Award-winning composer Christophe Beck (The Hangover I & II, Waiting For Superman) scores the action-drama Edge Of Tomorrow, directed by Doug Liman and starring Tom Cruise and Emily Blunt. The film follows a soldier (Cruise) who finds himself caught in a time loop while battling an alien invasion.
Listen to a preview of the soundtrack below.
Want to hear more? Check out 4 tracks from the upcoming Edge Of Tomorrow soundtrack Here.
Christophe Beck credits display his ability to find the tone of film in any genre. In 2000, the cheerleading comedy Bring It On launched Beck’s prolific film scoring career. His credits include The Hangover, the highest-grossing R-rated comedy of all time, Under the Tuscan Sun, Red, Burlesque, What Happens in Vegas, and the heartwarming film, Crazy, Stupid, Love demonstrated Christophe Beck’s ability to convey a spectrum of emotion, with his varying tones throughout the film. The same year, he...
Listen to a preview of the soundtrack below.
Want to hear more? Check out 4 tracks from the upcoming Edge Of Tomorrow soundtrack Here.
Christophe Beck credits display his ability to find the tone of film in any genre. In 2000, the cheerleading comedy Bring It On launched Beck’s prolific film scoring career. His credits include The Hangover, the highest-grossing R-rated comedy of all time, Under the Tuscan Sun, Red, Burlesque, What Happens in Vegas, and the heartwarming film, Crazy, Stupid, Love demonstrated Christophe Beck’s ability to convey a spectrum of emotion, with his varying tones throughout the film. The same year, he...
- 6/2/2014
- by Melissa Thompson
- WeAreMovieGeeks.com
Director: David Blyth. Review: Adam Wing. With a CV that includes Red-Blooded American Girl and Death Warmed Up, not to mention TV work like White Fang and Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers, it’s fair to say that director David Blyth’s career has been anything but ordinary. That statement isn’t going to change anytime soon if his latest psychosexual horror movie is anything to go by. With a taste for the kind of absurd imagery Takashi Miike would be proud of - a birthing scene in particular echoes one of his most celebrated images - David Blyth is about to take you on one hell of a joyride. Maybe we should start by getting our heads around the plot. Susan (Kate O’Rourke) has a history of horrific abuse, which refuses to loosen its grip on her. Tanya (Te Kaea Beri) is a lost girl searching for the mother she never knew,...
- 10/25/2011
- 24framespersecond.net
Director: David Blyth. Review: Adam Wing. With a CV that includes Red-Blooded American Girl and Death Warmed Up, not to mention TV work like White Fang and Mighty Morphin’ Power Rangers, it’s fair to say that director David Blyth’s career has been anything but ordinary. That statement isn’t going to change anytime soon if his latest psychosexual horror movie is anything to go by. With a taste for the kind of absurd imagery Takashi Miike would be proud of - a birthing scene in particular echoes one of his most celebrated images - David Blyth is about to take you on one hell of a joyride. Maybe we should start by getting our heads around the plot. Susan (Kate O’Rourke) has a history of horrific abuse, which refuses to loosen its grip on her. Tanya (Te Kaea Beri) is a lost girl searching for the mother she never knew,...
- 10/25/2011
- 24framespersecond.net
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