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The Gray Man (Henry Jackman) (2022)
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Average: 2.16 Stars
***** 10 5 Stars
**** 15 4 Stars
*** 24 3 Stars
** 51 2 Stars
* 58 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Gavin Greenaway

Orchestrated by:
Stephen Coleman
Andrew Kinney
Michael James Lloyd
Edward Trybek
Henri Wilkinson
Jonathan Beard
Nicholas Cazares

Additional Music by:
Alex Belcher
Evan Goldman
Alex Kovacs
Jack Dolman
Total Time: 80:50
• 1. The Gray Man (17:10)
• 2. Bangkok (3:07)
• 3. To Kill Your Own (2:13)
• 4. The Curse (1:39)
• 5. Shades of Gray (2:03)
• 6. A Question of Loyalty (1:17)
• 7. An Old Friend (1:59)
• 8. Lloyd Hansen (2:55)
• 9. Sky High (3:06)
• 10. Unstoppable, Uncatchable (2:14)
• 11. Ensnared (2:31)
• 12. Where's the Target? (3:08)
• 13. A Timely Intervention (1:42)
• 14. Unexpected Ally (2:00)
• 15. An Honorable End (3:07)
• 16. Tango in Prague (4:55)
• 17. Lone Wolf (2:38)
• 18. Ghost in the Machine (1:53)
• 19. Against All Odds (3:26)
• 20. Missing a Wing (2:35)
• 21. Unhinged (2:00)
• 22. The Labyrinth (3:51)
• 23. Under the Blood-Red Sun (3:11)
• 24. Internal Affairs (1:29)
• 25. Bed of Secrets (1:49)
• 26. Exoneration (1:43)
• 27. Always Gray (1:24)

Album Cover Art
Netflix Music
(July 22nd, 2022)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,141
Written 9/17/22
Buy it... if you admire heavy synthetic manipulation techniques in your action and thriller film music, especially if the ticking, slashing, banging, and thumping effects produce what Henry Jackman calls "gnarly noise" for this project.

Avoid it... if you hate copy and paste scores that do nothing to advance what minimal conceptual development exists in a drab and tedious musical environment.

Jackman
Jackman
The Gray Man: (Henry Jackman) After ten years of production delays, 2022's The Gray Man debuted as the most expensive Netflix movie of all time. Based on a 2009 novel, it is a pointlessly redundant assassin story that postulates, like dozens of other equally mindless plots, that there are shadow governments being run out of American intelligence agencies. Those entities have secret assassins running around the planet knocking off distasteful people (except for Vladimir Putin; they never seem capable of something as useful as that) and, when not killing those against their interests, they're trying to wipe out each other because of the usual elements of betrayal. There is absolutely nothing new of value in The Gray Man, its existence owing to audiences' insatiable desire for high-tech chases involving capable killers. What matters for this plot is that there is an American assassin code-named Sierra Six who is sent to kill a person that turns out to be Sierra Four, who failed his performance improvement plan, smelled bad too frequently, or had compromising information about the criminality of a superior in the chain of command. The whole film involves the agency hunting down Sierra Six while he and sympathizers try to expose the wrong-doing of those seeking to silence them. Not much intellect there. The movie did perform fairly well in ratings, critics shrugging their shoulders along the way. Brothers Anthony and Joe Russo directed, and they continue their collaboration with composer Henry Jackman that includes multiple Captain America sequels and thriller schlock more in line with The Gray Man. Jackman was in the middle of a hiatus from film scoring to concentrate on his duties as a new father, but he did squeeze this project in on the side. He wrote most of the score's key elements without seeing the picture first, creating a 17-minute concept suite that he extensively tinkered with over nine months while the film was being shot. Jackman didn't intend to produce such a long demonstration of themes, but the extended time playing around with it led to the unexpected length.

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