After I read the reviews and was able to get a first acoustic impression, I find that an average review is appropriate. Dramatic Action rousing pieces are not necessarily Patrick Doyle hobbyhorse; they seem rather conventional. In the film, they might fit, but freed to listen only conditionally. The melodic part, however, is beautiful to listen to and very well done to the part, the music really has a nutcracker-touch, but this is not unbending inappropriate. Poignant and thus very well done, the piece "Cedric's Death". The 3 songs are a matter of taste. The quiet song is most listeners like; the rocking title are for my Geschmach lugubrious and disruptive to the album. Overall, it's a new orchestral soundscape with undeniable qualitative heights and with some hangers through. Choosing to hire Patrick Doyle was not wrong because it is stylistically closer to John Williams as many other composers. With "Much Ado About Nothing," "Hamlet" and "Henry V," Doyle has already gained experience of soulful, visually stunning and truly romantic country movies and she introduced with varying degrees of success in this film. Best first listen (here on Amazon or at the movies) and then buy, as are the ghosts in this music a little.