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Published: Wednesday, 21 August 2024 at 12:25 PM


Benjamin Wallfisch is the latest composer to write music for the Alien film franchise, but how does his new score, for Alien: Romulus compare to the rest of the series? Here’s our ranking of all the Alien film scores…

With the release of Fede Alvarez’s Alien: Romulus, cinema audiences are being thrown back into the terrifying (and occasionally baffling) sci-fi/horror franchise launched in 1979 by Ridley Scott’s masterpiece, Alien.

The films that followed over the last four decades have certainly varied in success.

Some have taken us in bold new directions, while others (Romulus included) have merely riffed on familiar franchise tropes that were never served up better than in the first two films.

Musically, Alien has been something of a moveable feast with no single composer ever scoring more than one of the films. 

Each has been inspired by the sheer horror unleashed by the insatiable Xenomorph – the nightmare-inducing alien species at the heart of the series, designed by HR Giger, with acid for blood and a hideous mouth-within-a-mouth.

Like the films themselves, the music has variously taken listeners to tantalising new places or else been a variation on a theme.

But which Alien score is the very best? From the action-packed to the downright disturbing, here’s our ranking…

9. Alien vs. Predator (2004)
Music by Harald Kloser

Two of cinema’s most fearsome alien monsters went head-to-head in Antarctica in this cinematic adaptation of what was a nifty comicbook ruse.

It probably seemed like a licence to print money for what was 20th Century Fox, and while the box office wasn’t too shabby, Alien vs. Predator didn’t really hit the spot for fans of either franchise.

Austrian composer Harald Kloser, who had seemingly come from nowhere in 2004 when he scored Roland Emmerich’s The Day After Tomorrow, followed that with this robust, anthemic and somewhat forgettable score.