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Woman in Gold (Martin Phipps/Hans Zimmer) (2015)
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Average: 2.85 Stars
***** 10 5 Stars
**** 17 4 Stars
*** 27 3 Stars
** 20 2 Stars
* 15 1 Stars
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Co-Composed and Produced by:
Martin Phipps

Co-Composed by:

Orchestrated and Conducted by:
Andrew Skeet

Additional Music by:
Andrew Kawczynski
Natalie Holt
Total Time: 41:35
• 1. O Mary Don't You Weep (traditional) (3:16)
• 2. Hotel Jazz - composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1:10)
• 3. Deh, Vieni Alla Finestra - composed by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart (1:12)
• 4. Restless* (2:10)
• 5. Maria Altman (3:09)
• 6. The Belvedere (2:40)
• 7. Vienna* (1:15)
• 8. Randy Schoenberg (1:27)
• 9. Open the Door* (2:09)
• 10. Apotheke (1:26)
• 11. Fleeing Vienna* (4:15)
• 12. Flight 12 to Cologne* (3:26)
• 13. First Hurdle Down (2:01)
• 14. Art Theft* (2:43)
• 15. Statues (1:08)
• 16. Final Testimony (2:13)
• 17. The Language of Our Future (3:18)
• 18. I Lived Here (1:49)


* composed in part by Hans Zimmer
Album Cover Art
Sony Classical
(June 1st, 2015)
Regular commercial release, with CD and vinyl options.
The insert includes no extra information about the score or film.
Filmtracks Traffic Rank: #2,332
Written 1/29/25
Buy it... for a competent, conservative drama score that adequately shares a chamber feeling between understated themes supplied by Martin Phipps and Hans Zimmer.

Avoid it... if inspiration is your expectation, Phipps' work elevating optimism and determination for the protagonist in only a few cues and Zimmer's portion stewing in the gloomier flashback sequences.

Zimmer
Zimmer
Woman in Gold: (Martin Phipps/Hans Zimmer) Based on the true story of Jewish refugee Maria Altmann, whose family fled Austria during World War II, Woman in Gold tells of her plight to regain ownership of uniquely styled artwork that had been stolen from her family by the Nazis. While the real legal case involved five pieces of art worth hundreds of millions of dollars, the 2015 movie was focused on the primary "Woman in Gold" painting of her aunt. Helen Mirren plays Altmann as the various legal battles play out in Austria and America, with several elements of the story embellished or outright altered. In the end, Altmann wins her case at the United States Supreme Court and with Austrian arbiters, taking possession of the paintings from Austrian museums and moving them to America. It's not the most glamorous subject matter, but Woman in Gold had enough character intrigue to carry it to solid box office results even if it failed to muster much awards interest. The soundtrack contains a blend of classical source placements and original music by Martin Phipps and Hans Zimmer. It wasn't uncommon for Zimmer to take an interest in scoring only parts of a World War II drama, including 2024's Blitz, targeting his efforts on one side of a story in a separated assignment. The main credit for the music in Woman in Gold goes to Phipps, a British composer known most for his television works but branching into film projects on occasion as well. Zimmer was reportedly only interested in scoring the flashback sequences in Woman in Gold, leaving the bulk of the modern-day courtroom and other drama to Phipps. The extent of the direct collaboration between the two composers is not certain, but each utilized their own ghostwriter. (Zimmer only wrote about three minutes of music solo for the movie, the opening credits.) The style of the score overall is consistent between the two, a chamber feel with piano and slight synthetic accompaniment guiding both halves of the work. Phipps applies the synthetic effects for the modern scenes more readily alongside the connecting chamber tones. Highlighted performers include acoustic guitar, alpine horn, piano, and cello. Aside from the light classical source pieces and one rock song on the soundtrack, the work is consistently tonal and easily digestible, both composers offering muted but appreciable drama without getting in the way of the narrative. There are moments of dissonance in "The Belvedere," "Fleeing Vienna," and "Flight 12 to Cologne," but these passages don't define the whole.

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