Pan's Labyrinth (2006)
Track Listing
| 1. | Long, Long Time Ago | 02:11 |
| 2. | The Labyrinth | 04:07 |
| 3. | Rose, Dragon | 03:36 |
| 4. | The Fairy & the Labyrinth | 03:36 |
| 5. | Three Trails | 02:07 |
| 6. | The Moribund Tree & The Toad | 07:11 |
| 7. | Guerrilleros | 02:08 |
| 8. | A Book of Blood | 03:49 |
| 9. | Mercedes Lullaby | 01:37 |
| 10. | The Refuge | 01:34 |
| 11. | Not Human | 05:53 |
| 12. | The River | 02:51 |
| 13. | A Tale | 01:53 |
| 14. | Deep Forest | 05:48 |
| 15. | Vals of the Maldrake | 03:41 |
| 16. | The Funeral | 02:46 |
| 17. | Mercedes | 05:37 |
| 18. | Pan & the Full Moon | 05:07 |
| 19. | Ofelia | 02:20 |
| 20. | A Princess | 04:02 |
| 21. | Pan's Labyrinth Lullaby | 01:52 |
| Total Time: | 73:46 |
Awards
- Oscar (Academy Award) - Best Achievement in Music Written for Motion Pictures, Original Score (2007)
- Cinema Writers Circle (Spain) - Best Score (2007)
- Goya (Spain) - Best Original Score (2007)
- Online Film Critics Society (OFCS) - Best Original Score (2007)
Ratings
|
User Average Rating:
4.75 Stars
Review Average Rating:
4.38 Stars
Reviews
4.38 StarsAndrew Granade (SoundtrackNet)

"Navarrete has met Del Toro's triumph step-for-step with a haunting, lyrical score that far surpassed my expectations. Navarrete manages to do something few composers, who are usually concerned only with thematic cohesion, accomplish - he foreshadows."
Christian Clemmensen (Filmtracks)

"Buy it... if you seek an exotic, rich fantasy score with thematic integrity and grand, tonal schemes while maintaining a persistent sense of dread in its dissonant accompaniment."
"Avoid it... if you are easily exhausted by extremely dense, complicated, and emotionally conflicted scores, no matter their beauty."
Jonathan Broxton (Movie Music UK)

"Composing music to match Del Toro’s startling visuals must have been a daunting prospect, but Navarrete more than holds his own. His score is a rich, bold, detailed work, generally dark in tone, and occasionally more sinister than that, but which paints a fantastical picture of myths and legends which never fails to delight."
Mike Beek (Music from the Movies)

"There was some marginal disappointment that Marco Beltrami wasn’t involved with the project, as he had scored all of Del Toro’s recent English-language outings such as Mimic, Blade II and Hellboy. But fears of ‘Javier who?’ can now be utterly quelled as his score for this movie is absolutely remarkable and ought to be a serious contender for any awards going in 2007."