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A Minecraft Movie (Mark Mothersbaugh) (2025)
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Average: 2.89 Stars
***** 20 5 Stars
**** 31 4 Stars
*** 43 3 Stars
** 36 2 Stars
* 26 1 Stars
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Composed and Produced by:
Mark Mothersbaugh

Co-Orchestrated and Conducted by:
Tim Davies

Co-Orchestrated by:
Jeremy Levy
Lorenzo Carrano
Ryan Humphrey
Pano Fountas

Additional Music by:
Peter Bateman
Sunna Wehrmeijer
Tim Jones
Total Time: 74:09
• 1. I Feel Alive - performed by Jack Black (4:06)
• 2. When I'm Gone - performed by Dirty Honey (3:24)
• 3. Change Song - performed by Dayglow (3:28)
• 4. Zero to Hero - performed by BENEE (2:23)
• 5. Could This Be Love? - performed by Bret McKenzie (4:53)
• 6. Just Can't Get Enough (Instrumental Version) - performed by Jamieson Shaw (1:42)
• 7. Steve's Lava Chicken - performed by Jack Black (0:34)
• 8. Birthday Rap - performed by Jack Black and Jason Momoa (0:40)
• 9. Ode to Dennis - performed by Jack Black (0:44)
• 10. Minecraft (0:39)
• 11. Mintage (3:24)
• 12. Midport Village (3:00)
• 13. Day to Night (3:57)
• 14. Steve in the Nether (4:00)
• 15. Chicken Fight Club (3:46)
• 16. I Need a Win, Man (3:14)
• 17. I'm Coming With/Minecraft (2:58)
• 18. Nitwit Crosses and Steve Finds/Minecraft (3:01)
• 19. Woodland Mansion Planning (3:22)
• 20. Steve vs. Malgosha (3:56)
• 21. Piglins Attack (4:07)
• 22. Heroic Henry/Minecraft (3:02)
• 23. Let's Go Fight Some Pigs (2:20)
• 24. Run from the Great Hog (3:47)
• 25. Back in the Nether (3:42)


Album Cover Art
WaterTower Music
(March 28th, 2025)
Digital release with vinyl options.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,244
Written 4/26/25
Buy it... for the overall soundtrack experience, the Jack Black songs and interpolations of the game's original material serving as the crowd-pleaser.

Avoid it... for any specific narrative satisfaction from the score by Mark Mothersbaugh and his crew, their work totally sufficient as a parody orchestral adventure outing but leaving little to remember.

Mothersbaugh
Mothersbaugh
A Minecraft Movie: (Mark Mothersbaugh/Various) Given the amount of time teenage boys have spent playing the Minecraft video game in the 2010's and 2020's, it's amazing that the movie studios bungled the inevitable cinematic adaptation of the concept for so long. The 2025 adaptation, A Minecraft Movie, was long in the making, and features four average and not-so-average people who get sucked into the Minecraft universe of blocky virtual reality where they discover a guy trapped there from decades before, Steve, who has mastered the land and fights an evil ruler of the game's darker half. As Steve, Jack Black is the comedy heart of A Minecraft Movie, and the gang of five protagonists spend the film doing various silly things and battling the mindless minions of the villain. All of this action happens because of magical orbs and crystals that somehow found themselves amongst the famous potatoes of Idaho. The plotline is so ridiculously dumb that audiences reacted with glee at its hideousness, catapulting the film to grosses that immediately stirred studio interest in a sequel. The general formula of the film is familiar to anyone who has seen The Lego Movie, and it's no surprise that veteran parody composer Mark Mothersbaugh became involved in the project. Before he got to his part, however, the movie employed Black to conjure a slew of original songs, performing some of them himself. His ridiculous but funny short entry, "Steve's Lava Chicken," became an internet sensation, prompting the release of a longer version on album a few weeks later. These songs and Mothersbaugh's score remain creatively separate, as do those facets and the music that specifically carries over from the game. That popular and easily recognizable legacy music, led by Daniel Rosenfeld using the artist name C418, has always been helmed by surprisingly tender keyboard identities for the topic. His colleague, Lena Raine, sees her "Pigstep" theme reprised during the movie's "Nether's Got Talent" sequence. The game song "Dragon Fish" also plays during a panda scene. But it's Rosenfeld's main theme for the game that serves as the most satisfying inclusion in this film, interpolated into the score by Mothersbaugh a handful of times (and obviously credited in any album track with "Minecraft" as its sole or conclusive word), but the usage is rather token and abruptly inserted when referenced.

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