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    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008
    Quantum of Solace game demo:

    http://uk.gamespot.com/pages/gamespace/ … id=6198688

    (I don't know if there's a demo on 360/PS3/Wii though).
    •  
      CommentAuthoromaha
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008
    moonie wrote
    Ill have to watch Casino Royale frist, I have the dvd just need to watch it.


    watch it!
    I rank it as number 5 of 22.
    • CommentAuthorTimmer
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008
    omaha wrote
    moonie wrote
    Ill have to watch Casino Royale frist, I have the dvd just need to watch it.


    watch it!
    I rank it as number 5 of 22.


    What is the top 10 IYO ?
    On Friday I ate a lot of dust and appeared orange near the end of the day ~ Bregt
    •  
      CommentAuthorBregt
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008 edited
    Zero Coke is 99,7% the same as Diet Coke (or Coke Light as they call it around here) and was mainly marketed towards the male population, as an alternative for Diet Coke. Both contain the evil aspartame. If I had to choose between aspartame and sugar, I'd choose sugar.

    It's all in yah headz!
    Kazoo
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008 edited
    Bregt wrote
    Zero Coke is 99,7% the same as Diet Coke


    But that 0.03% still manages to be shit. wink
    • CommentAuthorTimmer
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008
    Anthony wrote
    Bregt wrote
    Zero Coke is 99,7% the same as Diet Coke


    But that 0.03% still manages to be shit. wink


    My advice is don't drink tooth-rot cool
    On Friday I ate a lot of dust and appeared orange near the end of the day ~ Bregt
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008
    Timmer wrote
    My advice is don't drink tooth-rot cool


    Drink liver damage instead. beer
    • CommentAuthorTimmer
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008
    Anthony wrote
    Timmer wrote
    My advice is don't drink tooth-rot cool


    Drink liver damage instead. beer


    Ahhhhh you talking my language, I'll drink to that! beer
    On Friday I ate a lot of dust and appeared orange near the end of the day ~ Bregt
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 7th 2008 edited
    Anthony wrote
    Quantum of Solace game demo:

    http://uk.gamespot.com/pages/gamespace/ … id=6198688

    (I don't know if there's a demo on 360/PS3/Wii though).


    Don't bother with this game actually. I failed to spot that it's developed by Treyarch (who butcher the Call Of Duty games whenever they can get their hands on one). The demo lasts about two minutes, the gameplay is bog standard, the music (which I'm sure would sound quite good with out of the game) is at a really low bitrate, and the graphics are down right ugly. And this is using the Call Of Duty 4 engine! Sheeh! vomit
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 18th 2008 edited
    I think I've found my playlist for QOS:

    Time To Get Out - Banging action - plus the only reference I've heard to the title theme.
    The Palito - I love the last 50 seconds or so.
    Pursuit At Port Au Prince - Very heavy action material for a Bond movie, and a great little reprise of the Bond theme at the end.
    Talamone - The "I'm The Money' of QOS, but arguably even better.
    Field Trip - Haven't had Bond music like this since Tomorrow Never Dies!
    Target Terminated - Again, what an adrenaline fueled cue!!
    Oil Fields - Great use of the vamp at the end!
    I Never Left - A final emotional reprise of Vesper's theme.

    All in all, what is good, is great, but what is not so good isn't going to make much sense until I've seen the film. cool

    (Death to the pan pipe source music too!)
    • CommentAuthorTimmer
    • CommentTimeOct 18th 2008
    Anthony wrote
    I think I've found my playlist for QOS:

    Time To Get Out - Banging action - plus the only reference I've heard to the title theme.
    The Palito - I love the last 50 seconds or so.
    Pursuit At Port Au Prince - Very heavy action material for a Bond movie, and a great little reprise of the Bond theme at the end.
    Talamone - The "I'm The Money' of QOS, but arguably even better.
    Field Trip - Haven't had Bond music like this since Tomorrow Never Dies!
    Target Terminated - Again, what an adrenaline fueled cue!!
    Oil Fields - Great use of the vamp at the end!
    I Never Left - A final emotional reprise of Vesper's theme.

    All in all, what is good, is great, but what is not so good isn't going to make much sense until I've seen the film. cool

    (Death to the pan pipe source music too!)


    Pan pipe music.... shocked vomit
    On Friday I ate a lot of dust and appeared orange near the end of the day ~ Bregt
    •  
      CommentAuthorDavid
    • CommentTimeOct 18th 2008
    The BBC has written up a very positive review of the film:

    "And it's a brave step to push even further a lot of the themes developed in Casino Royale, especially the rediscovery of who Bond is, and why he is the way he is.

    It's a film that feels like the second part of a trilogy, with this being the bleaker second act."

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/entertainment/7676637.stm
  1. I really liked Casino Royale, so I have hopes for this one, indeed.
    http://www.filmmusic.pl - Polish Film Music Review Website
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 18th 2008
    I just want this one to involve a lot of shooting and remorse, and it looks like it's going to deliver right on target.
  2. Posted over at FSM by Bond1965:

    http://commanderbond.net/components/qui … item=50148

    The Midas touch of David Arnold and his influence on Bond

    Mark Beaumont

    He nearly worked in Blockbuster, but blockbusters are David Arnold’s forte - reports The Times.

    “That mid-period Bond became so silly,” David Arnold chuckles in his refined movie nerd whine. “I think it was Octopussy where there’s a bomb in a circus tent and Bond has to dress up as a clown to get in. I’m thinking, hang on, why don’t you just say, ‘My name’s James Bond, I’m MI6, there’s a bomb in here, I need to go in and defuse it please?’ There are jumping-the-shark moments but then you get to Daniel Craig and you forget about all that.”

    Arnold, a 46-year-old Bondophile from Luton, has had as much of an influence on 007’s swaggering 21st-century rebirth as Craig’s child-sized trunks. As the composer of the past five Bond scores (Tomorrow Never Dies to Quantum of Solace) his racy dub-metal sounds – part Portishead, part Audioslave – have gradually stripped Bonds of their camp Eighties orchestration and scrawled on a daring modern edge. He’s the man, after decades of Bassey, ballrooms and brass, who made Bond rock.

    “I had the idea of bringing in rock’n’roll ideas, whether it’s Queen or Massive Attack – of making it contemporary without losing the essence,” he says, hunched over the mixing desk at Air Studios in Hampstead, looking not unlike a bearded Blofeld.

    Born in the same year as the film Dr No, Arnold has found Bond a lifelong inspiration. As a child he would gaze from his bedroom window over the Electrolux factory and dream of flying over Japanese mountain-tops in Connery’s Little Nellie from You Only Live Twice. He was drawn to the gutsy fantasy of the themes: “John Barry did what a lot of great pop song-writers did. He made the point very succinctly and very elegantly. The opening bars of You Only Live Twice are utterly distinct. Within ten seconds you’re in that world.”

    In 1993 his score for his Luton friend Danny Cannon’s lowbudget first film The Young Americans (showcased by the majestic Björk-sung Play Dead) earned him a call from Harvey Keitel’s office offering him a first-class flight to LA on the day he was due to swap his labouring job for working at Camden Blockbuster. But even as he began scoring Hollywood big-hitters, including Stargate and Independence Day, his eyes were on a golden-fingered prize.

    “I went and saw the head of music [at MGM],” he recalls, “and told him I was a lifelong Bond fan and if ever John Barry didn’t want to do it please give me a call.” Arnold then recorded an album of Bond songs called Shaken and Stirred with singers including Jarvis Cocker and Iggy Pop. Barry got the hint; one listen to these wry modern twists on his classics and he recommended Arnold as his replacement.

    Technically, scoring Bonds is unglamorous graft, repeatedly viewing scenes while composing strictly timed interludes, but the Solace director Marc Forster encouraged Arnold to write blind. “I was writing themes that weren’t driven by what I was seeing but by the script. It was a more impressionistic approach. Then they cut that music into certain scenes in the film, so there was music which I wouldn’t have written had I seen the picture.”

    Did you change your style to suit Craig’s performances? “Definitely,” Arnold says. “The whole idea was following on from the way he plays it. He doesn’t look over his shoulder, he does it completely unafraid of what’s gone before. It’s more muscular, it’s less flowery, it’s more rhythmic, it’s darker, it’s dirtier. Though you’re still utilising the sound of an orchestra, the approach is punk-rock. We ask the players to hit their instruments hard and be aggressive and there are lots of dirty horrible guitars and drums. But if it doesn’t stick to the screen it’s useless.”

    Arnold isn’t just on the big screen. He’s behind the soundtrack to Little Britain and its US offshoot, even making a cameo appearance in the first series of the former as a prime ministerial adviser.

    He worked on string arrangements with Kaiser Chiefs and Paul McCartney at the Electric Proms last year and has penned Bond songs for Garbage and Chris Cornell (the Grammy-nominated You Know My Name). So you sense disappointment that he wasn’t more involved in the writing of the song by Jack White and Alicia Keys for Solace, Another Way to Die. “I had dialogue with Jack about what I thought the song should be about, basically taking him through story points . . . It was just Jack’s thing, he’s like Prince in that respect, he does everything.”

    Didn’t Noel Gallagher submit a song for Solace? “I didn’t hear it,” Arnold shrugs. “A lot of prominent writers and great artists say, ‘I’ve written a song for the film’ and I always think, ‘I know you haven’t read the script, so how can you know if it’s right for the film?’ Perhaps what you’ve done is written a song that sounds like a Bond song so therefore it should be in a Bond film.”


    I've bolded one section which may indicate this score will be a bit more unconventional in the film.
    A butterfly thinks therefore I am
  3. The Midas Touch, interesting, the same phrase was used in a John Barry biography and it is widely known how Arnold references the original Barry style in his scoring.
    http://www.filmmusic.pl - Polish Film Music Review Website
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 19th 2008
    I've got the article from The Knowledge sitting right next to me and I didn't even realise it. biggrin
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 19th 2008
    franz_conrad wrote
    I've bolded one section which may indicate this score will be a bit more unconventional in the film.


    You realise that process is so they can essentially "temp" the movie with new music? I will still have been rewritten to fit better.
  4. Anthony wrote
    franz_conrad wrote
    I've bolded one section which may indicate this score will be a bit more unconventional in the film.


    You realise that process is so they can essentially "temp" the movie with new music?


    Not necessarily. This is a very common way of having music written for a film in European and Asian cinema, particularly in arthouse films. I often recommend it to my students as a way of getting a cue written for a scene that plays through the action onscreen rather than being overly referential to it. It makes sense that Forster would have worked this way, as films of his like MONSTER'S BALL feature scores that are less likely to shift with story beats and more likely to drape the images with an overall mood.
    A butterfly thinks therefore I am
  5. we heard from David Arnold that you musn't expect the Bond theme at all, only in snippets does it appear in the film and on CD

    oh, and for you lovers out there, he said he wants to make the Third Narnia as big as those 3 before smile

    this is gonna be simply awesome punk
    waaaaaahhhhhhhh!!! Where's my nut? arrrghhhhhhh
    •  
      CommentAuthorDemetris
    • CommentTimeOct 19th 2008
    The third Narnia will surely be far, far better than HGW's snoozers so i can't wait. I haven't heard the new Bond yet but i am confident i'll love it as i actually adored every moment of CASINO ROYALE's big ass loud, modern action writing where he still stayed orchestral in core and complex.

    As for the new movie, i am definitely looking forward to it because CASINO ROYALE was excellent from start to finish and there's not a single reason why the new film wouldn't be as good, or even better actually.

    I love what they're doing with the 'new' Bond; in basis, their approach reminds me of the look on the franchise as a whole and ethics the team behind the new Batman films have and with which i 100% agree.
    Love Maintitles. It's full of Wanders.
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 21st 2008
    QOS review - and it's good!

    http://www.empireonline.com/reviews/rev … FID=134523

    (spoilers though)
    • CommentAuthorAnthony
    • CommentTimeOct 30th 2008 edited
    Steven, if you read this in time, your bird is about to be on BBC News (8am). tongue