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Danny Elfman, John Debney, and Christopher Young - SPIDER-MAN 2 (2004) - 2024 La La Land Records edition produced by Neil S. Bulk and Dan Goldwasser


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1 hour ago, karelm said:

For example, the main title theme, Chris wrote his music then the music stopped for 18 bars (or whatever it was for the insert) that were just inserts of Danny's theme.  We had access to all of Danny's material and could just insert but like any composer hired to score a film, you would want to do that as little as possible so you can produce your vision of the material.  That happened wherever Danny's theme came in straight as written from prior films.

 

Are those straight inserts of the Elfman material the reason why Elfman has been preventing a release of the score? Or did Young use his theme in his own cues that that's what he objects to? (I'm not familiar with the score)

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2 hours ago, Davis said:

I’m sure Spider-Man 3 is already in the pipeline for a 2027 release.


I think it will come out sooner than that. LLL has a working relationship with both Young and Elfman— there’s no way the negotiations for the SM2 expansion were a one off (and probably included SM-3 too).
 

The question is whether a SM-3 CD premiere would include all the music as heard in the film or will it be more curated to curb the excessive temp track usage of Elfman’s material from the first two films? And I assume Debney and Lurie’s music will be included on the set too.

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2 hours ago, karelm said:

 One other thing worth mentioning, sometimes (often) the filmmakers don't know what they want and ask two or more composers to score the same scene in different ways and then decide which they'll use.  That happened too.  So one shouldn't interpret that as the composer missed the mark because they might not have known of the other direction. 

Sounds exactly like what happened with James Horner and Abel Korzeniowski.

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2 minutes ago, mstrox said:


 

Well the score sucked too, but that isn’t stopping them!

We're not talking about the Elfshit mstrox. ;)

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It was a fantastic experience rewatching these films back in the spring / early summer during the “Spider-Mondays” run of all live action movies. Of these three in particular, the theater I attended had the smallest audience for the first film, the largest for the second and somewhere in between for the third. 

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The second film is easily the best of the trilogy. It has the best, most epic Spider-Man web swinging to date. And it's losely based on the classic The Amazing Spider-Man #50 "Spider-Man No More!" by Stan Lee and John Romita. 

 

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Nothing will beat the first for me!  A lot of classic, filmic moments, but still pretty lean, direct and to the point.  Raimi’s sequels kept getting flabbier and flabbier.

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Despite Raimi disliking Venom and clearly despising Eddie Brock, I thought the Venom side of the film had by far the most interesting ideas and execution. Meanwhile the widely praised Sandman is… just there.

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Do we know if 5M10 Aunt May Sells Spidey will be part of either 5M9 Aunt May Packs (2:56) or 5M11 Not Back Yet (1:09)? Just curious because it seems to be the only cue "missing" from the tracklist.

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9 hours ago, bruce marshall said:

Anyone else notice that the plots of S2&S3 mirror those of SUPERMAN 2&3?

 Think about it.

  

 

Interesting, there are similarities, but the plot of S2 was partly based on a 1967 comic book. 

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10 hours ago, bruce marshall said:

Anyone else notice that the plots of S2&S3 mirror those of SUPERMAN 2&3?

 Think about it.

  

 

The plot of Superman: The Movie mirrors S1, too. :)

 

Karol

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5 hours ago, crocodile said:

The plot of Superman: The Movie mirrors S1, too. :)

 

Karol

I know!😊

6 hours ago, Davis said:

Interesting, there are similarities, but the plot of S2 was partly based on a 1967 comic book. 

In The comic he quits.

In the film he actually loses his powers- like Superman does in II#

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1 hour ago, bruce marshall said:

In The comic he quits.

In the film he actually loses his powers- like Superman does in II#

Yes, but you said that the plot of S2 mirrors the plot of Superman II, and I pointed out that the comic book S2 was based on predates Superman II. 

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14 minutes ago, Davis said:

Yes, but you said that the plot of S2 mirrors the plot of Superman II, and I pointed out that the comic book S2 was based on predates Superman II. 

In the comic Spidey quits, he retains his powers.

S2 copies the plot point of voluntarily giving up/losing superpowers from SUPEII.

It's a subtle difference

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Oddly I thought I once read the opposite - that after the chaos of Spidey 2, Elfman got the rights to his themes from Sony, hence the only way Young would get an album out would have been by editing out any references to Elfman's themes, which was hardly going to happen. Could be total rubbish.

 

I guess the idea of Sony deciding against a CD makes sense if they were going to have to shell out a lot for the AFM fees - which for our labels would be a bankrupting move, but for a major studio is just a cost that might not make a good return.

 

We can only hope that the AFM isn't an impenetrable obstacle to Spidey 3 - it's astonishing how long a modern, huge orchestral score for a tentpole blockbuster by an A-list composer can go 100% unreleased.

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7 minutes ago, Giftheck said:

I always thought the rumour going around that Elfman torpedoed Spider-Man 3 getting a soundtrack release was absurd, and for that very reason that he didn't own the material. Honestly, Sony going 'welp, soundtrack CDs just don't make us money' sounds about right.

I've thought the same, but I've heard Young say it several times in interviews. True or not, he certainly believes it to be true.

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3 minutes ago, ddddeeee said:

I've thought the same, but I've heard Young say it several times in interviews. True or not, he certainly believes it to be true.

Maybe DE did intervene and the studio buckled due to not wanting to piss off one of their top composers in the same way JW is deferred to in a way that is probably officially unnecessary but is done out of respect.  Plus, if DE objects and it'll cost a fortune, it's an easy decision to just pull the plug and not risk the cost or potential animus.

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6 hours ago, Richard Penna said:

 - it's astonishing how long a modern, huge orchestral score for a tentpole blockbuster by an A-list composer can go 100% unreleased.

You mean like WAKANDA FOREVER?

😔😣

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7 hours ago, Richard Penna said:

it's astonishing how long a modern, huge orchestral score for a tentpole blockbuster by an A-list composer can go 100% officially unreleased.

Fixed.

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There are definitely differences in key sections of the alts, even if it isn't far off from how karlem described the recording process of SM3. Clearly, the versions used in the film were picked because more was done to not make them sound like full on carbon copies of the temp track. I only note it because most copies of the SM2 "complete" bootleg end up using the alts instead, so it's difficult to be certain yet which exact iterations will be what's on the LLL release.

 

21. Open Heart** 1:03

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I never listened to the 'demonstration' cues that much, but the main one I remember is one that started with a huge choral section extremely reminiscent of Young's The Fly II. Is it a reasonable assumption that the versions chosen for this set will be the ones used in the film, or would above discussions suggest being more careful from a temping perspective?

 

The train cues are extremly interesting from a stylistic perspective - I love both cues and they represent a very different way of scoring the same scene. Although being less familiar with Young's older material I've never been entirely sure why they rescored that scene - there's nothing wrong with Elfman's cue.

 

A minor hope for this set is that Spidey Falls matches the film - one of the leaks on YouTube contains an alternate that's nowhere near as good, whereas the film has a wonderful, somewhat subdued statement of the spidey theme and I was disappointed it wasn't on the album from the moment I saw the film.

 

Also revisited Spidey 3 yesterday and found with this score that it's primarily the Sandman and action material that's really good - the personal/family bits aren't as interesting to me (they never were with Elfman either). Maybe in the coming years an arrangement might be found with the AFM to get this one out. Given some recent comments stating that projects/franchises like Spidey were off the table for the labels, it feels like there are no longer any hard and fast rules with what might be doable.

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1 hour ago, Richard P said:

The train cues are extremly interesting from a stylistic perspective - I love both cues and they represent a very different way of scoring the same scene. Although being less familiar with Young's older material I've never been entirely sure why they rescored that scene - there's nothing wrong with Elfman's cue.

I might be misremembering something but I think it has something to do with tempo of the music.

 

Karol

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On 3/11/2024 at 2:40 PM, Tom Guernsey said:

Maybe DE did intervene and the studio buckled due to not wanting to piss off one of their top composers in the same way JW is deferred to in a way that is probably officially unnecessary but is done out of respect.  Plus, if DE objects and it'll cost a fortune, it's an easy decision to just pull the plug and not risk the cost or potential animus.


It doesn’t make sense. Giacchino used several of DE’s motifs in Spider-Man No Way Home (including Doc Ock). And that film got a OST release with the motifs included.

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I have never once believed that Elfman has some sort of authority over the studio regarding his Spider-Man themes. That is such a rare thing, a film score being owned even in a small percentage, by a composer. 

Also, the idea of a studio wanting to piss off a composer? Why would a studio care ? Director or producer that makes the billions sure, but the music people?

 

Elfman, like all composers who have come and gone, is not John Williams. Maybe he has that kind of deference but he’s the GOAT in a class all his own.  


That isn’t a slight against anyone else to say that. It’s just the way it is. 
 

 

AFM reuse fees for the recording and Sony seeing the lackluster reception to Spider-Man 3 were reason enough to forget a score album release. 

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On 11/11/2024 at 12:50 PM, Richard P said:

I never listened to the 'demonstration' cues that much, but the main one I remember is one that started with a huge choral section extremely reminiscent of Young's The Fly II.

I don't think, that there is any choir in The Fly II.

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