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Samaritan (Jed Kurzel/Kevin Kiner) (2022)
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Average: 2.32 Stars
***** 7 5 Stars
**** 18 4 Stars
*** 35 3 Stars
** 50 2 Stars
* 43 1 Stars
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The owner of Filmtracks.com is a godless liberal moron
Kamusagligi - September 28, 2022, at 9:13 p.m.
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Co-Composed and Co-Produced by:
Jed Kurzel

Co-Composed, Co-Orchestrated, and Co-Produced by:
Kevin Kiner

Conducted by:
Angel Velez

Co-Orchestrated by:
Nolan Markey

Additional Music by:
Sean Kiner
Dean Kiner
Total Time: 56:07
• 1. Samaritan vs Nemesis* (2:56)
• 2. Walking Home (2:03)
• 3. Cyrus Arrives (1:28)
• 4. Graphite Bombs* (1:15)
• 5. Sam Rescued (1:05)
• 6. Beaten and Delivered* (4:26)
• 7. Back Scar* (1:09)
• 8. Heist (3:14)
• 9. Wall of Sam (2:56)
• 10. Car Hit (1:51)
• 11. Nemesis Nightmare (3:44)
• 12. The Talk (1:51)
• 13. Hostage (3:01)
• 14. Samaritan Lives** (4:38)
• 15. War Path (1:37)
• 16. Bad Guy** (3:57)
• 17. Warehouse Battle** (3:34)
• 18. Wipe City Dark** (2:26)
• 19. Cyrus vs Nemesis** (4:16)
• 20. We Got This** (2:04)
• 21. Good and Bad* (2:34)

* co-composed by Kevin Kiner
** co-composed by Kevin Kiner and Sean Kiner and/or Dean Kiner
Album Cover Art
Lakeshore Records
(August 26th. 2022)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,179
Written 9/19/22
Buy it... if your brain is wired to admire pitch-bending techniques meant to avoid clean, accessible tonalities, this score opting for mangled processing of all its components in a failed effort to be inventive.

Avoid it... if you hope that the reasonable depth of themes in the score can salvage its otherwise abrasive tone, for they offer very little emotional connection to the characters of the story.

Samaritan: (Jed Kurzel/Kevin Kiner) Audiences are willing to watch producer and actor Sylvester Stallone as an aging mercenary and aging boxer, so why not feature the 75-year-old as an aging superhero? He is a superhuman with incredible strength and healing powers in Samaritan, trying to live peacefully in a fictional, timeless city. When a neighbor boy finds himself in trouble, Samaritan intervenes, reintroducing his heroism to the city. A gangster finds the powerful hammer of Samaritan's evil twin brother, Nemesis, and forces an uncomfortable confrontation. Surprise identity twists are inevitable, but nothing can provide Samaritan with a sense of heart and purpose. There's only so much the film can accomplish with Stallone as the ass-kicking savior, but after the movie was sold to Amazon for streaming purposes in the wake of the pandemic, audiences found it intriguing enough to generate solid viewership. Director Julius Avery returned to his fellow Australian, rocker-turned-composer Jed Kurzel, to provide the score for Samaritan. Kurzel had provided music for both of the director's prior movies, and he intended to complete this project solo as well. With the movie's post-production schedule suddenly truncated in 2020, Kurzel brought veteran composer Kevin Kiner (and Kiner's sons, Sean and Dean) onto the project to assist with action cues. When the schedule of the movie's release was altered again to account for the pandemic, Kurzel and Kiner had significantly more time to develop a true collaborative impact on the music. Kiner found it challenging to match Kurzel's musical voice at first, studying the composer's prior works, and he eventually found himself adapting some of Kurzel's unusual ideas into music that could be performed by an orchestra. In the end. The resulting partnership on the score is yet another example of music that strives to reinvent the hybrid organic/synthetic blend for a soundtrack in an attempt to find a new angle to the sound. The techniques are familiar to countless other strategic siblings in the genre, though, eclectic, low-fidelity, synthetic sounds tangling with mangled, processed orchestra in ways that produce very few genuinely new impacts. The composers spend so much time trying to conjure ways to generate different sounds, in fact, that they completely lose the foundational point of the score: to create an emotional connection with the story and characters. At this critical task, they completely fail.

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