The biggest dilemma facing the music for 2018's
Halloween was its general approach to the passage of time. Should
the score reprise its former self as a method of reminding the audience
that, despite the decades in the interim, nothing has really changed
between the lead characters? Or should that time, and the troubles and
preparation of the heroine, reshape (pun intended!) the score into an
evolved version of its prior presence? A combination of both, favoring
the latter, was probably the best bet, especially with musical rendering
technologies and accompanying audience expectations always evolving.
Carpenter, however, decided upon a straight update of the classic score,
retaining the synthetic tones of yesteryear while beefing up some of
their qualities with that newer technology. If you found the original
score to be arduously grating, then the same attitude will apply here.
An enhanced role for electric guitar is the most obvious alteration to
the equation, chase cues like "The Shape Hunts Allyson" and "The Shape
and Laurie Fight" likely appealing most to concept enthusiasts if only
because the instrument lends a dose of badass attitude to the
environment. Otherwise, and especially in the application of the piano
and general synthetic keyboarding, there's surprisingly little
development of interest in the 2018 score. The sound effects used in the
loops tend to have a watery personality. The production quality of the
sound is improved, of course, but that was never much of an obstacle in
the first place. Perhaps the more pervasive disappointment in the score
is Carpenter's decision not to push his themes into unfamiliar
territory, devising a few variants to supply newfound intrigue but only
applying them in minimally effective ways. The three major themes of the
original all return, but it's really the main theme and especially its
iconic, underlying 5/4 rhythm that returns most satisfyingly. The rhythm
becomes the default device of movement for far more cues than expected
here, which is nice, especially as it takes the place of the organ-like
effects of the original. Fragments of the actual ascending theme are
everywhere in the work. Aside from the expected, formal arrangements of
the rhythm and theme together in "Halloween Theme" and the lengthy
"Halloween Triumphant," the composing team supplies the theme in full
during "The Shape Returns" to announce the character's successful
reclamation of glory. Prior to that, there's an almost empathetic,
lyrical rendition of the theme in "Prison Montage."
In the original
Halloween, Laurie's theme was
merged with the "Haunted House" motif in memory, and you hear some of
that mingling here in the later cues. Her theme, after being only
briefly alluded to in "Laurie's Theme," is saved for direct combat with
Myers and the main theme in the final moments of the score. None of the
character's conflict, psychological defeat over time, or perceived,
prevailing victory at the end is satisfyingly developed by Carpenter
outside of the dramatic cello and choral passages of "The Shape Burns."
(This cue, ironically, sounds like an early electronic entry by John
Ottman, who arguably recorded the best orchestral version of Carpenter's
main theme for one of these films, albeit in a rejected effort.) The
opportunity for persevering defiance on the heroine's part was lost.
Meanwhile, the stalking motif from the original
Halloween does
make itself heard here, though its thumping piano base is replaced by a
synthetic alternative in "The Shape Kills" and "Ray's Goodbye." In a
nice touch, that motif sets the pace for the main theme in "The Shape
and Laurie Fight." The guitar-laden "Halloween Triumphant" suite at the
end provides seemingly endless reprises of the main theme and its rhythm
before offering an extroverted take on the character material for this
film. Carpenter and his team do extend an alteration of the main theme's
progressions from "The Shape Burns" into the start of this suite to
provide a more determined drive to the theme, though it reverts to
classic form thereafter. Ultimately, the score is exceedingly faithful
and will please hardcore concept enthusiasts with its continuation of
Carpenter's original ideas and general tone. The music isn't
particularly refined, its conclusions to crescendos and cues often
awkward, its sampled rhythmic devices occasionally obnoxious at the
forefront of the treble region, and its adherence to synchronization
points not always crisply realized. But some of these problems primarily
plague the album experience, in which the 43 minutes of score-only
material can sometimes drag interminably despite short track lengths. On
the upside, though, Carpenter fans enjoyed both CD and vinyl options,
the final track alone worth the album price for loyalists. The following
year, he offered an expanded edition with 28 new minutes over 24
additional tracks, the CD joined by a range of collectible vinyl
pressings. The added music is largely incidental but does help form the
narrative in the score's first third. The soundtrack remains a mixed
bag, though, appropriately satisfying in its faithfulness but lacking
the kind of evolution and intrigue to take the concept to the next
level. Then again, that pretty much summarizes the film itself; you know
exactly what you're going to get.
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