| Superman (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soundtrack album by | ||||
| Released | July 4, 2025 | |||
| Recorded | December 2023–April 2025 | |||
| Studio | Eastwood Scoring Stage,Warner Bros. Studios,Burbank | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 77:00 | |||
| Label | WaterTower | |||
| Producer |
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| John Murphy chronology | ||||
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| David Fleming chronology | ||||
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| Superman soundtrack chronology | ||||
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| DC Universe soundtrack chronology | ||||
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Superman (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) is thesoundtrack album to theDC Universe (DCU) filmof the same name written and directed byJames Gunn, starringDavid Corenswet as the eponymous character, alongsideRachel Brosnahan andNicholas Hoult. The film score is jointly composed byJohn Murphy andDavid Fleming which incorporatesJohn Williams'main theme from theoriginal 1978 film. The soundtrack was released byWaterTower Music on July 4, 2025.
John Murphy was confirmed to compose music forSuperman in February 2024, after previously working with Gunn onThe Suicide Squad (2021),The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special (2022) andGuardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3 (2023),[1] whileDavid Fleming joined the film as a co-composer sharing credits for the score with Murphy; his involvement was confirmed during April 2025.[2][3] Before Murphy and Fleming's confirmation, Gunn said that much of the film score and themes were written even before the script being conceptualized but the composers were not announced as he had to finalize the deal with the studios by then.[4][5]
Murphy and Fleming considered Gunn's enthusiasm on superhero projects helped in curating a creative and larger-than-life score with Fleming further attributing his interest on comics and graphic novels during childhood as the genesis for the score; the first graphic novel he read,The Death of Superman (1992) helped him to develop themes that reflect the core truth of Superman.[6] Gunn further confirmed that Murphy was using a new version ofJohn Williams' "Superman March" theme fromRichard Donner'sSuperman (1978).[5][7] Gunn considered Williams's score to be one of the greatest of all time and had associated his theme with Superman from the start of the film's development. He saw the theme's inclusion as one way for the film to harken back to past iterations.[8][9] Both composers also opined on Williams' theme being the DNA for the film's score and had incorporated them into the original material providing variety in colors, texture and instrumentation.[6]
Murphy considered Superman as a decent figure, maintaining his purity and honesty even at grim circumstances, hence the score was considered to have an orchestral.[6] However, Gunn's openness to experimentation at specific instances led them to craft themes revolving around Superman to be orchestral while becoming "messy" at other themes.[6] Besides the orchestra, Fleming played both electric and acoustic guitar with fellow musiciansYvette Young and Andrew Synowiec.[6] He further worked with theLos Angeles Philharmonic for the orchestral portions, where Fleming split up the string section into two and mirror them which each other, as they split down in the middle and bring the effect of doublingsynthesizers, providing a "very off-kilter" sound. He also liked working on the themes forGreen Lantern, theDaily Planet, andLois Lane, whose character had a detective angle.[6]
The film has fewer licensed songs than Gunn's previous superhero projects.[7] On the soundtrack, Safran's daughter Lou Lou performs a song with the American rock bandFoxy Shazam, with Lou Lou and the band's member Eric Nally on vocals, and written by Gunn and Nally.[10] Gunn stated that he included theTeddybears andIggy Pop song "Punkrocker" in the soundtrack after discovering it through theSpotify algorithm.[11]
The main theme titled "Theme from Superman" which incorporated Williams' theme had two versions, featured in both the teaser and trailer and released conjunction with the promotional materials assingles.[12][13]WaterTower Music released the soundtrack on July 4, 2025, featuring 33 tracks that included selections from Murphy and Fleming's score, as well as three songs.[14]Mondo would further release adouble LP of the score album in two colors—"Blue/ Red / White Spinner" and "Solid Red / Blue"—and pre-orders for the album will be scheduled on July 11.[14]
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Artist(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Home" | David Fleming | 2:02 | |
| 2. | "Last Son" |
| Fleming | 2:46 |
| 3. | "Hammer of Boravia" |
| Fleming | 3:02 |
| 4. | "LuthorCorp" |
| John Murphy | 1:37 |
| 5. | "The Daily Planet" | Fleming | Fleming | 0:54 |
| 6. | "Lois & Clark" | Murphy | Murphy | 1:08 |
| 7. | "Eyes Up Here" |
| Fleming | 2:22 |
| 8. | "Justice Gang vs. Kaiju" |
| Fleming | 3:23 |
| 9. | "Intruders" |
| Fleming | 3:25 |
| 10. | "The Message" |
|
| 2:43 |
| 11. | "Secret Harem" |
|
| 2:20 |
| 12. | "The Real Punk Rock" | Murphy | Murphy | 1:29 |
| 13. | "Pocket Universe" | Fleming | Fleming | 1:55 |
| 14. | "5 Years Time" | Charlie Fink | Noah and the Whale | 3:34 |
| 15. | "Something Like a Sun" |
|
| 2:19 |
| 16. | "Jailbreak" |
| Fleming | 1:06 |
| 17. | "The River Pi" |
| Fleming | 3:25 |
| 18. | "Take the T-Craft" |
|
| 1:38 |
| 19. | "Your Choices, Your Actions" |
| Fleming | 2:55 |
| 20. | "Raising the Flag" |
| Murphy | 1:49 |
| 21. | "The Rift" |
| Fleming | 4:53 |
| 22. | "Bases Loaded" |
| Fleming | 3:07 |
| 23. | "Speeding Bullet" |
| Fleming | 2:02 |
| 24. | "Remote Control" |
|
| 3:02 |
| 25. | "Upgrade" |
|
| 1:13 |
| 26. | "Driven by Envy" |
|
| 2:04 |
| 27. | "Look Up" |
| Fleming | 2:45 |
| 28. | "Being Human" |
| Fleming | 1:57 |
| 29. | "Luthor the Traitor" | Murphy | Murphy | 1:51 |
| 30. | "Metropolis" |
|
| 1:17 |
| 31. | "Walking on Air" | Murphy | Murphy | 1:34 |
| 32. | "Punkrocker" |
| Teddybears feat.Iggy Pop | 4:07 |
| 33. | "The Mighty Crabjoys Theme" |
| The Mighty Crabjoys | 1:16 |
| Total length: | 77:00 | |||
Sophie Madeleine's cover ofBring Me Sunshine is featured in the film.[15]
Pete Hammond ofDeadline Hollywood wrote "Music by John Murphy and David Fleming does what is expected, but the snippets we hear of John Williams' immortal score for the 1978 classic just remind of the emotional power that is missing from thisSuperman which doesn't try to compete, but plays in its own field."[16]Amy Nicholson ofLos Angeles Times called it "a very good doom metal electronic score by John Murphy and David Fleming".[17] Tom Jorgensen ofIGN wrote "John Murphy and David Fleming's guitar-heavy score gives these scenes an impressive sense of gravity, and that extends to the emotional moments, too. Although Murphy and Fleming quote John Williams' original Superman theme liberally, Gunn is more judicious with his crate-digging, mixtape-making sensibility this time out. That makes their driving and inspiring compositions all the more important."[18]
David Rooney ofThe Hollywood Reporter called it "a galvanizing orchestral and synth score by John Murphy and David Fleming that weaves in the immortal John Williams theme, Gunn'sSuperman is overloaded, even muddled at times, but relentlessly entertaining."[19] Siddhant Adlakha ofMashable wrote "The score is electric at times — pun intended — though it's most memorable when composers John Murphy and David Fleming aren't charged with recreating John Williams' motifs from 1978'sSuperman: The Movie."[20] Lisa Laman ofLooper, meanwhile, declared the score one of the highlights ofSuperman and a welcome contrast to the quality of Murphy's previous comic book movie scores. She especially praised tracks like "Speeding Bullet" for their theatricality and stirring energy.[21]
Zanobard Reviews gave the score a mixed review, stating that, while the new material for "the bustling Daily Planet, villainous Luthor, gentle love and heroic Justice Gang [is] interesting", the score was overall "sadly focused on cheap, trailerised repeating excerpts of John Williams' iconic theme playing over seemingly synthesized, generic-sounding action music".[22]Filmtracks.com gave the score a one-star review, unfavorably comparing it toHans Zimmer's prior efforts on Man of Steel: "Zimmer's score was simply terrible on its own merit. This time, you hear Williams' music crucified, and that emotional gut punch is arguably worse. What you hear is like Williams' music run through a Zimmer artificial intelligence filter to make it bigger, heavier, and more bad-ass in every cue of any significant volume." He also wrote off Murphy and Fleming's new themes as "ineffective and dumb in their expression" and was heavily critical of the score's mixing and orchestration, dubbing it "the ultimate dumbing-down of this sullied franchise".[23]
Music critic Jonathan Broxton of Movie Music UK likewise critiqued the usage of Williams' Superman March, stating that "these versions of the theme sound like those Youtube videos where a young kid with a set of samples has created an “epic” re-imagining of a theme, full of simple harmonies, chugging ostinatos, and massive synth choirs, reducing the whole thing to sound like modern trailer music, devoid of any nuance or subtlety or sophistication", though he did have some appreciation for Fleming's "Justice Gang" theme, which he dubbed "modern, appropriately heroic, [...] injecting a sense of crowd-pleasing bravery into his punk rock orchestra".[24] James Southall of Movie Wave also expressed his disappointment with the film's score, stating that "if you leave aside the mistreatment of the Williams material, you’re left with something that sounds pretty generic and could be from any 2025 action movie. It doesn’t really sound like there’s any great ambition there to create something lasting".[25]
| Chart (2025) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| UK Soundtrack Albums (OCC)[26] | 2 |
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