Why ‘Baby Driver’ and ‘Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2’ work and ‘Atomic Blonde’ doesn’t.
Great soundtrack albums, like great albums in general, are more than the sum of their parts. They’re not just compilations of great songs. That’s something easily forgotten in the era of digital downloads and shuffled music libraries. Great soundtracks can be an extension of, sometimes even an adaptation of, their respective movies. Listen to them after seeing a movie, and scenes are recalled through the songs they feature. Characters’ personalities are encountered again through the music that represents them.
This year’s two most notable soundtracks are special not just because of the tunes they collect. The music of Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2and Baby Driver are tied very specifically to their main characters. They are songs on tapes and iPods played in the movie by those characters. They’re not always played in a diegetic manner — that is, in the story and heard by people on screen rather than overlain — but they all have a diegetic existence, which gives them a pseudo tangibility in their films.
Compare those to the soundtrack for Atomic Blonde. I love all the songs in this movie, but I hate them as used in the movie. Why? There are a few reasons. I find the use of German pop songs that became hits in America, such as “99 Luftballoons” and “Major Tom (Völlig Losgelöst)” to be lazy representations of “the 1980s” (both came out six years ahead of the 1989 setting) and “Berlin.” The movie’s music choices reach full embarrassment, though, when “London Calling” plays when a character arrives in London.
The soundtrack doesn’t properly represent the specific time or places of the movie, nor does it relate to any of its characters. The background punks of East Berlin maybe managed to listen to bootlegs of “Fight the Power” in the fall of 1989, and maybe much of the GDR was embracing more tunes from the West, but a lot of the curation of songs seem misguided. Want to represent East Germany with music? Play some Frank Schöbel — the movies The Lives of Others and This Ain’t California know better.
What happens is there’s little connection between song and scenes when you listen to the soundtrack. When you hear “Mr. Blue Sky” on the Guardians 2 album, Baby Groot’s dance and the action in the background may play back in your mind. Same for “Bellbottoms” and “Neat Neat Neat” and their respective action scenes in Baby Driver. When you hear “I Ran (So Far Away),” you probably don’t have any remembrance of what is on screen in Atomic Blonde as it plays. The only track with any significant connection is “Father Figure,” as it plays diegetically during the most memorable action sequence in the movie.
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