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Evil Does Not Exist Image
Metascore
82

Universal acclaim - based on 6 Critic Reviews What's this?

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  • Summary: After working on 2021's Oscar winning Drive My Car, Eiko Ishibashi asked filmmaker Ryusuke Hamaguchi to create visuals for her upcoming live performances which then became a film and more music was created for it.
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Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 6
  2. Mixed: 0 out of 6
  3. Negative: 0 out of 6
  1. Jul 3, 2024
    80
    The music rewards multiple listens, with different emotional subtleties emerging in each one.
  2. Jul 3, 2024
    80
    As a standalone soundtrack Evil Does Not Exist is a fine addition to Ishibashi’s singular work – the mood is darker and eerier than her fêted Drive My Car, but it’s the stronger album nonetheless. [Jul 2024, p.33]
  3. The Wire
    Jul 3, 2024
    80
    This is a complex, affecting work by Ishibashi, but listeners are advised to seek out the film to experience it in context. [Jun 2024, p.50]
  4. Jul 10, 2024
    80
    Eiko Ishibashi’s soundtrack skilfully and subtly complements the film’s themes, capturing stillness, beauty, sorrow and uncertainty in such a way that the album succeeds on its own terms as a nuanced listening experience.
  5. Mojo
    Jul 3, 2024
    80
    Ishibashi’s latest score is again subtle, delicate, but robust enough to blossom away from the film itself. It’s her balancing of disparate elements that’s so impressive. [Aug 2024, p.87]
  6. Jul 3, 2024
    75
    The cloudier nature of Ishibashi’s score leaves it feeling less like a standalone piece than the soft, jazzy pop of her Drive My Car soundtrack. But as a mirror to Hamaguchi’s tale of creeping environmental anxiety, Ishibashi’s ghostly music makes a rich companion.