Abel Korzeniowski once again joined forces with Tom Ford for his latest film “Nocturnal Animals.” The composer, who earned his first Golden Globe nomination for Best Score with Ford’s directorial debut “A Single Man,” created an intense and spell-binding score to accompany the designer-turned-director’s haunting romantic thriller.
Korzeniowski described his newest creation as “embracing two extremes, but switching their traditional genre characterization. Adding in a press release that, “The crime plot is scored as an intimate, personal story, while the psychological drama is treated as a thriller. The cold and detached intertwines with poignant and excruciating, the simple and intimate becomes grand and bold.”
The soundtrack features 13 original songs and was digitally released on Back Lot Music on November 4. The physical copy will arrive November 18 via Silva Screen Records.
Read More: ‘Nocturnal Animals’ Featurette: Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal Talk Unrequited Love
In an interview with Where To Watch,...
Korzeniowski described his newest creation as “embracing two extremes, but switching their traditional genre characterization. Adding in a press release that, “The crime plot is scored as an intimate, personal story, while the psychological drama is treated as a thriller. The cold and detached intertwines with poignant and excruciating, the simple and intimate becomes grand and bold.”
The soundtrack features 13 original songs and was digitally released on Back Lot Music on November 4. The physical copy will arrive November 18 via Silva Screen Records.
Read More: ‘Nocturnal Animals’ Featurette: Amy Adams and Jake Gyllenhaal Talk Unrequited Love
In an interview with Where To Watch,...
- 11/8/2016
- by Liz Calvario
- Indiewire
Much as ghost driven horror stories swept Asia a decade or so back, dark but classy thrillers are where it's at in Europe these days with the success of The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo emboldening producers across the continent to weigh in with their own bleakly elegant tales and now it would appear to be Poland's turn with Ziarno Prawdy (A Grain Of Truth). As is the case with so many of these films, Boris Lankosz's effort is adapted from a successful novel - Zygmunt Miloszewski's book of the same name - and plunges investigators into a murky world of crime. Though there are no subtitles available on the trailer the format is familiar enough to have a sense of what's going on while...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
[Read the whole post on twitchfilm.com...]...
- 12/4/2014
- Screen Anarchy
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