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Review of A Haunting in Venice (Hildur Guðnadóttir)
Composed and Produced by:
Hildur Guðnadóttir
Orchestrated and Conducted by:
Robert Ames
Label and Release Date:
Hollywood Records
(September 15th, 2023)
Availability:
Commercial digital release only.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... if you'd like to study a massive intellectual misfire by an esteemed director who demanded vaguely musical sound effects in lieu of a functional film score.

Avoid it... if you already have a low opinion of Hildur Guðnadóttir's style of writing, for she offers almost nothing of value in her extremely sparse and emotionless minimalism for this story.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
A Haunting in Venice: (Hildur Guðnadóttir) For his third stint directing and starring as Agatha Christie's famed detective, Hercule Poirot, Kenneth Branagh decided to take a supernatural path in tackling 2023's A Haunting in Venice. Retired in Venice, Poirot is talked into attending a séance at the mansion of an opera singer who is a part of a scheme to discredit the medium performing it. Of course, a grisly murder results, and Poirot not only must solve the killing of the evening but also unravel a twisted past involving the characters, all the while battling his own hallucinations. The film lacks the glamour of the prior two entries in the franchise, replacing it with jump scares and other techniques common to the horror genre. Reactions were relatively positive, but some audiences won't be able to sit through the contemplative pacing of the execution. The scores by Patrick Doyle for Murder on the Orient Express and Death on the Nile are both attractive orchestral dramas with notable highlights. Rather that turn once again to that trusted collaborator of decades, however, Branagh sought a completely new direction for the music in A Haunting in Venice. He wanted as little music in the picture as possible, a strategy meant to accentuate the sound effects that characters and audience members are meant to discern. What music that did appear in the film was instructed to be small, dark, moody, confined, and claustrophobic. For Branagh, this equation led him in search of a very sparsely rendered chamber score without any of the romantic sensibilities that Venice would otherwise suggest. He apparently decided that Doyle wasn't the right composer to generate that type of score and instead sought industry darling Hildur Guðnadóttir. Psychic pain has come to define the Icelandic composer's career, and it makes for unpleasant music, but her distinctive techniques were intended to represent Poirot's inner turmoil in this story. A major Christie fan herself, Guðnadóttir approached the assignment intellectually, studying the music of Italian composers from the era and attempting to discern the difference in the classical music from before and after World War II. Writing the score in the traditional method with a pencil, she devised what she viewed as an appropriately off-kilter expression of melody and tonality for both the time period and main character.

The resulting score for A Haunting in Venice is both short and extremely understated. Guðnadóttir ignores the proven methodology of film scoring at her peril, producing music that is better defined as muted musical sound effects rather than a conventional narrative. She employs only a few strings and woodwinds with a chamber-like tone and extremely dry environment, only two or three cues combining the two sections of the orchestra to muster any significant volume. The supernatural elements are handled by musicians bowing under the bridge of a string or overblowing and screaming into woodwinds, all of which distinctly dissonant as a result. But none of it is remotely unnerving; rather, it's merely mildly annoying. Much of it is barely audible. The lack of depth in the ensemble hampers any sense of dread intended. The composer does explore melodic inclinations, but she achieves absolutely no end with them. The main theme on low strings only in "Haunt" is described by Guðnadóttir as a "sort of melodic movement that doesn't really go anywhere," a description that also applies to everything she conjures later in the work. Although meant for dreamy introspection, these performances are completely devoid of any passion, distinction, or even humanity. The thematic material does not remain consistent throughout the few moments of development in the score, either, eventually evolving into a fuller idea in "Money in the Mattress" that likewise lacks any care or resolution. Poirot is a fascinating and incredibly deep character, but Branagh and Guðnadóttir reduce him to a mere tool for cheap scares and psychological horror. Even if some listeners can find solace in the very shallow, intimate melodic expressions of nothingness, the remainder of the score is driven by the acoustic use of the instruments as sound effects. While abstraction isn't by itself a detriment, the absence of musical norms means that a sound designer could have assembled some of this material and achieved equally effective results for Branagh. In the end, the copious intellectual explanations of this score's tepid, soulless personality cannot change the fact that Guðnadóttir has provided substanceless, emotionless, and gutless "music" for a Hercule Poirot film. Much of this misfire is owed to Branagh for failing to recognize that a strict avant-garde approach was a poor choice, one destined to leave listeners wondering why any film score was written for the film at all. The only distinguishing characteristic of the music for A Haunting in Venice is its totally inscrutable and meaningless existence.  *
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 34:46

• 1. Haunt (3:45)
• 2. Gondolas (2:47)
• 3. Alcoven (2:52)
• 4. No Music Without Her (2:46)
• 5. Seance (1:48)
• 6. Psychic Pain (2:53)
• 7. St. Louis (3:09)
• 8. Pipes (2:13)
• 9. Confession (8:14)
• 10. Money in the Mattress (4:19)
NOTES & QUOTES:
There exists no official packaging for this album.
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The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from A Haunting in Venice are Copyright © 2023, Hollywood Records and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 9/17/23 (and not updated significantly since).