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Review of The Son (Hans Zimmer)
Composed by:
Hans Zimmer
Produced and Additional Music by:
David Fleming
Conducted by:
Nick Glennie-Smith
Orchestrated by:
Oscar Senen
Label and Release Date:
Lakeshore Records
(November 18th, 2022)
Availability:
Digital commercial release only.
Album 1 Cover
FILMTRACKS RECOMMENDS:
Buy it... only if you seek to complete your collection of drab, unexpressive, and emotionless Hans Zimmer dramas of minimal scope.

Avoid it... if you're badly constipated, because nothing in this music will help inspire that stubborn turd to get moving.
FILMTRACKS EDITORIAL REVIEW:
The Son: (Hans Zimmer) It's not unusual to encounter films of highly disturbing familial challenges that rely on superb acting performances to elevate their appeal. Director Florian Zeller's pair of The Father in 2020 and The Son in 2022 are those types of movies; both are remarkably depressing in their own ways, but The Father was an award-winning success that earned high praise for star Anthony Hopkins while The Son was a monumental failure that left audiences bewildered and upset without any empathetic catharsis. While Hopkins reprises a similar role in the second movie as a not-so-nice grandpa, it's Hugh Jackman that is the centerpiece of the production. He plays a father with sons from two different wives, one a 17-year-old and another a very young product of his second marriage. The older boy blames his father for his depression and suicidal thoughts, unable to reconcile his father's affair with the woman who became his second wife. Meanwhile, the father attempts to apply his lessons learned from his first failed family to avoid making the same mistakes again. Not surprisingly, the situation turns from bad to worse, and the father and mother of the 17-year-old are not able to prevent the worst outcome. The topic and story allowed Jackman to dabble in awards consideration, but the story of The Son is so appallingly upsetting that few audiences or critics ultimately cared. It's a movie that makes you feel terrible about humanity, with no redeeming lesson to convey and an unrecouped budget to show for it. The Father had been scored by Ludovico Einaudi, but for The Son Zeller landed Hans Zimmer for the assignment. The composer had been dabbling in several lesser-known dramas during the early 2020's, often with a co-composer or ghostwriter in tow. In this case, that secondary composer is David Fleming, though his contribution does not rise to co-compositional credit. The work is comprised of solely a string ensemble and synthesizers, with Zimmer's usual solo collaborators on strings providing minimal sonic coloration beyond the string ensemble and occasional ambient synthetic effects. The result is a score that is a less dramatic version of The Survivor and akin to Rebuilding Paradise, providing very basic and conservative musical foundations that don't have much impact on the film.

Among Zimmer's light, morbid drama scores, The Son may very well be his most bleak, accomplishing no emotional connection and totally failing to solve the empathy issues suffered by the film. This kind of music is meant to be dialed down by a sound mixer in the final product to yield absolutely no character and minimal warmth. Most of Zimmer's cues are formulated by series of pulsating string notes with almost no secondary lines. Sometimes the players quiver, but it's mostly a score of long sustains and perpetual haze, performance inflection held to nearly non-existent levels. The score is mostly tonal in a foggy manner, though dissonant textures on strings define "Bridge," "Nicholas," and "Divide." The melodic structures in The Son do exist, but they are completely unmemorable because of their excruciatingly slow tempos. You really need to listen to the score at double speed to discern the very slight melodic structures at work, and even then, the listening experience still seems frightfully slow. The main theme in the "Waves" cues is a seven-note series that meanders with no anchoring point, its three-note primary phrase answered by a four-note response. The sounds of ocean waves on a beach in the "Waves" cues is a decent technique but not really all that creative. This theme takes a more pensive tact in "Mirror" and is very slight but marginally more hopeful in the conclusive "Mirage." A secondary theme is a distinct, longer-lined identity in "Love is Not Enough" that hints at deeper drama and makes better use of the soloists. The structure of this idea repeats endlessly without much modulation, matching the main theme in its wholly cold demeanor. It's possible that "Nicholas" is a deconstructed version of this second theme, but Zimmer fails to tie in earlier representations of the troubled boy into this idea to denote his downfall. The entirety of The Son is emotionally inept and devoid of any meaningful narrative. It has the constructs and sound of a sideshow diversion for the composer, not one striving to develop any kind of soul for the shattered families in the story. It's not unlistenable music by any means; in fact, the score can pass by without any significant negative moment to break its mood. But that experience is so pointless from start to finish that few listeners will find much appeal to the work on album. That product is only 20 minutes long, which is somewhat merciful given the absolute boredom it will invoke. Zimmer can be infinitely better than this, and the film definitely could have used more emotionally engaging music.  **
TRACK LISTINGS:
Total Time: 20:23

• 1. Waves 1 (1:59)
• 2. Love is Not Enough (3:21)
• 3. Mirror (1:36)
• 4. Bridge (1:19)
• 5. Waves 2 (2:28)
• 6. Nicholas (3:23)
• 7. Divide (0:59)
• 8. Waves 3 (2:04)
• 9. Mirage (3:10)
NOTES & QUOTES:
There exists no official packaging for this album.
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The reviews and other textual content contained on the filmtracks.com site may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without the prior written authority of Christian Clemmensen at Filmtracks Publications. All artwork and sound clips from The Son are Copyright © 2022, Lakeshore Records and cannot be redistributed without the label's expressed written consent. Page created 1/28/25 (and not updated significantly since).