Perhaps it would be helpful - since this is a virtual round table discussion over drinks say, for people to read ALL posts before posting themselves, especially when their posts are sizeable diatribes making points that were nullified before having been made. To do otherwise is somewhat insulting and a waste of time. Another useful thing to keep in mind - what in my opinion went without saying - is that most of us deplorers here were looking for symphonic soundtracks that are: a) Worth the title 'symphonic' - with the attached weight and meaning the word has enjoyed during the last few hundred years, b) able to stand on their own as music without the support of the film, c) being original (you know what I mean) inspired, compelling, memorable works. So,
'a' - refers to orchestral or ensemble works that demonstrate considerable compositional technique: ex. voice-leading, counterpoint, orchestration, balance, etc.
'b' - requires all of the above plus formal elements (shape, flow, drama, contrast, development), and most importantly, character!
'c' - refers to the ineffable, unquantifiable dasein, that breathes life to a work, makes it unique and, oftentimes, beautiful and/or haunting.
I don't care whether anybody's music 'works for the film'! At this level you'd expect it to (with loud exceptions such as the latest Star Trek film). We are not going to celebrate composers that write music that 'm e r e l y' works for the film... Don't the sagas of Star Trek, Harry Potter, Batman, Superman, and perhaps most importantly, James Bond, tell you anything? Isn't the difference as plain as day to you from the early films to the latest ones? 'a', 'b' and 'c' factors disappearing as the instalments continue?
Like I said before, Mr. H.Z. is not fully responsible for the state of affairs, he does what he can, although his offerings are hard to fully appreciate and attribute since he openly collaborates with staff-composers, so to say that that particular orchestral idea, or this particular passage shows promise or skill, in this case is a blurry statement. However the point is, that him and others like him who write such non-descript characterless music, could very soon be superseded by boxes like Symphobia 3, Hollywoodsteals, etc. Whereas Herrmann, Mancini, Williams, Goldsmith, Barry, Morricone, Jarre... just try it programmers... just try it...
Finally, as far as Desplat is concerned, I can tell this guy could do more one day, but he hasn't quite yet; Christopher Gordon (I was happy to be present in the studio for one of his recording sessions for an American Film) is a very solid composer - not a pad-grating, Stormdrum-depending incompetent, that has been overlooked, probably due to the fact that he lives in Australia.