Ross had more previous experience writing film music,
though Reznor seems to maintain primary credit for
The Social
Network. Some of the music they provided for the film consists of
re-workings of tracks from their 2008 album "Ghosts I-IV," a product
that Reznor considered an ambient soundtrack for daydreams and thus the
starting point for this film score. Fans of Reznor and Ross will hear
nothing particularly groundbreaking in
The Social Network,
therefore, and the score is understandably aimed at their collectors
rather than those of traditional film music. Original music of
significant size was eliminated from consideration, a convenient choice
fiscally but also an excuse to attempt one of those "radically
different" kinds of film scores that beats you over the head with a
murky environment rather than actually accomplish anything musically. As
a solo album, Reznor and Ross' achievement for
The Social Network
has its place. Unfortunately, looking at it as a film score, you can't
get help but be reminded that these men are novices in the genre.
Apologists will claim that the music, like that of Clint Mansell, is
revolutionary, the tell-tale sign that a really awful score for a
"different" kind of film is trying to masquerade as something more
intelligently conceived than it actually is. Every moment of the music
for
The Social Network is an exercise in disillusionment, the
kind of morbidly drab electronic atmosphere that encourages drug users
to dive headfirst into the realm of suicidal thoughts. Sunny outside?
Don't bother. Apparently, the sun never shone when Facebook was being
created, either. The ensemble consists of keyboarded samples and
electric guitars, both of which processed to death in all sorts of
obnoxiously artificial ways. Think of all the noises that major
household appliances and computer accessories make when they start
failing, or the sounds of an automotive body shop and mechanic's bay.
Think of the sounds of rail cars being hitched or garbage trucks lifting
and banging dumpsters. Think of jackhammers and pile-drivers. Now lower
the pitch of all those pleasant sounds, extend their duration three or
four times in length, and imagine them as an aimless musical device...
abrasive, slightly organized sound effects in a basic loop for four
minutes. Behold manipulation upon manipulation of sounds that were,
before much of the audience was born, organic.
Vague hints of harmonic ease are perpetually obscured
by the haze of dissonant layers of grinding, droning noise. The score's
only theme, heard in extremely slow, practically comatose piano
renderings over this fog in "Hand Covers Bruise" and several places
thereafter, is the ultimate downer. Narrative flow and synchronization
points are foreign ideas to these performers, further exposing the score
as being better applied to the market as a solo album. In construct,
there is nothing in this music to reflect the creation of accidental
billionaires, much less the concepts of legal intrigue, interpersonal
conflict, or even accurate representations of technology. The score is
laced with tones from the 1980's, a completely ridiculous choice of base
from which to create music for a film about the 21st Century's first
online superstar. The cue "In Motion" is about as wretched as anything
to grace a film score in years, taking 80's video game sound effects and
old midi music style and resurrecting them for an inappropriate
occasion. In
Tron: Legacy, these sounds are understandable, but
here? Likewise, another laughable moment comes in Reznor's adaptation of
"In the Hall of the Mountain King," an amazing feat of torture that must
have Edvard Grieg spinning in his grave. Otherwise, a 66-minute album is
as redundantly insufferable as any score in recent memory, with no
standout cues, no beginning, no end, no suspense, no adversity, and,
most importantly, no sense of accomplishment. Sure, the characters
aren't likeable, but they're certainly not as two-dimensional as this
music suggests. Reznor and Ross may have met Fincher's expectations, but
this film could have used more than a time-inappropriate, peripheral Nine
Inch Nails album. The film licensed eighteen songs to more accurately
convey the less depressing emotions necessary in certain scenes, but
none of these songs (including the rare appearance of a song by The
Beatles in any film) is included on the soundtrack. That album was
released by Reznor's own label, first for free as a five-track download
teaser and then commercially in full form. In the end,
The Social
Network is music for the sake of music, not music for the sake of
film. When you watch American football and see players take a blow to
the head and lie motionless on the field for five minutes before walking
groggily to the sidelines with much assistance, this music is the kind
of noise that they must hear in their helmets as their sloshing brains
suffer the initial effects of a concussion.
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