"The Dark Knight scores are excellent in my view, brooding, portentious and dramatic. That 2 note minor third theme (oh allright then, motif ) is remarkably powerful in situ and is a wonderful psychological portrayal of Bales' brooding character. " - mh7635
This film was RUINED by the score of Zimmer. It is musical idiocy and I cannot believe you are saying it is "brooding portentious" etc. I can't go to films scored by Zimmer because I know that heavy, sickly, pea-soup-thick crap of layering chords with drums that he does will be poured over every scene to the point of nausea.
You want to hear brooding and portentious? Remarkably powerful? Psychological portrayal?
Listen to the score by Danny Elfman of the first Batman film. This score is one of the best in all film music. It is powerful and intensely expressive and extremely musical.
An example - the main title: while slightly influenced by Herrmann's "Journey to the Center of the Earth" motif and orchestration, Elfman then makes it his own with an intense rhythmic development. No one had done music of that kind at the time. EVERYONE does now including Zimmer. Then, the end section: he takes this motif - 6 notes (transposed to c minor) C-D-Eflat-Aflat-G and transforms it to major using the first four notes of the Batman notif, starting on the third with E-F-G-C. This is played throughout the orchestra at the same time the camera is panning upwards through the dark cityscape to a final image of Batman above everything, looking down upon the darkness he stands above, and the minor key motif recurs C-D-Eflat-A-flat-G.
The music and the image are one, It is pure genius, the greatest film scoring anyone can do. I still shudder when thinking of that magnificent scene. THAT is brooding, portentious, psychological.