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Never Let Me Go (Rachel Portman) (2010)
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Average: 3.03 Stars
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Unintelligent reviewer
Phil C. - December 23, 2015, at 7:28 p.m.
1 comment  (844 views)
It's Keira, not Kiera   Expand
soundtrack collector - September 25, 2010, at 3:04 p.m.
2 comments  (2305 views) - Newest posted September 25, 2010, at 3:18 p.m. by Paul
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Composed, Co-Orchestrated, and Co-Produced by:

Conducted by:
David Snell

Co-Orchestrated by:
Jeff Atmajian

Co-Produced by:
Yann McCullough
Chris Dibble
Audio Samples   ▼
Total Time: 41:33
• 1. The Pier (2:01)
• 2. Main Titles (2:58)
• 3. Bumper Crop (2:02)
• 4. To the Cottages (1:35)
• 5. The Boat (1:49)
• 6. Madame is Coming (2:23)
• 7. Ruth's Betrayal (2:47)
• 8. Making Tea (1:11)
• 9. Evening Visit (1:47)
• 10. Kathy and Tommy (2:02)
• 11. Kathy Watches Behind Screen (1:35)
• 12. Life As a Carer (1:13)
• 13. Kingsfield Recovery Centre (1:38)
• 14. Unseen Tides (1:44)
• 15. The Worst Thing I Ever Did (1:44)
• 16. Souls At All (2:48)
• 17. We All Complete (5:02)
• 18. Hailsham School Song (0:46)
• 19. Never Let Me Go (2:43)

Album Cover Art
Varèse Sarabande
(September 14th, 2010)
Regular U.S. release.
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #1,379
Written 9/24/10
Buy it... if you never tire of hearing Rachel Portman's smooth and harmonious light drama writing, a sound defined by lovely themes and basic, repetitive structures for strings, piano, and woodwinds.

Avoid it... if you expect any depth within the soundscape to address the gravity of the film's premise or any substantially fresh ideas from a composer snugly in her comfort zone.

Portman
Portman
Never Let Me Go: (Rachel Portman) Few films are more irritating than those that use a completely unexplained and unsubstantiated science fiction premise to pursue a narrowly focused dramatic narrative. Mark Romanek's 2010 arthouse film Never Let Me Go, based on the acclaimed Kazuo Ishiguru novel, is a tearjerker no doubt, slowly and solemnly following the doomed lives of a trio of youngsters grown from test tubes for the single purpose of serving as organ donors. There exists in society a sub-class of such youth that are harvested and eventually (and prematurely) put to death as part of a widely accepted organ replacement program that devalues the people being used within it. Complications arise when the most progressive school raising these laboratory children yields three people in a troubled love triangle, forcing society to deal with the possibility (surprise, surprise!) that these youths actually can love and have souls. In its limited initial release, Never Let Me Go was praised for tackling this premise, but many critics admitted that it's a bit too heavily introspective for its own good. The blinding problem with this otherwise compelling story is the total disregard of any addressing of the larger civil rights issues that would never allow such a public practice to exist in today's world. It's one thing to postulate that society will have degraded enough by Bladerunner to accept replicated people with an artificially limited lifespan, but for Never Let Me Go to suggest that an entire class of essentially slaves to the rest of humanity (and ones as attractive as Kiera Knightley, Carey Mulligan, and Andrew Garfield, for that matter) would be generally accepted in the 1960's and beyond is ludicrous. Regardless of America's degrading social mores, the country still has too much empathy to allow an entire class of children, whether grown in tubes or not, to be brainwashed and harvested in such a morbid fashion. Too many questions abound to make Never Let Me Go a viable film, but for those who can suspend logic for a few hours, it's powerfully acted melodrama made complete (no pun intended for those familiar with the concept) by Rachel Portman's equally depressing score. Once considered the mainstream queen of romantic music, replacing both John Barry and Georges Delerue for a short time in the 1990's, Portman has limited her composing schedule in the 2000's as she raises her family. Her musical output in recent years has been reduced to predictable assignments of her choice, usually dealing with deeply developed female characters in a dramatic setting. In this regard, nothing about what she writes for Never Let Me Go should surprise anyone.

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