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Extraction 2 (Henry Jackman/Alex Belcher) (2023)
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Average: 1.84 Stars
***** 7 5 Stars
**** 10 4 Stars
*** 15 3 Stars
** 35 2 Stars
* 78 1 Stars
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They are right about this score, but it took 3 times for me!
TheDaybreak - July 11, 2023, at 4:25 p.m.
1 comment  (627 views)
This soundtrack makes me feel like death warmed over
Elizabeth Hawkins - July 9, 2023, at 2:24 p.m.
1 comment  (873 views)
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Composed and Produced by:
Henry Jackman
Alex Belcher

Conducted by:
Gavin Greenaway

Orchestrated by:
Stephen Coleman
Michael James Lloyd
Geoff Lawson

Additional Music by:
Evan Goldman
Tom Hodge
Jon Monroe
Total Time: 60:58
• 1. Starting Over (3:47)
• 2. The Brothers (3:24)
• 3. Rebuilding Rake (1:14)
• 4. Prison Mission (3:52)
• 5. Code Red (3:16)
• 6. Born Into War (1:12)
• 7. Davit & Goliath (1:27)
• 8. Riot in the Square (1:11)
• 9. Prison Escape (1:56)
• 10. Forest Chase (2:27)
• 11. All Aboard (1:41)
• 12. Something Else (1:36)
• 13. The Morgue (1:25)
• 14. A Second Chance (0:50)
• 15. Sandro Makes Contact (3:47)
• 16. Two Families (0:57)
• 17. Garage Escape (3:14)
• 18. Zurab vs. Chopper (2:17)
• 19. Storm the Tower (2:54)
• 20. Mahem Montage (2:09)
• 21. Rooftop Ruckus (2:15)
• 22. Tower Escape (1:14)
• 23. Yaz (1:39)
• 24. Cry Uncle (0:59)
• 25. No Time for Negotiation (2:11)
• 26. Rake Unleashes (2:21)
• 27. Avenge Him (1:34)
• 28. It's Over (2:28)
• 29. Brave Like Dad (1:41)

Album Cover Art
Netflix Music
(June 16th, 2023)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,124
Written 7/8/23
Buy it... if you have a framed, autographed photo of Henry Jackman hanging in your bathroom.

Avoid it... unless you absolutely adored the brainless personality of the first Extraction score and have always commented to your co-workers that it could use more distinctly heinous sound effects and brazen instrumental processing.

Jackman
Jackman
Extraction 2: (Henry Jackman/Alex Belcher) One extraction wasn't enough. Two aren't either. Director Sam Hargrave and actor Chris Hemsworth are inclined to provide Netflix with an entire series of extractions, especially with the two of them producing this schlock as well. Sadly, these extractions don't involve toenail extractions or sex toy extractions but instead show largely redundant extractions of human subjects from God-forsaken places where Western white saviors like Hemsworth can kick godless second and third world ass. Extra credit given for a smidge of Thor humor along the way. In the 2020 movie, Extraction, his mercenary character kills ample brown people in Bangladesh. Amazingly, Americans who don't read books decided to watch that film in droves during the pandemic lockdowns. In the therefore mandatory 2023 sequel, creatively titled Extraction 2, the protagonist, Tyler Rake, is going for lighter shades of killing in Georgia and Europe. Different skin colors, same senseless violence. Rake is still trying to reconcile how awful his Extraction experience had been when a random guy shows up at his hideaway and gives him another assignment. This time, he has to rescue a family related to his ex-wife, but they're in a prison with a crime syndicate boss. That bad guy's brother chases Rake down over the rest of the movie, leading to frothy death counts. Just when you think your own family (and especially the in-laws) is dysfunction, Extraction 2 reminds you that other families are actually fucked up far worse. The entire purpose of these movies is to show stylized action, sometimes with long, continuous, single-shot camera angles that stimulate semen production in the core demographic. Viewers want to see angry men thrashed in glorious fashion. What they don't want to hear is any hint of elegance in the music for such violence. The score for Extraction by Henry Jackman and Alex Belcher was appropriately mindless drivel with no intellectual merit whatsoever, and there was no reason to change that equation for the sequel. Jackman, the far more established composer, continues to share top-line credit with Belcher, and the results are frightfully predictable.

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