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Thirteen Lives (Benjamin Wallfisch) (2022)
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Average: 2.69 Stars
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Alternate review of THIRTEEN LIVES at Movie Music UK
Jonathan Broxton - September 26, 2022, at 10:08 a.m.
1 comment  (242 views)
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Composed and Produced by:

Conducted by:
Chris Egan

Orchestrated by:
David J. Krystal
Alex Lu
Silvio Buchmeyer
Total Time: 45:52
• 1. Thirteen Lives (3:50)
• 2. Tham Luang (2:36)
• 3. Rain (2:44)
• 4. Flood (1:01)
• 5. Dive (3:50)
• 6. Navy SEALs (3:33)
• 7. Oxygen (2:15)
• 8. Prayer (4:18)
• 9. Syringe (4:18)
• 10. First Customer (1:15)
• 11. White Umbrella (3:23)
• 12. Everyone Leaves Today (4:35)
• 13. All But One (2:05)
• 14. Reunion (3:16)
• 15. Soh Long Nan* (2:53)

* performed by Natt Buntita
Album Cover Art
Milan Records/Sony Classical
(August 5th, 2022)
Commercial digital release only.
There exists no official packaging for this album.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,144
Written 8/14/22
Buy it... only if you embraced the stark tone of Benjamin Wallfisch's minimally ethnic and dramatic melodicism during the score's final cues in context.

Avoid it... if you expect this score to excel at any of its duties to drive the suspense and humanize the characters in the tale, the director dictating an experimental, atmospheric score that mostly fails to engage.

Wallfisch
Wallfisch
Thirteen Lives: (Benjamin Wallfisch) A Ron Howard drama originally set to debut on the big screen but eventually released mostly via Amazon streaming, Thirteen Lives is the biographical tale of the 2018 Tham Luang cave rescue. That feat resulted after a soccer team of local boys took an unscheduled detour to explore the Tham Luang Nang Non caves in the northern part of Thailand. A freak rainstorm flooded the cave complex and trapped the boys and their coach within, forcing Thai Navy SEALs and British diving experts to rescue them over the following three weeks using unconventional methods. The story was an international sensation, and other than the death of one of the SEALs, the rescue was declared a success as the team was extracted alive. Although the tale had already been told in a documentary before, Howard sought to approach its drama from a more cinematic viewpoint without overemphasizing the emotional element to a sappy, Hollywood end. His efforts were largely considered a success, though Thirteen Lives struggled to gain traction with audiences more interested in lighter summer fluff. One of the trickier elements of the picture was its soundtrack, which did employ regional source music as necessary but also required a score that Howard wished to defy norms. He specifically sought to avoid overly sentimental or manipulative music, instead focusing on using the score a tool of abstraction, disorientation, and chaos. He initially sought the advice of his regular collaborator of many years, Hans Zimmer, who appropriately recommended the ascendant Benjamin Wallfisch for the assignment. Howard and Wallfisch hashed through extensive strategic approaches to the score over several months, seeking ways to incorporate Thai influences, experimental electronic suspense techniques, and just enough of a touch of drama to suffice for the human element. Wallfisch is adept at exactly this kind of merging, for he applied similar traits to his music for the 2014 film, Bhopal: A Prayer for Rain, and the end result in Thirteen Lives is very much telegraphed by that prior work. In fact, if you swap out the Indian ethnic influences for Thai ones and crank up the manipulation of the electronic aspects in Bhopal: A Prayer for Rain, you essentially receive the same score again, even down to the cello and keyboarded main theme of quiet contemplation.

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