How did THIS score win an Oscar?

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  • Опубліковано 21 бер 2023
  • People are calling the Oscar winning score boring and repetitive. Is it really so bad?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 411

  • @Condog
    @Condog Рік тому +1645

    How could anyone call this score boring??? I watched the movie 3 times and it literally gave me chills ever time

    • @Albino_Monke
      @Albino_Monke Рік тому +28

      I dont think ill ever be able to go through that again

    • @johnrojas8215
      @johnrojas8215 Рік тому +4

      It's not accurate

    • @WhoAmIHmmm
      @WhoAmIHmmm Рік тому +45

      ​@@johnrojas8215accuracy is not the point of the movie

    • @johnrojas8215
      @johnrojas8215 Рік тому +6

      @@WhoAmIHmmm dude it's not even that terrifying at all, accuracy is needed so it can be as awful and horrific, an example of a ww1 movie would be westfront it's an old movie but it portraits how war was.

    • @johnrojas8215
      @johnrojas8215 Рік тому +1

      this movie is like hella boring ngl not even that terrifying.

  • @simonjohansson248
    @simonjohansson248 Рік тому +1088

    You know a movie is depressing when it even darkens the color of your shirt..

    • @RyanLeach
      @RyanLeach  Рік тому +158

      Everything has become so bleak

    • @michaelfitzgerald38
      @michaelfitzgerald38 Рік тому +11

      Were you expecting a movie about WW1 to be joyful or funny?

    • @simonjohansson248
      @simonjohansson248 Рік тому +6

      @@michaelfitzgerald38 I didn't expect it to alter the color of real life objects 😉

    • @Loli4lyf
      @Loli4lyf Рік тому +13

      ​@@simonjohansson248 bro nobody gets the joke and it gives me physical pain

    • @panzershrek7942
      @panzershrek7942 Рік тому +1

      @@michaelfitzgerald38 r/wooosh

  • @TrophyBoiii
    @TrophyBoiii Рік тому +1168

    What I loved about this simplistic score is, that the 2 most used patterns (the now famous 3 not brass pattern, as well as the snare drum rhythm) are not subtle at all. They are the opposite of film music that merges perfectly with the film without you realizing it. This music is disruptive. It's present. It's impossible not to notice. It's terrible, in a a sense that it evokes terror within the audience. It's almost like a jump scare. And boy, does it fit that horrible war.

    • @jayandgem
      @jayandgem Рік тому +28

      My sentiments exactly.

    • @user-tc9po4mi7h
      @user-tc9po4mi7h Рік тому +8

      I couldn't say better

    • @soni3608
      @soni3608 Рік тому +17

      It also pushes the concept of how mechanical and uncaring the *machine* of war is

    • @robkilbride9242
      @robkilbride9242 Рік тому +1

      If you like it you should use the word “simple” not, “simplistic”. The negative connotation of “simplistic” is the main reason the word exists at all.

  • @usernamestelpe
    @usernamestelpe Рік тому +204

    4:03 I think the piano piece highlights the fact that they are back at the farm, where they had one of the few good moments. The first time they get shot at, but they get away, laughing and enjoying the food. It calls back to that moment with it's beauty, while being somber for obvious reasons.
    That's the way I viewed it at least.

    • @stephendavis6267
      @stephendavis6267 Рік тому +9

      Agreed. I also think it is somewhat of an elegy because it is a moment of respite, and they have time to take stock of the fact that the war is soon to be over and they (incorrectly) think they are going home soon, and will be able to process the horrors of what they have endured and be able to properly mourn and reflect on their fallen comrades. But it's also a premortem elegy for Kat and ultimately Paul.

    • @Swamp72
      @Swamp72 Рік тому

      Do you know the name of that piece?

    • @tobiaskringe8734
      @tobiaskringe8734 Рік тому +2

      @@Swamp72 "Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ" BWV 639
      ua-cam.com/video/fLLEumabTPA/v-deo.html
      It has been used in movies before, for example by Tarkovsky in Solaris (ua-cam.com/video/apvgFZCSeQY/v-deo.html), or quite originally by Lars von Trier in Nymphomaniac (ua-cam.com/video/ltjToiuP4xs/v-deo.html)

    • @Swamp72
      @Swamp72 Рік тому

      @@tobiaskringe8734 awesome, thank you!

  • @uncle7215
    @uncle7215 Рік тому +434

    People who say the score is shit obviously haven’t watched the film and listened to Tjaden, Bomb Crater, Comrades, Flares, and Paul. Amazing tracks that tore a hole through my heart. Bertelmann did in a amazing job

    • @friedrichgattermann
      @friedrichgattermann Рік тому +8

      Totally agree. The score is phenomenal

    • @beatricesasso5932
      @beatricesasso5932 Рік тому +2

      I agree with you. The score is amazing 👏👏👏

    • @TheGamingFishkiller
      @TheGamingFishkiller Рік тому +1

      How are you doing with your lumbago?

    • @uncle7215
      @uncle7215 Рік тому +3

      @@TheGamingFishkiller it’s a slow and painful death my brotha

    • @airsir9559
      @airsir9559 5 місяців тому +2

      My favourite is Making Sense of War. Gets me every time.

  • @chiellazona5624
    @chiellazona5624 Рік тому +38

    I seriously don't understand the hate to the score. It's not boring at all. It gives me goosebumps. It's heavy

  • @friedrichgattermann
    @friedrichgattermann Рік тому +149

    I love the soundtrack. Wouldn’t say it is boring at all 😅
    It’s super modern and fits the film very good.
    Congrats to Volker Bertelmann!

  • @technoquetz126
    @technoquetz126 Рік тому +204

    Well I think the point of the soundtrack kind of is that it’s modern, WWI was the first modern war, and all of the generals were still trying to fight war in a very traditional way, an example is ending the war at 11 AM November 11 (11 11 11), and it’s to show the modern age is closing in on these people, the soundtrack literally sounds like a machine clanking and chains running along the ground, and constantly throughout the movie the soldiers are being killed by some new very modern machine like flamethrowers or tanks, and of course planes are bombing them throughout a lot of the movie, and yes the soundtrack is very repetitive, but it is effective, it shows nobody had experienced that kind of warfare before, high schoolers were being sent off to a war where they’d probably be dead before the end of the first day, and they were fighting with technology never used before

    • @samuelbrooker1553
      @samuelbrooker1553 Рік тому +9

      just so you know they weren't getting bombed, it was artillery

    • @StubbySum9
      @StubbySum9 Рік тому

      My exact thought as well :) Loved the movie.

    • @bruhlol2744
      @bruhlol2744 Рік тому

      @@samuelbrooker1553 bombing suprisingly was on a more strategic scale, like bombing airfields, artillery, and even factories in london and paris

  • @ChrisJ82
    @ChrisJ82 Рік тому +365

    You could say that composing just 3 bass tones is a sort of brilliant minimalism. For me it’s the same with abstract art. Yes, a couple of Paint dots can be art, but at least you can’t say that it is fine craftsmanship. I don’t like it and it’s not really music for me, but I can understand that it is considered art and fitting to the film.

    • @jonnenne
      @jonnenne Рік тому +41

      A film score can be assessed on its own as a musical piece. But in this context it is about the entirety, not just the musical piece. The paint comparison isn't really fitting because of that. The point of Marcel Duchamp's Fountain isn't the piece itself but rather its place in the context.

    • @ronricherson6685
      @ronricherson6685 Рік тому +3

      Great honesty Christoph. I agree with you. I don't watch a lot of TV but due to health reasons I was stuck watching to pass the time. I've noticed that the lack of melody, long slowly-evolving dark drones and a minimalist approach has really overtaken film and TV. In the movie, that large minor triad blasting out of nowhere seemed to have been added as a, "Hey, let's do something bold and obnoxious here to stand out from the otherwise mundane themes!" I'm afraid that comment may appear snarky, but when I watched this movie with a friend, we both said, "What's up with that?" and laughed. It's still very subjective, so I enjoy hearing what people think. I am a composer, by the way. Cheers!

    • @sneed777
      @sneed777 Рік тому

      No no no. Not everything is art

    • @ronricherson6685
      @ronricherson6685 Рік тому

      You're right...sometimes movie music is bombastic yet as ordinary and forgettable as bathroom wallpaper...which I think is what a lot of directors want.

    • @Chocolateness2000
      @Chocolateness2000 Рік тому +2

      I personally disagree with this, but it’s only because I think that the context of the music is the way these things are awarded. Music for movies and tv is made for moments which have other things going on over the top of the music. This can’t be judged in the same way as an album with no external piece to serve.

  • @cirehn3866
    @cirehn3866 Рік тому +65

    I study International Relations, so i've been reading about war (as an institution and as a practice) since i was 18. The day i watched this rendition of AQOTWF was the day something changed. I can't hear the name of any war theorist, can't read about historical campaigns, can't listen to the news about any current conflict, can't do nothing related to war without hearing the brass pattern. Sometimes i'm doing the most random of things, and the three notes slam against my brain walls, and my day is dragged to the mud. This score may be considered simple, but it lingers like a PTSD. I'm no music student, I can't debate over the theory superiority behind other scores, but I can say this: no other soundtrack did the same to me.

  • @Ramen_Sensei
    @Ramen_Sensei Рік тому +83

    The first time I heard those three “dark” notes…YOOOOOOO!!! I was immersed in the movie immediately because, well, it was a totally different approach to the usual type of compositions that are used for this movie genre!! It was pretty darn good!! And thank you for explaining deeper!! 👊👊

  • @SteelShirt99
    @SteelShirt99 Рік тому +475

    The signature sound was incredible with the story. However I feel like Babylon should’ve won.

    • @igruk93
      @igruk93 Рік тому +23

      Waiting for video about Babylon "How did THIS score didn't win an Oscar?"

    • @ChemBoy613
      @ChemBoy613 Рік тому +9

      I thought Babylon should have won too but all quiet was an incredible film

    • @jacklafferty6654
      @jacklafferty6654 Рік тому +16

      I thought women talking should have won but most people refuse to watch the movie because they look at the title and run a mile away

    • @SteelShirt99
      @SteelShirt99 Рік тому +3

      @@jacklafferty6654 haha I’ll check it out

    • @Reggie1408
      @Reggie1408 Рік тому +14

      Babylon has the better "CD soundtrack". AQOTWF has the better movie score

  • @PeterToml1nson
    @PeterToml1nson Рік тому +23

    From a trailer composer’s perspective, I think it’s awesome to hear a braam/signature sound be the primary feature of a score. It works really well and the sound design and production were incredible

  • @biggusdave
    @biggusdave Рік тому +9

    I can't believe some composers don't seem to recognise the difference between music scored for film and a stand alone score.

  • @HarveySummers
    @HarveySummers Рік тому +50

    A very good appraisal / deconstruction of the score here. As a film composer myself, I know how challenging it can be to walk the fine line between being original, supporting the story, providing an appropriate tone for what is on screen, adding something to the scene which is not on screen and also staying out of the way enough so as not to pull attention away from the movie. I think the composer did a superb job of balancing those elements here and deserved the award not least for his carefully pitched subtlety. I have just finished scoring a film where my music never follows the on screen action which is almost entirely dialogue between two characters. Instead, I’m scoring their various thought processes as they figure out their mysterious relationship to each other, which at times are confused and conflicting, at other times in unison and generally, a little devious / sneaky yet never malicious. So the score supports the story by adding something which does not become apparent until we get to the final act, making for a lot of mystery, and perhaps not only giving the audience more questions, but also making them ask why they are even asking those questions in the first place! Fortunately I was working with a director who understood all of that subtext and liked the approach but it doesn’t always go so smoothly! I can also see why some folk might not like this choice as a winner when what they love in a score is a big, strong and memorable melody. But those are things for musical appreciation, a score is often, if not always, serving other priorities. 😊

  • @domidoodoo
    @domidoodoo Рік тому +2

    The music is so memorable for me to the point I just hear it in my head whenever I’m learning about ww1 or ww2

  • @6666Imperator
    @6666Imperator Рік тому +9

    maybe another aspect of the music becoming more happy is that from a meta perspective we are closing in towards the end of the war, the desired peace as well as the scene where Paul steps into the light outside the bunker which can of course also be seen as "stepping into the light" aka dying, leaving all sorrows, bitterness and pain behind

  • @derkeheath5172
    @derkeheath5172 Рік тому +11

    I prefer melodic scores, but an ambient score can work wonderfully. The one thing that DOES annoy me immensely with ambient scores, though, is when I can't tell if the sounds I'm hearing are part of the score or something in the movie that the characters are hearing. This happens a LOT in modern horror movies.

  • @hottkrap1188
    @hottkrap1188 Рік тому +3

    The timing of the synth and tension it builds is crazy, love this score.

  • @Fall__Forward
    @Fall__Forward Рік тому +7

    Everyone makes fun of the BUMMM BUMM BUMMMM because that's all they played at the Oscars... but in the film it's played over our first view of the war machine. It's a really industrial sounding part of the score giving us our introduction to the war machine... it's actually a really interesting and noteworthy choice...
    You might say this during the video I haven't watched yet

  • @pianoman1857
    @pianoman1857 Рік тому +2

    4:16 if anyone is wondering it’s a Bach Choral « Ich ruf zu dir, Herr » BWV 639

  • @nananou1687
    @nananou1687 Рік тому +4

    People forget that the score is to complement the film , not outshine it. It is probably the perfect score if you look at it that way

  • @emmanuelmartinezguzman2357
    @emmanuelmartinezguzman2357 Рік тому +1

    That transition from before seeing the movie and after doing it says a lot of things 💀💀💀

  • @uffevonlauterbach
    @uffevonlauterbach Рік тому +34

    I liked your humor with the part about us watching you watch the movie for two hours. 😆 "There's not really anything 'tuneful' or 'memorable' other than maybe like a three note lick." This is one of the reasons I like your videos and why I subscribed sometime ago. You listen to the music and you try to hear the music from a different perspective. This sort of reminds me of when you talked about Metroid Dread's music. People were saying the music wasn't memorable for that game as well, and like you said in that video, the music is made for the setting of that game, and the music in this film was specifically made with a different approach in mind rather than relying on it just using melodies.
    I've never seen this movie, but again, I like your perspective. Great review.

  • @PastoriMP
    @PastoriMP Рік тому +1

    That 3 notes score with synths (look out of place at first) was the first soundtrack that could transcribe lots of feelings mixed together. Eerie. You knew something bad was going to happen. It stuck with me ever since, when I remember the scenes. That’s a real genius there! Totally deserves.

  • @jasonhubsmith
    @jasonhubsmith Рік тому +12

    The music is wonderful! It was so out of place and machine sounding - it was great! It shows how war is a machine, and the charecters we see go through it are a cog in it.

  • @chasvox2
    @chasvox2 Рік тому +12

    Glad you did this. I am in the process of scoring a film (for local film maker) and your remarks - "works with film and the story" - are spot on. Fortunately the writer/director I am composing for has given me free reign......(as you probably know Bertelmann has an instrument library issued by Spitfire...which I find quite fascinating and useful....)...keep up the good work, Mr. Leach.

  • @Windupchronic
    @Windupchronic Рік тому +8

    A good score just has to fit the material and help create the best possible version of the film. That doesn't mean it should have themes or _not_ be repetitive. It doesn't have to be a compelling listening experience in its own right. An argument can be made that film scores can sometimes be distracting by being too melodic when it doesn't fit the material or the scene.

  • @robabiera733
    @robabiera733 Рік тому +9

    The only thing that counts when scoring a film is: does it make the audience connect with the film? If it does that, it succeeds.
    That having been said, could it be said that Bertelmann relied on cliches about war and pacifism?

    • @pacorka9943
      @pacorka9943 Рік тому +3

      The novel is nearly 100 years old so I feel like cliches are gonna naturally be there.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Рік тому +2

      The movie isn't pacifist as much as socialist. The spirit it invokes makes you want to attack the commanding officer, not lay down your arms.

  • @Lap-TV123
    @Lap-TV123 Рік тому +2

    Music is epic .
    Their “No end” theme is epic.
    And these three notes have the potential to become a sound depiction of the word “war” in general

  • @moustachiomoustache8933
    @moustachiomoustache8933 Рік тому +5

    The music instantly sticked out to me in the beggining scene, it reminded me that this is not going to go well, the contrast really helped to highlight the score, and because it was done so quickly in the movie, it grasped my attention for the entire runtime, and this is why I think the score being repetitive worked really well here, because every time I heard those iconic 3 notes, I once again remembered what kind of impression this movie wanted to make on me, and this score is honestly one of the first things that comes to my mind when thinking about this movie, so if it burned itself so strongly into my memory, it must be phenomenal.

  • @nathanaelhahn4795
    @nathanaelhahn4795 Рік тому +2

    Even just the first cue is amazing. The famous motif with that synth... rips out your heart. Even the way the synth is designed with a slight fall at the end. Outstanding.

  • @TheAltair236
    @TheAltair236 Рік тому +8

    Would I buy the soundtrack? No. But the score fits perfectly to the movie and thats why the guy won. A great score doesnt not has to be great on its own.

  • @nei892
    @nei892 Рік тому +4

    I noticed that the Bach cantata being used, "ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ" was the same one that was being used in tarkovsky's solaris. I'm wondering whether that was an intentional reference or not

  • @berserker2551
    @berserker2551 Рік тому +1

    You are a very nice music teacher
    Thanks so much for share your knowledge
    All the best :)

  • @classicalmusiclover4029
    @classicalmusiclover4029 Рік тому +3

    When I heard the piece by bach, while watching the tragic story unfold, I couldn’t hold back tears. It’s just so emotional.

  • @joaquinsantillan4130
    @joaquinsantillan4130 Рік тому +1

    Every time i heared those 3 bass lines, my heart started to hurt, i knew that Something was coming. The sadness and the fear that beat produces me is crazy

  • @person_man9278
    @person_man9278 4 місяці тому

    that three bass lick had/has more of an emotional impact on me than any other movie soundtrack EVER. i still get goosebumps just hearing it. easily deserved the oscar and should go down as one of the greatest compositions in all of cinema.

  • @nananou1687
    @nananou1687 Рік тому +4

    Tbf, I feel it was the best movie score of the decade. It did not need to have any fancy music, it needed to provoke dread within you and it did that very well.

  • @emptyhad2571
    @emptyhad2571 Рік тому +1

    Some of the moments felt like a video game

  • @Akkordeondirigent
    @Akkordeondirigent Рік тому

    Great analysis! Thank you very much!

  • @friendedtreefilms
    @friendedtreefilms Рік тому

    This is a really good analysis on the musc of the film. Been looking fr this kinda video great work!

  • @user-cc7ho4ce9z
    @user-cc7ho4ce9z Рік тому +3

    The music drew me into the story and into the movie. Great score.

  • @Rub5007
    @Rub5007 Рік тому +3

    4:05 Side note: the piano piece isn’t a church cantata by Bach. It’s an organ chorale by Bach named Ich ruf zou dir, Herr Jesu Christ (BWV 639)

    • @RyanLeach
      @RyanLeach  Рік тому +1

      ah interesting, there's a cantata BWV 177 with the exact same title Ich ruf zu dir, Herr Jesu Christ

    • @arjenbij
      @arjenbij Рік тому

      ​@@RyanLeach All of Bach's cantata's, like the chorale prelude heard in the video, are based on existing hymn tunes (aka chorales) :)

  • @PatentPending47
    @PatentPending47 Рік тому +1

    I feel like the reason it won was not because of the quality of the music by itself (although I greatly enjoyed both the film and the soundtrack) but by the context of the scenes the tracks are featured in and the intensity and fear of the scenes that the music helps deliver, all while being so minuscule and simple in nature. I see why some don’t agree with its winning. However, the soundtrack in my opinion was masterful and perfectly fit the theme and atmosphere it was trying to create. Those three pronged bass notes in Remains gave me chills as I saw the tanks lurk in the shadows. Sometimes simplicity can deliver better results that complex and convoluted musical pieces

  • @ThyYniverse
    @ThyYniverse Рік тому +1

    I believe that the 3 brass pattern was used similarly to the Prowler's theme in Spider-man: Into the Spider-Verse. Where we the audience get used to a certain melody. It is established already that this melody is dark, ominous, almost sinister. Once the rapport is built, we hear it all over the movie at key moments, establishing that what just happened is certifiably fucked up. I don't know for sure though, and I might be wrong so take that with a grain of salt.

  • @6amerking648
    @6amerking648 Рік тому +2

    I love history and I’m a historian and this movie 🎥 is about all his friends getting killed in front of him and he went through all that just to die seconds before the end of the war it was also probably about the last man to die in WWI

  • @joachimkuipers8002
    @joachimkuipers8002 Рік тому +2

    wirklich informativ gemacht. Danke, Joachim, Berlin

  • @morayonkeys
    @morayonkeys Рік тому +7

    Great analysis! I loved this score, and while it's true I wouldn't listen to it on its own, I thought it was a perfect complement to the picture. There couldn't be a more fitting soundtrack to the wasteland of no-man's-land than 3 notes outlining a minor chord! I only wish I'd been able to experience it in the cinema with a big screen and big sound system.

    • @annaclarafenyo8185
      @annaclarafenyo8185 Рік тому +1

      I don't think of it as a minor chord, because the tonic is the final E, not the initial A. I think it's better described as a 4th, minor 6th, followed by a 1. It doesn't feel like a chord, but like a dissonant evil spirit.

  • @BellsCuriosityShop
    @BellsCuriosityShop Рік тому +2

    Surely the score helps the director reinforce the mood(s) out forward by the picture

  • @rafaelc.c.
    @rafaelc.c. Рік тому +3

    "Boring. Repetitive. No melody" could literally be said of 90% of Zimmer's scores in the last 15 years, yet people don't mind.
    At least AQOTF has soul. The strings and the piano gave emotion and poetry to the soundtrack.
    It isn't Babylon, it isn't The Batman, nor Pinocchio. But it's great.

    • @wilsonwahome8411
      @wilsonwahome8411 Рік тому

      Hans has done a good number of melodic scores, and they were quite good. Apart from TDK trilogy, Dunkirk (which were not boring) and Dark Phoenix, I'm curious to know the rest of the 90% you're talking about.

  • @Dklampanis
    @Dklampanis Рік тому +1

    I think there's a lot to be said about how easily we criticise a composer's vision of a movie while forgetting that when all is said and done they have to serve another person's vision, the director's.

  • @ethicaltechnical
    @ethicaltechnical Рік тому +2

    Gave me anxiety through the whole movie and that's what he was going for.

  • @BertzTriscut
    @BertzTriscut Рік тому +1

    "Didn't have any themes?"
    Dude, anyone with ears can parse out a main theme. That loud blaring horn for the main theme is the same notes used in most of the violin tracks like Ludwig, Paul, Making sense of War, Flares, etc.
    Speaking of the specific arrangement used in the nighttime scene with the flares is used only one other time, and that's in the part where Albert Kropp gets killed by a flamethrower. How can anyone go through this soundtrack and say "no themes?"

  • @geekTroperaku
    @geekTroperaku Рік тому +1

    I love the score, it really conveys the message that " this shit is not going to end well".

  • @winknotes
    @winknotes Рік тому +1

    ROFL the look on your face after watching was brilliant. I had a similar reaction tbh.

  • @Aquablecs
    @Aquablecs Рік тому

    Outstanding score. Deserved the win IMO.
    Also I’d just like to say this was an excellent analysis, well done.

  • @Swimmmy_21
    @Swimmmy_21 Рік тому +1

    I actually really enjoyed the score, the harmonium motif is really cool in my opinion.

  • @AK_-xn1fm
    @AK_-xn1fm Рік тому +1

    People don’t get that movie music is more than just nice music, lyrics or melody. However when it comes to movies it’s all about what way in which movies are able to make use of their score to amplify the tone and the story. If your looking at individual songs it’s different cause it’s only looking at the song not the song and the music.

  • @homeofcreation
    @homeofcreation Рік тому +1

    This was a great review.

  • @StarshipTrooper4231
    @StarshipTrooper4231 4 місяці тому

    I listened to the track and found it extraordinary fitting. The weird almost outdated sound together with the 1918 theme makes it perfect.
    In 1918 the war became more mechanized and tanks were introduced in larger numbers. And as you said, it is honest.

  • @justalpha9138
    @justalpha9138 Рік тому +2

    The score repeats itself a lot, sure, but it is DAMN memorable. I remember being extremely taken aback by those sounds when I first saw this movie, and in all honesty, that's what makes it work. It's supposed to be industrial, not fitting, and scary. If you have sufficient knowledge on what the first world war was like, you know that this was going to be the last time these new recruits would ever sing joyfully if they were lucky, and if they weren't lucky, the last time they would ever sing in their lives. Every aspect to that sound is refined to fit with this film alone to invoke a sense of terror in you, because no matter what side people fought on, it was essentially young adults being sent out by idiotic, arrogant, power-hungry generals to die.

  • @galvendorondo
    @galvendorondo Рік тому +1

    My complaint about this score wasn't that it was boring, it was that it DID NOT fit this movie. Every time it played I felt taken out of the moment and it just did not hit the mark with me.

  • @SGFlicksify
    @SGFlicksify Рік тому +1

    To me, the main 3-note part reminds me a lot of the theme music from JAWS. It also makes me think of the creaking of a huge sinking ship - as in the Titanic movie. Really not so sure about it - does not sound all that original IMHO.

  • @waffles8127
    @waffles8127 Рік тому +1

    It's the first film depiction of the book that was actually made by germans and made in germany. And it's good!

  • @birajsingha9879
    @birajsingha9879 Рік тому +1

    That "three note bass" was coming out of nowhere, getting mixed up with the other tune and even in the screenplay itself but the thing is it suits the theme of the movie. It shows us that "the impending doom is coming, get ready for your shit!"
    A very depressing movie nonetheless but the score is brilliant, period.

  • @ThomasHaberkorn
    @ThomasHaberkorn Рік тому +7

    Sound design was so great, win is deserved

  • @retrigger_
    @retrigger_ Рік тому +1

    That 3 note lick.

  • @gabrieldossantoscosta4946
    @gabrieldossantoscosta4946 Рік тому

    When I watched the movie, the "triple heavy sound" theme showed gave me chills cause it always sounded to me as an omen of bad things to come

  • @semajsivraj
    @semajsivraj Рік тому +1

    The score sets the tone from the beginning. Industrialized murder isn't going to have a snappy tune.

  • @versko9
    @versko9 Рік тому +6

    Well said, Ryan. I also appreciated how much the score played into the jarring sensation that we could only imagine war to be like. Especially in that time. The high strings playing as a sort of mist/fog of war, juxtaposed against the literal bombs of sound. My other pick for Best Score would have been Everything Everywhere All At Once, but this was also a great choice.

  • @mr.vorrnyvorrn2516
    @mr.vorrnyvorrn2516 Рік тому

    What-if: *John Williams − Gatchaman: Complete Motion Picture Score* (Imagi film project)
    3 Flutes (2nd and 3rd dbl. Piccolo)
    2 Oboes (2nd dbl. English Horn)
    3 Clarinets (3rd dbl. Bass Clarinet)
    3 Bassoons (3rd dbl. Contra Bassoon)
    6 French Horns
    4 Trumpets
    4 Trombones (3rd and 4th dbl. Bass Trombone)
    2 Tubas
    Timpani
    Percussion
    2 Harps
    2 Celestes/Pianos
    14 Violins I
    12 Violins II
    10 Violas
    10 Celli
    6 Double Basses

  • @mono6.052
    @mono6.052 Рік тому

    tanks, war machines,ludwig mmm *chef kiss* i could listen to those on repeat all day long

  • @adleajeh
    @adleajeh Рік тому +1

    The score was ideal for a film that was about the truth of war.

  • @arielyznardocomposer
    @arielyznardocomposer Рік тому +1

    The subtle touch of Ryan's shirt going dark after watching the movie...

  • @lumbagoboi1649
    @lumbagoboi1649 Рік тому +1

    This score is fuckin perfect. The deep unsettling electronic sounds make the movie feel very uncomfortable, almost alien. Which is very much how those soldiers felt in those trenches.

  • @Graylord88
    @Graylord88 8 днів тому

    I can't believe people complained the music didn't match the mood of the kids going to war. It's so clearly and obviously setting the mood of how naive and misinformed they are about what they are about to go through. The movie even has an extended scene literally showing us how bad it went for the group sent before them. It's clearly a soundtrack aimed at us the viewers, with the information we have available that the characters do not have. It almost makes you want to reach in and save them by telling them not to go.
    It couldn't be more blatant, yet people missed it so badly and still expected a happy and excited soundtrack? It would have missed the mark so hard if it did and feel generic and paint by the numbers without any thought put behind it.

  • @ramennoodle4783
    @ramennoodle4783 Рік тому +1

    My opinion it deserved to win cuz it made you feel the most emotion. The brass instruments terrified me and made me wonder what kind of movie I was going into

  • @joedow4591
    @joedow4591 Рік тому +2

    The distorted synth/maybe cello line used was not my favorite and actually took me out of the movie a bit, but I think this is because I'm preconditioned to anticipate something more conventional for a film depicting the early 20th century vs. a sound that could've made an appearance in Bladerunner 2049 or the last Tron movie. On the flipside, makes sense that such a "rude" sound would rear its head given the overwhelming industrial presence in WWI (fierce shelling, tanks, machine guns). Sidenote on the movie: I much preferred this to 1917, because this is what WWI was, absolute hell.

    • @EugWanker
      @EugWanker Рік тому +1

      I found that repetitive 3-note synth line annoying. Every time I heard it, I was like, "no, not this again". It too took me out of the movie, each time. So yes, colour me surprised it won the Oscar. However, I'm just one of the masses here, as I am neither a composer nor even a musician.

  • @someguitardude8462
    @someguitardude8462 Рік тому

    What bothered me the most is not the string pads, but the fucking snares. The fucking snares in the most inappropiate of times, had me thinking I had a snare vst open and doing weird shit. It has probably the worst screen-music sync I've ever seen

  • @aeromundos
    @aeromundos Рік тому +2

    Talking about minimalism in a score : Matthew Herbert did a much better job in The Wonder. Also not nominated but in my opinion better scores were : Emily by Abel Korzeniowski , Living by Emilie Levienaise-Farrouch , Pearl by Tyler Bates & Timothy Williams , Men by Ben Salisbury & Geoff Barrow and Women Talking by Hildur Guðnadóttir. Is all a popularity contest at the oscars.If your film is well recieved by critics and box office most probably u will land some nominations, obscure and small films don't stand a chance. Sad but true.

  • @MyBoomStick1
    @MyBoomStick1 День тому

    It’s kind of the only memorable score of all the movies it competed against so

  • @drmoonrat
    @drmoonrat Рік тому +4

    The Oscar for music score should have gone to "Babylon" hands down. . . The was the most inventive and moving score I've heard in a movie for a long time.

    • @aqualcunopiaceclassico3201
      @aqualcunopiaceclassico3201 Рік тому +1

      inventing?

    • @drmoonrat
      @drmoonrat Рік тому

      @@aqualcunopiaceclassico3201 "Inventive" was the word I used.

    • @drmoonrat
      @drmoonrat Рік тому

      The composer took what we know of 1920's jazz music and cranked it to a whole other level. He basically had to invent a subgenre of 1920's music that we have no record of. We've heard 20's scores in movies before, but he took those arrangements and instrumentations and created something totally unknown before. There's a track from that soundtrack that I swear sounds like an EDM track, but it's all played on 1920's period instruments. I've never heard such a thing before. It's bold, inventive and really puts you in the wildness of the 1920's that the public never saw before.

    • @aqualcunopiaceclassico3201
      @aqualcunopiaceclassico3201 Рік тому

      @@drmoonrat It is a bit rich when it is the same composer of la la land, which is very similar to Babylon and the scores are similar as well. Furthermore, the score shouldn't be taken away from the movie. Bertelmann did many things and genres in a single score, very rock influenced, some edm too, very modern score despite the film was period (proving that scores don't have to be historically accurate), using the harmonium, adding metal noises to link the score to WW1, the first war with machineries. It deserved the Oscar.

  • @BillHilton
    @BillHilton Рік тому +2

    Here's an interesting counter to the "heavy and depressing" (as you, rightly, put it) approach to scoring war movies. One of my all-time favourites is John Addison's score for A Bridge Too Far, the movie that tells the story of Operation Market Garden, the Allies' failed attempt to get over the Rhine by seizing a series of bridges in Holland, of which the one in Arnhem is the most famous. Addison's score is very tuneful, and by turns jaunty and wistful. It's the exact opposite of the heavy and depressing war-is-hell school of movie scoring, and could easily be accused of being unrealistic. The kicker is that Addison was *actually there*, at the battle. He was a tank commander - rather on the fringes of the action as depicted in the movie, but he had been wounded in Normandy, and would have known what war was all about. Yet he chose to write a very upbeat score, even though the movie itself is notable for its lack of jingoism. Anyway, this is apropos of nothing, really, but I always think of it when I hear very gritty, dark war movie scores.

  • @XcelDarlek
    @XcelDarlek 2 місяці тому

    The score was phenomenal i added it to my playlist within first ever hearing it in the first few minutes of the film

  • @sulev111
    @sulev111 Рік тому

    No one should drop a tear over an Oscar.

  • @bostinobaddog2040
    @bostinobaddog2040 Рік тому

    Remains sounds like it'd be in one of the battlefield games' soundtracks

  • @francis900
    @francis900 6 місяців тому +1

    The score is really good and deserves it. I swear people need to stop associating greatness and complexity !

  • @RushanaMusic
    @RushanaMusic Рік тому

    Actually I like movie and it's very good made on this book of Remark.And I noticed,that brass theme only 3 notes,like from Mahler 2 symphony!

  • @jonathanvelazquezph.d.2719
    @jonathanvelazquezph.d.2719 Рік тому +3

    The Oscars got it right. Babylon's music might be the best but All Quiet on the Western Front had the best score matched with the movie. Hopefully, you get what I mean. It's not an award for Best Music it's an award for Best Music made for a film. All Quiet on the Western Front made me remember the unique score of Jaws in that it's a perfect match in both cases.

    • @markelijio6012
      @markelijio6012 7 місяців тому +1

      Alison MacKenzie, Actress, Producer, Orchestrator - AMPAS Member Since 1986: "All Quiet on the Western Front" won an 2023
      Original Score Oscar which was outstanding in most cases. Because in many ways in the process of scoring a movie for filmmakers
      that works with film and the story are spot on.

  • @mathiaslevyvalensi-compose5014
    @mathiaslevyvalensi-compose5014 Рік тому +12

    Completely agree with your explanation on this one. I feel like the fact that it wasn't the typical Hollywood, neo-romantic score bothered some people.. which is understandable in some way. But the inventivity put to the service of the film deserved to win.
    I really wanted to see Banshees of Innisherin win best score for the same reason. The contrast it created with the humorous tone used throughout the film. But it's definitely a deserving win for All Quiet On The Western Front!

    • @johncartee-music
      @johncartee-music Рік тому +1

      Thank you. However I'm not so sure the Banshees was in the same league. Volker's score had me subdued and wondering, asking questions about why, how etc. Banshees was a bit cliché and the harp is the national symbol, not only the official musical instrument of Ireland. Bear in mind the story of Banshees was all about the backdrop, the scenery made that movie whereas the story made the movie in All Quiet. What's strange for me is that when I first heard this score, I dismissed it but now I realised I was drinking good wine after cheap wine which is never a good idea because we never appreciate it. Good luck.

  • @TyZeHD
    @TyZeHD Рік тому +11

    That 3 note modern synth didn‘t work at all for me. Whenever it played all immersion was broken and it instantly pulled me back into the real world because it felt so jarring and unsuitable.

    • @JonnDthunDer
      @JonnDthunDer Рік тому +3

      Hate to be that guy, but it wasn't a 'modern synth'.

    • @TyZeHD
      @TyZeHD Рік тому

      @@JonnDthunDer Fair enough. What would you call it?

    • @arvedschulze2641
      @arvedschulze2641 Рік тому +1

      ​@@TyZeHDit was a Harmonium

    • @buildingmagic77
      @buildingmagic77 Рік тому +1

      Regardless if the synth was modern or not, I’d have to agree, it took me out of the film every time,

    • @JonnDthunDer
      @JonnDthunDer Рік тому

      @@buildingmagic77 ...it's not about it if was modern or not, it wasn't a synth lol

  • @eihcra_
    @eihcra_ 8 місяців тому

    Its not meant to be musically pleasing, its meant to convey the mood at different times of the movie. Whether it be fear, tension or small bits of happiness, it does it right.

  • @annaclarafenyo8185
    @annaclarafenyo8185 Рік тому +2

    The score is Satanic, it's not depressing as much as horrifying. The music is 20th century and extremely effective, and the composer wasn't trying to impress anyone, just to do his job. It is extremely important to the film, because it removes the emotion of the characters and gives up a sort of superhuman spirit over the whole events, with malevolent intent.

  • @k1oeve
    @k1oeve Рік тому

    I gotta say, the whale had one of my favourite scores of all time. It made the simplistic set design and location feel so much more deep.

  • @CribNotes
    @CribNotes Рік тому +4

    Haven't seen all the nominees yet, but the film score for Everything Everywhere All At Once was simply astounding - perfectly laced into that bat shit insane film.

  • @c0dexus
    @c0dexus Рік тому +2

    I haven't watched the movie and tried listening to it, I gave up quickly. I guessed many of the things you said, but even if it works as some kind of soundscape supporting the movie I'm not sure I agree with it winning the oscar.

  • @Fotoschiki
    @Fotoschiki Рік тому +1

    I saw people reacting to the music the first time it plays in the movie and many don't seem to like it at first. Most of them say it sounds too modern. But that's exactly right for ww1 if you ask me. The great shock of ww1 was how warfare, which was the same for the last thousand years of humanity, has become something unrecognizable. Yes fire weapons and artillery were a thing for about a century, but the way wars were waged was still the same in the 19th century. Your comrades beside you, your enemy a person ahead and a battle that could be won or lost by your involvement. But modern war is inhuman, mechanical and unnatural. For the most part you don't even see the enemy, only dead comrades and harsh living conditions.
    To me the soundtrack represents the unnatural mechanical grinding machine that eats up people faster than they can be replaced.
    It reminds me a bit of Made in Abyss (an anime). Your enemy is not a person that wants your death. Then at least you could fight it and win, which is what the human psyche is built for. Instead the enemy is a formless entity that kills indiscriminetly, we are not made to comprehend that. Neither the first world war, nor the Abyss care if you survive today or die. There are no hero narratives you could spin around this kind of enemy, to make sense of it in your mind. It's like fighting an (un-)natural disaster, not a person or an animal. So it takes the place of a malevolent deity, an indifferent transcendent entity that cannot be reasoned with or understood. It slowly eats away your humanity and twists you into an unrecognizable shell of your former self. Pretty fitting that our culture has agreed upon "hell on earth" as the most fitting analogy for modern wars.
    In both this film and Made in Abyss music is eerie and revolting, but also has an underlying primordial beauty that works very well parallel to the beautiful nature we see in contrast to the horror the characters experience. The soundtrack is nothing special but still unique and it perfectly achieves what it sets out to do.
    Worthy of an oscar in my view (the only valid question ofcause is wether it was more worthy than the other contenders).

  • @polyman4
    @polyman4 7 місяців тому

    A brilliant and daring score. Having an overtly electronic soundtrack to such an historical time made for an interesting juxtaposition. It de-sentimentalized the whole approach. I can't imagine the horrors of war to have much to be sentimental about, and shouldn't. It would have been easy to have had a rousing orchestral score but it would have been not as interesting if it had. The score is one of the most arresting things about the film.

  • @sophiecarpenter8888
    @sophiecarpenter8888 Рік тому +1

    have u read the book?? i would recommend that then your pov may change 😭😭