CD Review: Alice In Wonderland

Jim Lochner March 25, 2010 10

Tim Burton’s ALICE IN WONDERLAND continues its spectacular (and surprising) box office run, bringing Danny Elfman‘s score, one of the strongest elements of the film, right along with it. As I mentioned in my post of 9 Favorite Danny Elfman Scores, Elfman is the composer du jour. His ALICE score fares better with Burton at the helm than his music for THE WOLFMAN did, but the score as represented on CD isn’t quite what you’ll hear in the theater.

aliceinwonderlandcd CD Review: Alice In Wonderland“My score was not going to be about the Mad Hatter or the Red Queen,” said Elfman in an interview with Wired. “The ‘falling down a hole’ music is going to be wild, crazy falling-down-a-hole music. Two armies meeting—I can almost write that automatically. That’s the easy part. The hard part is Alice’s trajectory. I needed the music to tie it all together as she goes from this kind of confused child to a bewildered young lady to becoming Alice as a hero who finds herself in the center of this big story where she has a huge part to play.” Alice’s story inspired one of Elfman’s finest themes.

The first thing you’ll notice about the main theme on CD compared to the film are the lyrics. The CD has them, the film does not. Apparently, the lyrics came late in the game, and much as Burton did with Stephen Sondheim’s choral “Ballad of Sweeney Todd” that runs throughout SWEENEY TODD, he eliminated Elfman’s lyrics and kept just the theme. For some reason, it didn’t bother me in SWEENEY (which is odd considering my love for that score), but the lack of lyrics weakens Elfman’s score within the film and relegates the chorus to wordless ah‘s. None of this distracts from the sheer memorability of the theme though.

Set against a combination pulsating duplet and triplet accompaniment, the haunting minor-key theme draws you in to the surreal world of Wonderland. Elfman excerpts various motifs from the theme that can be used tenderly or more aggressively as the story commands. The theme as a whole moves from terror and “curiouser and curiouser” to full-on battle music by the end of the film.

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Click Track: Alice’s Theme

Elfman’s sly humor conjures the absurd in cues like “Finding Absolem” and “The Cheshire Cat.” Action cues like “Bandersnatched,” “Going To Battle,” and “The Final Confrontation” will please fans of Elfman’s superhero scores.

The quiet moments are few and far between. Then again, Burton doesn’t allow the film to relax much. Elfman makes the most of the more lyrical moments at the beginning of the film with young Alice and following the final battle and Alice’s return to the real world.

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Click Track: Alice Returns

As a child, Elfman was terrified by a picture of Alice on a copy of Lewis Carroll’s classic on his family’s bookshelf. Elfman’s score captures that terror, but as music it’s more enjoyable than frightening. In the film, the score does its job and gave me something to listen to while I fidgeted and checked my watch through the slow portions.

Is there anything new here? Not particularly. But Elfman’s inimitable style shines through and there’s something comforting in that. The score is stronger on CD than in the film, and for us film score fans, that may ultimately be all that matters. As for that main theme, I dare you to get it out of your head.

Film Score Click Track Rating: star CD Review: Alice In Wonderlandstar CD Review: Alice In Wonderlandstar CD Review: Alice In Wonderlandstar CD Review: Alice In Wonderlandblankstar CD Review: Alice In Wonderland

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10 Comments »

  1. Michael Arlidge March 25, 2010 at - Reply

    I could strangle Elfman for “Alice’s Theme”, because I couldn’t get it out of my head for days after I first heard it. :D Seriously though, it’s a wonderful piece of music, and it’s just a shame that the director chose to eliminate the lyrics in the film itself. At least the full version can be heard during the end credits (even if it is placed after that horrific Avril Lavigne song).

    • Jim Lochner March 25, 2010 at - Reply

      I fled the theater once Avril Lavigne came on the screen (which as you correctly pointed out in one of your message board posts totally ruins the mood of Elfman’s score), so I didn’t even know they played during the end credits. Good news for those people who can sit through the credits.

  2. Ravi Krishna March 25, 2010 at - Reply

    Alice’s Theme was on repeat on my music player for a LONG time, it’s so addictive! Lovely, lovely score by Elfman and in my opinion one of the serious contenders for the year’s top 5 list already.

    • Jim Lochner March 25, 2010 at - Reply

      I may have to retire the theme. Like Michael, once it plays I can’t get it out of my head and it drives me nuts! Talk about the sign of a good theme…

  3. Bizarro Pedro March 25, 2010 at - Reply

    Looks like its one of his stronger scores in a while. I don’t know why he took the lyrics out- it actually fits in the movie…

    • Jim Lochner March 25, 2010 at - Reply

      It definitely is one of Elfman’s strongest, especially of late. I don’t know why the lyrics were left out either. It’s too bad.

  4. eewee1 March 25, 2010 at - Reply

    Can’t get the theme out o my head, either, which is a wonderful thing. English lyrics in score material usally raise two questions: 1. Will they distract? 2. How will foreign audiences react when the movie is dubbed into other languages? On rare occasions, the lyrics are translated and recorded in other languages, which requires a lot of work but might be necessary if understanding the lyrics is essential to understanding the plot.

    • Jim Lochner March 25, 2010 at - Reply

      I understand about the distraction but had never thought about the international aspect of it. Of course, I personally couldn’t understand a word they were singing on the CD anyway, except for “Alice.” LOL

  5. Mathieu April 20, 2010 at - Reply

    Very strong score indeed. The main theme is a joy but perhaps just a little too present/repetitive? On the CD anyway (I haven’t seen the movie).

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