When Badham took control of the picture, he brought along
his regular composing collaborator at the time, Arthur B. Rubinstein.
While Badham's career included work with John Williams and Hans Zimmer,
his projects with Rubenstein represented some of the composer's most
notable feature film music. Although they had just come from the
impressive
Blue Thunder at the time, they were primarily
television artists, and Rubinstein's career is highlighted by his duo of
1983 feature scores. He was known at the time for his abilities in
combining synthetic and orchestral sounds, especially in their catering
to standard pop culture styling. In many ways,
WarGames is a
comprehensive display of his wide range of talents, in part because of
his extraordinary depth of motific development but also in its highly
disparate instrumental ranges. This score is, in short, all over the
place in terms of style and tone, caught inescapably in the same dilemma
that faced the film as a whole. You can hear Rubinstein struggle to
balance the contemporary tones of the teenagers' world with the
strikingly serious militaristic angle, the whimsically lyrical Americana
side, and mischievous parody chase material, all sometimes at play in
short succession. For the teenage hacker element, the composer goes the
route of electronic pop silliness, the ultimate in early 1980's cheese
that is even less tolerable than most of the looped music for video
arcades of the era. The NORAD scenes feature extremely abrasive,
rhythmic, orchestral force, highlighted by relentless layers of
percussion and an abnormally large brass section. As the protagonists
contemplate nuclear annihilation during the island scenes in the middle
of the film, Rubinstein responds with harmonica-led tones of sincerity
that remind of Jerry Goldsmith's Westerns of the 1960's. The somewhat
dainty chase material, meanwhile, includes affable woodwind rhythms that
offer a tad of Williams' mischief built into their style. As if these
disparate tones of the score don't cause enough of a whiplash,
Rubinstein reinforces them with a huge selection of motifs in
WarGames.
Broderick's hacker receives two themes, each translated
into eerie, highly synthetic song variants performed by the composer's
band, "The Beepers," early in the
WarGames score. These
simplistic progressions of three of four notes are extremely obnoxious
and are barely recognizable when they turn serious in the latter half of
the score. The NORAD computer and its creator receive a couple of often
intertwined themes, the more sensitive one for the computer a lovely
piano melody that is too seldom utilized to really appreciate. The
aforementioned harmonica theme in
WarGames is translated into the
"Edge of the World" song that is featured prominently and has become the
soundtrack's calling card for mainstream viewers. The mischief,
military, and action motifs all dutifully pop up in their expected
places, the action motif the most interesting in its brutality in
"Helicopter Pursuit & Launch Detected" and "Winner None." Rubenstein is
at the top of his game in the climactic "Winner None," the cue's brass
lines answering each other in pounding Alan Silvestri fashion to
accompany the horrifying scenarios being played out by the computer at
the climax. A few singular motifs in the score, such as the Russian
choral material in "Confidence is High," further fragment its narrative,
however, confirming
WarGames as a truly schizophrenic work. It's
not hard to appreciate the technical mastery in some of Rubenstein's
highlights, and the Americana theme for "Edge of the World" is easily
digestible, but
WarGames remains a very challenging score to
casually enjoy on album. The early synthetic tones for the lead
character and the hacking element are downright insufferable so many
years later, regardless of the audio quality, and the thematic
assignments that follow are compartmentalized to a great degree, never
evolving to mingle with each other intelligently. It's almost as though
Rubenstein wrote a score too complex for what the film required, though
the indecision about whether to make the overall personality
light-hearted, a split parody, or completely serious likely doomed the
music more than it did the film.
On album, it took a long time for
WarGames to be
treated properly. The original LP presentation contained the highlights
of the score riddled with dialogue, and its only official CD
representation for a long time was in a little over twenty minutes on
Rubenstein's rare, personal 1998 promotional set from Super Tracks. In
2008, Intrada Records finally provided the complete score with a couple
of bonus tracks that brought the presentation's time to almost 70
minutes. Sound quality on this 2,500-copy release is surprisingly good,
though while that clarity enhances the action material, it doesn't do
much justice to the purely synthetic portions early in the score. Some
strange placements of players in the soundscape will cause stereo
oddities in a few places. It was Rubinstein himself who chose to re-mix
this 2008 presentation as he wanted for it to be heard in the film; the
director had dialed down many of the synthetic vocal lines that
Rubinstein had intended to carry the melody of several cues. The product
sold out and has fetched obscene prices, and it remains relevant despite
a 2018 revisiting of the score by Quartet Records. For their 2-CD
presentation of the
WarGames score, Quartet chose to remaster
both the film and original LP album mixes of the score to populate its
two CDs, throwing some of the alternates onto the end of the second CD.
Expect a different listening experience on this product, the sound
quality roughly the same but cues separated and emphasizing the mix
preferred by the director and better known by listeners. Of particular
interest is the version of "History Lesson" without vocals. Given that
hardcore enthusiasts of the film are the intended audience for this
album, opinions about which mix is superior will vary widely, and some
may even prefer the original LP remastering that continues to include a
plethora of dialogue tracks. The 2008 album will remain viable for these
ardent fans, however, given its distinct presentation. The 2018 product
was limited to 1,000 copies which sold out relatively quickly, prompting
Quartet to re-issue the product by 2020, this time eliminating a stated
limit to the pressing's quantity. Overall,
WarGames is among
Rubenstein's most respected career works, and given its highly disparate
components, it's likely best that you preview the music in the context
of the highly entertaining movie before exploring either of the albums
blindly.
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