Nicolas Winding Refn's haunting, mostly silent and meditative Viking movie “Valhalla Rising” came out all the way back in 2009. In our review way back when, we described it as akin to “Terrence Malick making a horror movie,” and that’s kinda not far off the mark (maybe Kubrick making a twisted nature movie too). “I always wanted to make a drug movie. Because you can present it in one way as this movie is about some Vikings going crazy and killing each other. But at least I can see now that it has many themes going through it and it's very open to interpretation,” Refn told us in a 2009 interview. “It’s about science-fiction but without science. It's about faith, and what's beyond faith is when you die.” One of the more terrific elements of the movie was the score by Peter Peter and Peter Kyed (they did Refn...
- 10/15/2013
- by Edward Davis
- The Playlist
While "Bronson," "Drive" and "Only God Forgives" solidified Nicolas Winding Refn as a director known for his powerful filmmaking and the carefully curated scores and songs he assembles for his films, one movie seemed to be left behind: "Vahalla Rising." The moody, near wordless flick may not be as popular as those other films, but the score is just as stirring anything in those films. And finally, it's getting a proper release. The score by Peter Peter and Peter Kyed will get equal face time on the forthcoming disc as the work by sound designers Giles Lamb and Douglas MacDougall, in what is collaboratively a pretty beautifully oppressive combination of sounds. But the catch in all this? Milan Records will drop the disc overseas, on October 7th, so you'll either have to import it or wait for domestic date, if/when that ever arrives. and also release the album (CD...
- 9/20/2013
- by Kevin Jagernauth
- The Playlist
Let me start off this article by saying something that I know a lot of people think but rarely vocalize: Sean Bean is a great actor and one badass motherfucker. When he's not kicking ass in movies like The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring and the recent Black Death and on television in HBO's Game of Thrones, he's waving off stab wounds after defending the honor of his girlfriend in a bar fight.
He's also been killed more times on screen than most actors I or you can think of, and usually in spectacular fashion. Never let it be said the man didn't know how to make a great exit. A few days ago, Harry Hanrahan over at Pajiba put together a 4-minute-long video compilation of Bean's death scenes and set to Giles Lamb and the Dead Island Quartet's theme music from the announcement trailer for the video game Dead Island.
He's also been killed more times on screen than most actors I or you can think of, and usually in spectacular fashion. Never let it be said the man didn't know how to make a great exit. A few days ago, Harry Hanrahan over at Pajiba put together a 4-minute-long video compilation of Bean's death scenes and set to Giles Lamb and the Dead Island Quartet's theme music from the announcement trailer for the video game Dead Island.
- 7/17/2011
- by Robert Morgan
- Geeks of Doom
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