias Check: |
For Lorne Balfe reviews at Filmtracks, the average editorial rating is 2.83
(in 30 reviews) and the average viewer rating is 2.86
(in 23,380 votes). The maximum rating is 5 stars.
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The inserts of the physical albums include no extra information
about the score or film.