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Prey (Sarah Schachner) (2022)
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Average: 2.93 Stars
***** 26 5 Stars
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Alternate review of PREY at Movie Music UK
Jonathan Broxton - September 26, 2022, at 10:07 a.m.
1 comment  (408 views)
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Composed and Produced by:
Sarah Schachner

Orchestrated and Conducted by:
Tim Davies

Additional Music by:
Jason Graves
Total Time: 45:19
• 1. Predator Instinct (3:03)
• 2. Thrill of the Chase (0:55)
• 3. Naru and Surii (0:59)
• 4. Beyond the Great Plains (1:38)
• 5. Five Senses (2:28)
• 6. The Night Has Ears (2:31)
• 7. Communion (1:19)
• 8. Naru's Way (3:13)
• 9. Flesh and Bone (3:11)
• 10. Orange Totsiyaa (0:53)
• 11. Moon Wanderer (0:55)
• 12. The Onslaught (2:14)
• 13. Trapped (3:13)
• 14. Foolish Foray (2:43)
• 15. The Cruel Delight (2:07)
• 16. Horseback Ambush (2:31)
• 17. Human Bait (3:32)
• 18. Brave Girl (5:03)
• 19. Seeing With New Eyes (1:51)
• 20. The Hunter (1:20)

Album Cover Art
Hollywood Records
(August 5th, 2022)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,067
Written 8/19/22
Buy it... if you are ready for a fresh start in the music of this franchise, Sarah Schachner opting for a sparse and historically minded tone of extremely abrasive and raw anger for this film.

Avoid it... if you seek any of the coolness, wonder, bravado, or complete statements of the main themes established by Alan Silvestri in the franchise.

Prey: (Sarah Schachner) The concept of the original 1987 film, Predator, has expanded through the years as the need for fresh killing scenarios has persisted, associated literature suggesting that the Predator race has been hunting humans on Earth for centuries. As the technology of these alien Predators has improved through time, so has that of the humans, keeping the latter reasonably competitive as a choice of battle for the Predator race obsessed with killing as part of their rite of passage. From the perspective of film studios, the liberty to place the Predators up against populations and animals from throughout history opens an entire new set of potential profits, and 2022's Prey cashes in. (Watch out, Egyptians, Romans, and kangaroos... you're next!) In this entry, the Predators have decided to use a Comanche tribe in the early 18th Century as their target, along with French fur traders causing trouble for everyone and in clear need of elimination. A young Comanche woman, Naru, plays an important role in helping her tribe defend against the Predator, eventually dueling the alien in one-on-one combat. The general narrative of Prey is, in its most basic form, not much different from that of the original movie, and these horror thrillers continue to push dismemberment fetishes whether they involve humans or animals. It's grotesque entertainment for audiences with insatiable appetites for violent confrontation and eager to see characters get their arms, legs, and heads torn off in fairly graphic detail. Still, critics and audiences sucked it up, lavishing the movie with the highest praise since the 1987 debut of the franchise. Director Dan Trachtenberg had collaborated previously with composer Bear McCreary but was impressed by Sarah Schachner's music for the "Assassin's Creed" video games and hired her to write the score for Prey. For Schachner, whose career was largely guided to this point by her collaborations with Brian Tyler on the big screen and for video games, this movie represented a major breakthrough assignment. She and Trachtenberg approached the score with a very carefully measured approach that took into account historical Comanche musical methods and a variety of other primordial tones on percussion, strings, and wind. Most importantly, the attitude of the score is brutally dark for most of its length, the setting and violence allowing for very little respite from terror and darkness.

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