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Gnome in Plaid

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Posts posted by Gnome in Plaid

  1. Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest

    Raiders of the Lost Ark

    Birdman

    The Fellowship of the Ring

    The Two Towers

    The Return of the King

     

    And seeing Home Alone today!  Star Wars in January.

     

    I also had tickets to see E.T. and Naked Lunch but wasn't able to make it.

     

    Apollo 13, the Williams Harry Potters, Interstellar, and Jurassic Park are at the top of my wish list.

     

    On 8/30/2016 at 6:59 PM, crocodile said:

    The Silence of the Lambs

    That's a thing?

  2. "One of the things I love about film music is if i want to go and do my psychedelic country western heavy metal album, there probably is a movie...there's a producer somewhere going 'banjos and fuzz guitars - I need it!'  You're required to experiment; that's the call." - Hans Zimmer

     

    Terence Blanchard's relationship with Spike Lee sounds like every composer's dream, too.

  3. Heavy Trip.  It's basically a Finnish heavy metal Blues Brothers.  And it's fucking hilarious.

     

    The Catcher Was a Spy was excellent, and it's a shame people got the wrong idea about what kind of movie it's supposed to be, because it should really be getting a lot more press.

     

    I can't say anything else really has left that much of an impression on me yet, but this is about the time of year I start paying attention again.

  4. 15 hours ago, Incanus said:

    A History of Violence by Howard Shore: A strange post LotR soundtrack that really sounds like the Midwest USA of the film was actually Middle-earth. It strongly feels like big vestiges of the fantasy epic's sound and ideas were still going through the composer's mind when he scored this, from the noble horn main theme to the Ringwraith-y chase music. Despite of this it is thoughtfully constructed piece of music with just the right length album.

    As a born-and-raised Midwesterner, other than the action music (although is "Run" the most Shorian action piece ever?), the score strikes me as very Midwestern.  I think it's the pacing.

  5. I don't often bother with anything besides the film festival these days.  There's just not much that's interested me lately.  I haven't seen a "blockbuster" since Jumanji (which, honestly, I found really fun).  There aren't a whole lot of films which really demand a "cinema experience" (Loving Vincent comes to mind).  That said, I'm probably going to see Green Book tomorrow.

     

    On 11/26/2018 at 7:03 PM, Brundlefly said:

    A Wrinkle in Time

    <<<>>>

    The Mission, The Last Emperor, The Constant Gardener

     

    Just examples, but you know what the idea is.

    Oh what should have been.

  6. 18 minutes ago, Nick Parker said:

    A movie called "Death of a Nation", with a poster juxtaposing Lincoln and Trump's faces,  with track titles like "Jewish Problem"...

     

    What the hell kind of movie is this!?

     

    A Dinesh D'Souza crapfest that posits today's Democrats are the ideological heirs to the Nazis and Trump is the only one who can save us from them...

     

    Decent score, though.

  7. I really only know enough to go back to 1970, but I thought I'd give it a go.

     

    2018 (so far): The Catcher Was a Spy (Shore)

    2017: Loving Vincent (Mansell)

    2016: The BFG (Williams)

    2015: The Force Awakens (Williams)

    2014: Inherent Vice (Greenwood)

    2013: The Desolation of Smaug (Shore)

    2012: Lincoln (Williams)

    2011: The Adventures of Tintin (Williams)

    2010: Edge of Darkness (Shore)

    2009: Drag Me to Hell (Young)

    2008: Appaloosa (Beal)

    2007: American Gangster (Streitenfeld)

    2006: The Fountain (Mansell)

    2005: Revenge of the Sith (Williams)

    2004: The Prisoner of Azkaban (Williams)

    2003: The Return of the King (Shore)

    2002: The Two Towers (Shore)

    2001: The Fellowship of the Ring (Shore)

    2000: The Cell (Shore)

    1999: October Sky (Isham)

    1998: American History X (Dudley)

    1997: Amistad (Williams)

    1996: Hamlet (Doyle)

    1995: Apollo 13 (Horner)

    1994: The Lion King (Zimmer)

    1993: Cool Runnings (Zimmer)

    1992: Alien 3 (Goldenthal)

    1991: Naked Lunch (Shore/Coleman)

    1990: Home Alone (Williams)

    1989: Hider in the House (Young)

    1988: The Land Before Time (Horner)

    1987: The Kindred (Newman)

    1986: The Fly (Shore)

    1985: Legend (Goldsmith)

    1984: The Temple of Doom (Williams)

    1983: Return of the Jedi (Williams)

    1982: E.T. (Williams)

    1981: Raiders of the Lost Ark (Williams)

    1980: The Empire Strikes Back (Williams)

    1979: Alien (Goldsmith)

    1978: The Fury (Williams)

    1977: Star Wars (Williams)

    1976: The Omen (Goldsmith)

    1975: Jaws (Williams)

    1974: The Towering Inferno (Williams)

    1973: Battle for the Planet of the Apes (Rosenman)

    1972: The Godfather (Rota)

    1971: Straw Dogs (Fielding)

    1970: Patton (Goldsmith)

  8. 10 hours ago, Steve McQueen said:

    Positively regal!

     

    Anyway:

    Nixon by John Williams

    Solid score.  Elegant, brooding, some fine writing.  Impactful, as well.  Thoroughly enjoyed it, but, then, I'm in kind of a brooding mood as of late.  As for the electronics, they are integrated well enough, but I feel they were a tad redundant.

    Hunh.  It's one of the few Williams scores I find the electronics really add something.

  9. I finally got around to seeing The Catcher Was a Spy, and god damn...  Not only is it a phenomenal film (apparently reviewers didn't understand it's a character study, not a spy thriller), but it's probably Shore's best work since Edge of Darkness.  He finds a wonderful balance between the touching sensitivity of his recent concert work and the unbridled tension of his 90s thriller scores.  The end credits said there's an album available on Howe Records, but I can't find anything about it on his site.  It would certainly be a very nice holiday surprise for it to get released.

  10. On 9/12/2018 at 4:48 PM, TGP said:

    Wow I always thought Williams wrote basic piano sketches which were passed off to orchestrators to be fleshed out.

    I'm going to assume that's sarcasm, but if not, check out his sketches for the prequels.  The orchestrators didn't have to do that much beyond writing "tacet" on some parts.

    On 9/12/2018 at 2:03 PM, bollemanneke said:

    Man of Steel.

    That's what I was going to say.  (That or Fury Road).

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