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Published: Thursday, 05 September 2024 at 12:04 PM


If you’ve been to the cinema in the last few weeks you’ll likely have heard the music of Benjamin Wallfisch. The gifted British composer wrote the music for a pair of blockbuster sequels, Twisters and Alien: Romulus, released almost back to back over the summer.

It’s just the lastest big-screen success for the composer, who is the eldest son of cellist Raphael Wallfisch and violinist Elizabeth Wallfisch, following scores for last summer’s The Flash, hit horror franchise IT and so much more, including working with Hans Zimmer on the scores for Hidden Figures and Blade Runner 2049. And it comes ahead of his next projects, Marvel’s Kraven the Hunter and HBO’s IT prequel series, Welcome to Derry.

I sat down with Benjamin Wallfisch for a chat about his blockbuster summer, his journey to become one of Hollywood’s most trusted (and talented) composer and what it was like to grow up in such a musical family…

You’ve had quite the summer, what was your schedule like having to deliver scores for two such big films back to back?
Yeah, they were literally back to back. It was very lucky how that worked out – it often doesn’t; sometimes you have a bit of a collision, but fortunately the schedules on those two worked out very nicely.

And they’re two very different films and scores; how do you pivot from one to the other?
Well it’s good fortune when you have such amazing filmmakers to inspire you. Fede (Alvarez)’s vision (for Alien: Romulus) was so vivid, and he’s such a great musician. Part of the brief was to almost write a love letter to the scores of Jerry Goldsmith, James Horner and so on.

And when I was working on Twisters with Lee Isaac Chung, his sense of what the music would bring was so strong and so powerful. Both him and Fede gave me so much freedom as well. So it felt like I was in a wonderful environment in both cases, and to just try things and be daring.

I guess that isn’t always the case? Having so much freedom?
It really depends. In the case of Alien: Romulus it was very unusual in that from the very beginning Fede went to great lengths so that I would never hear any temp score. When I first screened the film there was no temp music at all; he was adamant that whenever I received a turnover of the film they stripped out all the temp music. That just gave so much freedom to our process, and it made it a little bit harder, but it also meant that we had to dig even deeper to discover what it could be.

In the case of Twisters so much of the music is not scored – there are so many amazing songs in the movie, and I wanted to make sure we didn’t attempt to double-up on that. So there’s a definite disctinction where I wanted to capture the essence of Oklahoma in some of the moments, but then still have it be very much from the point of view of the story, and make sure the tornadoes themselves had a voice and musical identity.