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Expend4bles (Guillaume Roussel) (2023)
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Average: 1.95 Stars
***** 6 5 Stars
**** 10 4 Stars
*** 22 3 Stars
** 46 2 Stars
* 67 1 Stars
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Composed and Co-Produced by:
Guillaume Roussel

Co-Produced by:
Ryan Svendsen
Total Time: 26:22
• 1. The New Squad (2:01)
• 2. A Horrible Loss (2:27)
• 3. Here We Go (1:50)
• 4. Introducing Decha (2:12)
• 5. Marsh Runs the Show (2:40)
• 6. Trouble Ahead (2:14)
• 7. Bike, Explosions and Death (3:13)
• 8. Battle on the Deck (2:12)
• 9. The Final Duel (1:41)
• 10. Finding Ocelot (1:12)
• 11. Redemption (1:57)
• 12. Expend4bles Main Theme (2:43)

Album Cover Art
Millennium Media Records
(September 22nd, 2023)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,122
Written 9/27/23
Buy it... if you can accept the abandonment of Brian Tyler's theme and style for this franchise and are open to a harsher rock and hip-hop attitude.

Avoid it... if you expect that new direction to amount to any substantive new appeal, Guillaume Roussel's score predictable and inane at every turn.

Expend4bles: (Guillaume Roussel) There wasn't much high art in the franchise of The Expendables to begin with, but 2023's belated fourth entry, Expend4bles dispenses with whatever appeal the concept once had. The 2014 predecessor, The Expendables 3 had reduced its violence to achieve a PG-13 rating, which robbed the production of the gloriously stupid death depictions that drove the prior movies. Its stumble caused years of consternation over the fate of The Expendables 4, lead actor Sylvester Stallone declining to contribute to the story as he had before and many of the franchise's prior big-name action stars of the 1980's and 1990's opting out. But with Stallone returns Jason Statham, and their chasing and explosions take them to the popular tourist destination of Libya to prevent a dude with dark skin from stealing a nuclear weapon on behalf of a mysterious warlord who, of course, turns out to be closer to home than anyone originally suspects. Fake deaths, double-crossing, and escaping nuclear blasts are part of the yawn-inducing story of the eventually renamed Expend4bles, and nobody seemed to care upon the film's release. Performing terribly at the box office, the franchise appears dead despite the valiant return to "R" rating territory. Missing out on all the fun of this failure is composer Brian Tyler, who was reportedly asked to return for this movie after scoring the first three. His commitment to The Super Mario Bros. Movie and Fast X did not allow him a chance to continue his work here, and that ended up being to the benefit of new director Scott Waugh's strategy. He hired relatively obscure French composer Guillaume Roussel for Expend4bles instead and instructed him to ditch Tyler's established sound for the franchise. Roussel is one of many graduates of Hans Zimmer's Remote Control Productions, having most notably contributed to the absolutely wretched score for Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides in 2011. Since branching off on his own, Roussel found himself mired in the muck of lesser television projects, though his big screen work in the action/thriller genre did include 2014's 3 Days to Kill and 2022's November. He has admitted finding more comfort with lighter orchestral music like that he wrote for Disney's 2020 version of Black Beauty. For Expend4bles, though, he is sunk by a director who asked for comparatively dull rock and hip-hop material as the new focus of the series.

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