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The 50 Best Film Scores Of The 21st Century So Far

40. “Inception” (2010) – Hans Zimmer
So influential that we had not one but several debates on how many ‘a’s to use when writing “BRAAAM!” (we settled on just the 3), the most famous motif from the “Inception” soundtrack was put together by Zack Hemsey for the trailer, using elements of Zimmer’s score. His music for Christopher Nolan‘s trippy triumph is a lot more than just that one Fart of God noise —a glitchy, tense, propulsive masterclass in tension-building that seems to glide and skim off the action beats of the thiller-ish, dream-weaving narrative when it’s not actively urging it forward. Don’t believe us? Stick on “Mombasa” and enjoy your instant anxiety attack.

39. “Ghost Dog” (2000) – The RZA
Perhaps the most striking element of Jim Jarmusch’s inspired and droll ninja assassin dramedy is the groundbreaking use of hip-hop employed to juxtapose the sleek and enigmatic presence of the title character (a superb Forest Whitaker). Composed by the RZA, abbot of The Wu-Tang Clan, the innovative, minimalistic score —dark, shadowy beats with evocative Shaolin-like samples and traditional Chinese instrumentation— is hypnotic and goes down well with puffs of weed and the ninth reading of Sun Tzu’s “The Art of War.” Exotic and mysterious, if this music feels ever so slightly dated by 2016, it’s only because its moody boom bap was so damn ahead of its time back in the day

38. “The Hateful Eight” (2015) – Ennio Morricone
Quentin Tarantino’s most recent pastiche —an Agatha Christie whodunit, a twitchy chamber drama and snowy Western— is an unmerciful, often nasty picture. Naturally, Ennio Morricone, the king of Spaghetti Westerns, delivers his all: vintage dusty symphonies and cinemascope-powered musical overtures, but also elegiac and sinister suspense. Like a stagecoach fatefully on the way to its wintry hell, the operatic threat of violence slowly builds, and this is where ominous notes of horror being to unthaw. Both intimate and epic in scale, Morricone does QT’s 70mm grandeur justice and gives life to brutal characters. Along the way, his eerie chimes signal the composer’s endgame: a haunting requiem for a massacre.

37. “Enemy” (2014) – Danny Bensi & Saunder Jurriaans
Indie composers Bensi and Jurriaans have scored roughly 5,500 movies in the last three years. Ok, that’s a baldfaced lie, but the highly sought-after, often dissonantly-inclined musicians have become the go-to-guys for myriad directors hoping to imbue their films with a sense of psychic vertigo. Which makes for a perfect team-up with Denis Villeneuve on his head swirling, Kafka-esque doppelganger film “Enemy.” Atonal and enigmatic, like the film it complements, the duo’s score is a summary lesson in minimalist unease. Both anti-melodic and strangely lush, their discordant drones make for a single-minded eeriness. Much like the characters in the movie fighting for their identities, the haunting score cleaves you in two.

36. “Brooklyn” (2015) – Michael Brook
Despite its title, director John Crowley’s “Brooklyn” is not achingly hip, (or gentrified and past its prime): it’s genuinely intimate and earnest in a way not many modern movies allow themselves to be. It’s a lovely little film and much credit is due to its gorgeous, unshowy score. A coming of age movie about identity and grieving for the fragments of our former lives gone by, the music of “Brooklyn” is truly heartbreaking: a lyrical goodbye to an innocence lost. Tender, like an embrace from someone you once loved but had to leave, this is humbly bittersweet like the story it tells: extraordinary in the way it does full, heartswelling justice to the stories of ordinary lives.

35. “Inherent Vice” (2014) – Jonny Greenwood
So symbiotic it’s hard to tell who is doing whom the favor, director Paul Thomas Anderson and composer/Radiohead guitarist Jonny Greenwood have gone four for four on indelible soundtracks. But dizzy though the heights of “Junun” and “The Master” are, Greenwood’s work on “Inherent Vice” just pips them – mainly for unexpectedness. Knitting together the song choices (it’s also on our Best Soundtracks list) this score is a smorgasbord from sunny acoustic folk to paranoiac analog-electronica to traditional noir to bendy philharmonic jags like an orchestra’s being forced at gunpoint to detune. We knew Greenwood could do mood and mystery but the goofiness is a delightful surprise.

34. “Ain’t Them Bodies Saints” (2013) – Daniel Hart
What David Lowery‘s under-seen lovers-on-the-lam movie may lack in storytelling dynamism, it makes up for in wonderful, cared-for craft, from its impressive central performances from Rooney Mara, Casey Affleck and Ben Foster, to its evocative, sun-dappled cinematography, to its lovely score by Daniel Hart (who also scores Lowery’s gorgeous 2016 title “Pete’s Dragon“). Luxuriant washes of strings – violins and cellos – underlie upper registers of bluegrass-inspired banjo-esque mandolin, and are buttressed by rhythmic hand-clapping percussion. It creates a unique and hypnotic sound: folksy but also grand; full of slightly magical lilts but also lived-in and worn-down, ground to dust that blows away on warm prairie winds.

33. “Trouble Every Day” (2001) – Tindersticks
Claire Denis’ collaborations with Tindersticks are always special, the problem was which one to choose. There are lighter, more melodic options like the “Nenette et Boni” score, and there is the heavy-breathing minimalism of 2013’s “Bastards.” Ultimately we opted for “Trouble Every Day,” which lies somewhere between those poles. It may be one of the less stand-alone scores on this list, but it runs the gamut from austere, tension-building strings to the broad, melodic hummability of the opening title track. That opener is simply a great Tindersticks song: romantic and lugubrious in equal measure, like pausing to marvel at the beauty of a devastating oncoming storm

32. “The Virgin Suicides” (2000) – Air
As close to a blockbuster score as early 00s indie cinema yielded, Air’s music for Sofia Coppola’s debut is worth another listen in the context of their previous, breakthrough album. It was Moon Safari that inspired Coppola to approach them, but the score they turned in is a lot less lounge-lizard, electropop cool, and a lot darker and stranger. Tracks like “Clouds Up,” “Playground Love” (sung by Phoenix’s Thomas Mars) and “Dirty Trip,” (which is all melodic basslines, ominous sound effects, analog synths and funeral, heavy rock organ), that this is kind of their Dark Side of the Moon, and it plays off the retro track selection in ways that border, like the film, on the mystical.

31.“Fright Night Lights” (2004)— Explosions In The Sky
Having spawned an enormously popular TV show, it’s easy to have forgotten the movie “Friday Night Lights” which feels like a little indie compared to the longtail cultural influence of the beloved series. Similarly, it’s easy to forget how forward thinking it was to hire a gloriously anthemic post-rock band to score a movie. Tapping Austin based orchestral rockers, Explosions In The Sky, the melodramatic name says it all; sonorous guitar squalls, lilting echoes that sound like the moments before dawn and crashing crescendo waves perfect for slow motion football victory. Explosions’ soaring, slowly building musical peaks are quintessentially cinematic.

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61 COMMENTS

  1. Fright Night Lights is that horror/drama mashup or something? lol I will say, this list really doesn’t say a whole lot about today’s composers.

  2. Oh guys. I do love your site but a little more thought and time was needed here. It’s not my favourite score of the 21st century by any means, but to omit Yann Tiersen’s now iconic score for ‘Amelie’ is just sloppy. Others are right here that omitting Michael Giacchino on a number of fronts is also surreal, but especially for the pitch perfect ‘The Incredibles’ and ‘Up’. It’s also pretty stunning to forego Ludovic Bourne’s score for the Oscar-winning ‘The Artist’ given it’s not just the score but the script, and speaks so much more than words.

  3. That is exactly the right #1. I’ve been saying that is one of the greatest scores ever written for years.

    But come on, how can you omit Howard Shore’s work on The Lord of the Rings?? That is pretty much the last great classic blockbuster score out there, the only one that can really compete with John Williams scores for Star Wars and Superman. I like Danny Elfmann’s score for Spider-Man, and of course Hans Zimmer has done plenty of impressive stuff for Nolan, but Shore’s work is just universally recognizable and is packed with so many different memorable themes that it’s a crime not to include it if you’re open to traditional movie scores at all.

    Plus I like the score to The Village. I like violins.

    • I completely agree with everything you just said. The score for Jesse James (and the film itself) are nothing short of brilliant. For me it is a toss up for #1 between this and the score for “Under the Skin.” Both are so integrally tied to the lifeblood of the films themselves that one cannot truly exist without the other.

  4. Uncharacteristically understated music from Elfman? What about his amazing work with Gus Van Sant and David O. Russell? What about the incredible score for Raimi’s A Simple Plan? Or his Oscar-nominated score for Big Fish? Say what you want about the movie, but the score is fantastic. Same for Burton’s dismal Planet of the Apes movie. That theme has been used over and over for years in trailers. Same for his great Wolfman score (see the amazing teaser trailer for Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy).

  5. Your list made me listen to scores all day long and I remembered what I forgot – one of the most exquisite scores of the last 20 years, the one of The Hours by Philip Glass

  6. No idea how in the world you missed “Lord of the Rings”.
    And Scott Walker’s “Childhood of a Leader” may be new, but it definitely deserves inclusion.
    I might forgive these omissions, though, since you included Shane Carruth’s “Upstream Color”. What a score.

  7. Omitting Michel Giacchino’s work, especially for UP, is rightfully being called out. There were a dozen inclusions where I’d forgotten entirely about the scores, such as LIKE CRAZY. Abel Korzeniowski is another composer who should have been mentioned, especially for his lush compositions on the forgotten W.E.

  8. A lot of good scores mentioned on that list. However, not a single score by Michael Giacchino? You even mention that as causing fervor in your notes.

    I also find the list disappointing for not including even one of John Williams scores. He still creates fantastic material. War Horse or Lincoln should be on the list.

  9. I know you guys like to think of yourself as the Alternative Rock of internet film criticism, just THAT off to the side of accepted mainstream opinion. And the list is real cute with all your indie picks and such…

    But not having anything from John Williams, Howard Shore, or Michael Gianchhino just seems contrarian for contrarian sake.

    • Not even listing Lord of the Rings in the long long long honorable mentions section seems a pretty deliberate slight against arguably the most ambitious and significant 21st century scoring achievement….the fact that they only mention it once in context with Requiem for a Dream being used in the trailer feels like a transparent snub.

      Overall the list seems filtered through a pretty specific taste and preference for the alt rock, folk, and electronica sound in American independent films, with a lot of the Hollywood or foreign concessions leaning toward those soundscapes (Zimmer, Reznor/Ross, Arcade Fire, Daft Punk, Tindersticks). Which I love and it’s nice to see champions for this stuff but the issue with me is that it actually makes the list feel weirdly limited in scope for how apparently eclectic it is on the surface. Fine for a personal whimsical list, but it doesn’t seem like there’s been much of an attempt to be that representative and therefore the article doesn’t say much to me except what the authors probably have on their iTunes. There’s a lot of cold shouldering to some terrific Hollywood and non-US scores, especially in more traditional idioms.

      Actually in general, a lot of the most popular consensus favorites that come to mind are weirdly absent from the article….Amelie gets thrown in the middle of the HMs, and not even a token mention to Pan’s Labyrinth, Road to Perdition, The Hours, James Newton Howard’s Shyamalan scores (particularly The Village), Pride and Prejudice, Atonement, Far From Heaven, Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon. John Williams’ impeccably crafted, varied, hugely entertaining output from 2001-5 is also entirely absent from the article, including AI, Harry Potter, Star Wars, Catch Me If You Can, Memoirs of a Geisha.

      And not a single animated score? How to Train Your Dragon merits the only HM when there are dozens upon dozens of fabulous choices from Disney, Pixar, Dreamworks, Studio Ghibli, and others like The Illusionist and Waltz With Bashir. I get there’s only so much room that you can’t cover it all, but these are pretty major omissions at the expense of certain choices, which may be more idiosyncratic but IMO are less impressive achievements on levels of dramatic and musical craftsmanship….sometimes consensus is consensus for a reason, and again, some of the scores I mentioned are pretty noticeable oversights when the HMs are so extensive.

      • What does knowledge of musical and dramatic craftsmanship matter when you can disguise your lack thereof with flowery descriptions?

        “…at times roaring the woozy, pulsating music into a sonic tidal wave of endlessly approaching, inescapable doom.”
        Oh lord…

      • > it feels weirdly limited in scope for how apparently eclectic it is on the surface.

        My thoughts exactly. Seems an oddly one-sided culling from a diverse medium. I’d rather they call it the “Top 50 Most Unappreciated…” or something.

  10. I’d add my voice to the chorus of disapproval for the weird omissions from this list. You guys manage to include a few genuinely great scores in there (Tron: Legacy, Life of Pi, Ghost Dog, 25th Hour, There Will Be Blood), and I’ll even defend the inclusion of a handful of musically underwhelming but cinematically effective soundtracks (Requiem for a Dream, Social Network, Dark Knight, etc.). But overall it does read like a catalogue of vaguely hip contrarian picks, at the almost intentional exclusion of all mainstream, international, or genre scoring. No Thomas Newman? Really?! Giacchino? James Newton Howard? Powell? Horner? Marianelli? Rahman? Shore? And seriously, no John Williams? The man may be old-fashioned, but in terms of craftsmanship and dramatic instincts, any one random score he has written since 2000 blows the majority of those listed here out of the water. It’s okay if that sort of stuff isn’t to your taste, but it’s hard to take the list seriously when it leaves out so much of most influential and admired film composition of the past decade and a half.

  11. A lot of discontent over your list (as usual around here) which is tremendous nevertheless. I’m sure you know you missed some. I would add to your honorable mentions;

    – Yann Thiersen’s Le fabuleux destin d’Amélie Poulain (2001)
    – Angelo Badalamenti’s Mulholland Drive (2001)
    – Thomas Newman’s Road to Perdition (2002)
    – Cliff Martinez’s Drive (2012)
    – Craig Armstrong’s The Great Gatsby (2013)

  12. OMG…how could you leave out some of the best scores ever? No “Perks of Being A Wallflower” from Michael Brook, no “Mud” from David Wingo, no LOTR trilogy from Howard Shore, no “Speed Racer” or “Up” from Michael Giacchino, no “Wall-E” from Thomas Newman, no “Wreck It Ralph”, “Big Hero 6” or “X-Men First Class” from Henry Jackman..the list goes on and on…thank you at least for including “All Is Lost”…there is SOME hope for you…heh heh…

  13. I think no mention of iconic scores like Lord of the Rings, Pirates of the Carribbean and Harry Potter is kind of a miss.
    I would also add the score for Atonement. It’s really beautiful and the use of the typewriter is ingenious.

  14. Be honest Jessica & Rodrigo – you guys were just trying to start a fight and be ironic or satirical, right? This article is akin to Donald Trump thinking he can become President by insulting pretty much every type of human that exists, while looking like a yellow-haired tangerine with the world’s biggest ego. It’s a joke that went a little too far, but now you can admit to us that you were pranking us the whole time and reveal your REAL list…

  15. This list is mind-bogglingly deranged. No Howard Shore, John Williams, James Horner, Jerry Goldsmith, James Newton Howard, Michael Giacchino, Marco Beltrami, Thomas Newman, Danny Elfman, Javier Navarrete, Brian Tyler, et al. or the actual best scores of Hans Zimmer or Alexandre Desplat since the year 2000.

    Good lord. There’s no proper place to begin deconstructing this mess of a “list.”

    So, no. Absolutely not.

  16. I don’t really get why this list, which is heavy on alternative sounds, paradoxically ignores the best alternative ones like Mad Max Fury Road and The Man from UNCLE. “The Social Network” was extremely weak. This doesn’t even mention the fact that you completely ignored (and you had 50 choices, so this is unexcusable) the Lord of the Rings movies which were monumental achievements. And if you knew anything about film music you would know that movies like The Force Awakens and Jupiter Ascending were amazing achievements. To not include in the top 50 at the expense of throwing in more stuff is pretty bad. And you throw in mentions of “Babel” as though Babel was a great film score. It won an Oscar but most of the music was derivative and not part of the actually original score. This list would be better entitled as, “The 50 favorite scores of someone who watches mostly indy films, loves alternative music and overrates it, and watches an occasional blockbuster”

  17. I really love David Wingo’s score for ‘Take Shelter’. Yeah, Cliff Martinez could be included in the list several times… I woud add his ‘First Snow’ (2006) score too as a serious contender. Other options that I miss when we talk about ‘alternative’ (?) soundtracks:

    Michael Andrews – ‘Donnie Darko’ (2001)
    Antonio Pinto – ‘Lord Of War’ (2005; and his themes for ‘Collateral’)
    Nathan Johnson & The Cinematic Underground – ‘Brick’ (2005)
    David Holmes & The Free Asociation – ‘Code 46’ (2003)
    Johan Soderqvist – ‘Let The Right One In’ (2008)

  18. Nothing from Joe Hisaishi in the list? Bit West-centered, no? Also no Yann Tiersen or Ludovico Einaudi. For me personally, the worst thing the Academy ever did was giving the Oscar to Trent Reznor for his uninspired noise on Social Network instead of the chef-d’œuvre that was John Powell’s HTTYD and continues to be…

  19. The fact that Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross are on this list at all tells me we’re dealing with a very specific taste. No John Williams, No Danny Elfman, No Alan Silvestri … the authors are clearly into the new wave of electronic noise that grates on me like fingernails on a chalkboard. I found Reznor and Ross to be the WORST aspect of “The Social Network”.

  20. I loved the list and more than that your loving poetic writing. It shows so clearly your love for music and movies. I never ever post anything anywhere but your piece was particularly moving and inspired. I’m going to follow everything you write from here on. Well done and keep up the good work.

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