I am bound to say that the main theme, Child's Spirit, does feature a rather cliché wordless young vocalist - indeed, the talents of the composer's daughter, Antonia are on display here. However, Desplat Snr's fabulous gift for melody easily lifts it above the cliché and into the genuinely haunting and quite beautiful. Where, after a fine start, many composers might then sink into a morass of tired suspense licks, Desplat appears to be entirely unwilling to just bumble along, punctuating the tension with the odd action cue. Every track where a three note motif could potentially be the sum total of material for 2 minutes, Desplat always builds from his opening gambit, from adding a few neat orchestration touches (notably some extremely effective string harmonics which are suitably eerie) to simply appending additional motifs onto the original idea. This is all while maintaining the singular clarity of texture that has become one of the composer's finest attributes. There is no orchestral mush here and every orchestral line can be heard even in the handful of bravura moments such as Crawl Space, Talley's Plan or The Trade.
The album lists several character melodies; Talley's Theme is a little unmemorable, and Mars' is saved by some effective synthetic background effects, but Tommy's Theme, presented on recorder, with a delicate, vaguely Stravinskian accompaniment of strings and a little percussion is wonderful. While none are quite as memorable as the main theme, they are used effectively throughout the score and give further evidence as to the level of care Desplat has taken with his composition. One might argue that some of Desplat's score is too elegantly wrought for a thriller, but that's not really much of an issue on disc. In this context, it is engaging from beginning to end and on the odd occasion where things appear to be running out of steam, the tracks are generally short enough (although many segue seamlessly into the next) to ensure that there's something engaging only moments later. In fairness, a thriller score without a couple of quiet spots is nigh on impossible. Desplat keeps the ball rolling and the listener engaged for over an hour, plus throws in a pair of fine melodies and numerous memorable motifs. What more could you want?! Thoroughly recommended.
Rating ~
Total Time ~ 61:25