Hans Zimmer & RCP
- Hybrid Soldier
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Non.
Le score de Debney est parfait dans le film très moyen qu'il illustre.
Et HGW aurait probablement regardé Bruckheimer avec un grand sourire, serait sorti de la pièce, aurait pris sa voiture et aurait quitté la Californie...
Le score de Debney est parfait dans le film très moyen qu'il illustre.
Et HGW aurait probablement regardé Bruckheimer avec un grand sourire, serait sorti de la pièce, aurait pris sa voiture et aurait quitté la Californie...
Hans Zimmer : "Lorne is the best, he really is!"
Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
C'est malin, je le range où, mon CD maintenant?
Je suppose que les remerciements de Badelt à Verbinski et Bruckheimer dans le livret sont ironiques? et que le surnom de "Bowsprit" pour Badelt est lourd de sens?
Je suppose que les remerciements de Badelt à Verbinski et Bruckheimer dans le livret sont ironiques? et que le surnom de "Bowsprit" pour Badelt est lourd de sens?
- Hybrid Soldier
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Bref, c'est un bordel sans nom cette histoire !! Enfin... si... il a un nom ce bordel : Bruckheimer.
Mais en même temps, ça correspond assez à l'idée (assez détestable) que je me fais du monsieur et de celle que ce dernier se fait des compositeurs de musique de film.........
Mais en même temps, ça correspond assez à l'idée (assez détestable) que je me fais du monsieur et de celle que ce dernier se fait des compositeurs de musique de film.........
Un accusé est cuit quand son avocat n'est pas cru. (Pierre DAC)
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Quid de Prince of Persia ?Hybrid Soldier a écrit :Et HGW aurait probablement regardé Bruckheimer avec un grand sourire, serait sorti de la pièce, aurait pris sa voiture et aurait quitté la Californie...
(par ailleurs un film autrement meilleur que tous les Pirates of the caribbeans du monde)
edit: tant que j'y songe, il s'est passé quoi avec le Main title de Enemy of the state ? Rarement écouté un thème aussi hybride, qui commence plutôt bien dans l'approche dramatique typique de MV des années 90 avant de s'effondrer dans une bouillie de synthés dégueulasses.
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Oui le Main Title d'EOTS est de Trev...
Hans Zimmer : "Lorne is the best, he really is!"
Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Quand on regarde l'interieur du double vinyle de Man of steel on peut voir la photo d'une formation de batteries plutôt hors normes:
- Hybrid Soldier
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
D'ailleurs si tu regardes encore plus détail dans les "thanks" il y a mon nom aussi...
Merci à Wyatt de me l'avoir confirmé...
Merci à Wyatt de me l'avoir confirmé...
Hans Zimmer : "Lorne is the best, he really is!"
Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Il est beau ce vinyle ! Ca donne envie de racheter une platine. Ca avait quand même plus de gueule les LP’s que nos malheureux CD’s aux pochettes riquiqui.
Plus on est nombreux à penser la même chose,
moins il vient à l'idée qu'on pourrait tous avoir tort.
moins il vient à l'idée qu'on pourrait tous avoir tort.
Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Je viens d'apprendre à l'instant qu'Harry Gregson-Williams sortait enfin de sa retraite anticipée pour faire la musique de THE EQUALIZER d'Antoine Fuqua!
Hybrid, plus d'infos à ce sujet ? Il était pas censé se retirer un temps de la musique de film ? Ca aura pas duré longtemps...
C'est bien mais bon, j'aurais largement préféré apprendre ça pour John Powell perso !
Hybrid, plus d'infos à ce sujet ? Il était pas censé se retirer un temps de la musique de film ? Ca aura pas duré longtemps...
C'est bien mais bon, j'aurais largement préféré apprendre ça pour John Powell perso !
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Il a enseigné pendant 1 an en Angleterre... Et il est de retour...
Hans Zimmer : "Lorne is the best, he really is!"
- Pierrebrrr
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Au fait, il a pas été un peu saccagé, le score d'Hansi dans le film qui met soit disant en scène Superman ?
"Le cinéma, c'est comme l'amour, quand c'est bien fait, c'est merveilleux, quand c'est mal fait, c'est un petit peu merveilleux aussi." S.Donen
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Hybrid Soldier a écrit :D'ailleurs si tu regardes encore plus détail dans les "thanks" il y a mon nom aussi...
Je viens de voir ça sur le livret !!
Bravo !
- Patrick59
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Il y a une BO de Zimmer que j'ai, c'est "pour le pire et pour le meilleur" avec Jack Nicholson, je ne me rappelais plus que c'était du zimmer, c'est vrai qu'il y a moitié score/moitié chansons.
Grazie di esistere (Merci d'exister)
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Un petit témoignage très intéressant de Michael A. Levine, qui a travaillé à RCP, lu sur un forum professionnel américain d'ailleurs activement fréquenté par Zimmer.
Ce message sous forme d'éloge est plutôt destiné aux jeunes compositeurs mais il éclaire quand même la façon de travailler à RCP.
"Why Hans Zimmer Got The Job You Wanted (And You Didn't)
I worked for Hans Zimmer for about 8 years, 5 of which were in a studio at Remote Control, his facility in Santa Monica. Since leaving Remote, many people have said to me, usually in a conspiratorial tone of voice, things like this: Hans doesn't really write his own music. The studios only give him work because he's famous. He's not a real musician. He just gets his clients drunk and all the work is done by guys in the back room. And so forth.
The underlying implication is that this underhanded semi-musician has Hollywood in his thrall due to Svengali like powers and maybe, someday, they'll wake up and hire a "real" composer - like whoever is whispering to me.
No other composer seems to stir up this kind of ire - I never hear people say, "Yeah, that John Williams only writes 12-line sketches and it's up to his orchestrators to make it into real music!"
Well, I hate to break it to you, but Hans gets what he gets because…he deserves it.
Here is why:
1) HANS IS A VISIONARY. In films there is a process called "spotting" in which the composer and director decide what kind of music is needed where. Hans is the best spotter I've ever observed. He has an extraordinary sense of what will work. But long before spotting, he will spend weeks writing a musical suite which is the source of the musical themes of the film. Oddly, this isn't really about music - it's about the essence of what the story and the characters are. Film composer great Elmer Bernstein (Magnificent Seven, To Kill A Mockingbird) once said to me, "The dirty little secret is that we're not musicians - we're dramatists." Hans is an outstanding dramatist.
But he also fearlessly pushes himself, challenging the limits of what is acceptable in our medium. In Batman: Dark Knight, long before we had footage of the film, Hans asked Heitor Pereira (guitar), Martin Tillman (cello), and me (violin and tenor violin) to separately record some variations on a set of instructions involving 2 notes, C and D. This involved a fair amount of interpretation! For those who are familiar with classical music, it was John Cage meets Phil Glass. We each spent a week making hundreds of snippets. Then we had to listen to each other's work and re-interpret that. The end result was a toolbox of sounds that provided Hans with the attitude of his score.
Later, he asked me to double every ostinato (repeating phrase) pattern the violins and violas played. There were a LOT. And a great studio orchestra had already played them all! I spent a week on what I considered an eccentric fool's errand, providing score mixer, Alan Meyerson, with single, double, and triple pass versions of huge swaths of the score. Months later, I joked with him about how "useful" my efforts had been. Alan told me that, actually, they had turned out to be a crucial element of the score, that he often pulled out the orchestra and went to my performances when something needed to be edgy or raw.
The attached video shows something from Man of Steel. Hans assembled a room full of great trap drummers to play the same groove at the same time, each with tiny variations. Is it a stunt? Maybe. But does it deliver a sound you've never quite heard before? Definitely.
2) HANS WORKS VERY, VERY HARD. When working on a project - which is most of the time - Hans usually arrives at the studio at 11 am and then works until 3 or 4 in the morning. 7 days a week. For months. As the deadline approaches, everything else fades away. Harry Gregson-Williams once told me you could tell how far into a project Hans was by the length of his beard - at some point, he stops shaving.
His late-night hours provide welcome relief from badgering studios and the noise of running a business. They proved to be a challenge to my metabolism when I was getting up at 6 a.m. to go to yoga. Which leads me to a the title of another post, "Never Keep Different Hours Than Your Boss." But I digress.
Hans is not as fast as his one-time assistant, Harry, or his current go-to arranger, Loren Balfe, both of whom work at superhuman speed. Hans once suggested that I worked too fast. I was puzzled at the time, but what I think he was really saying was that I needed to pay better attention to the little details that, cumulatively, make all the difference.
3) HANS IS THE BEST FILM MUSIC PRODUCER IN THE BUSINESS. We're not talking about technical music skills. Hans is a so-so pianist and guitarist and his knowledge of academic theory is, by intention, limited. (I was once chastised while working on The Simpsons Movie for saying "lydian flat 7" instead of "the cartoon scale.") He doesn't read standard notation very well, either. But no one reads piano roll better than he does. [The piano roll is a page of a music computer program that displays the notes graphically.] Which gets to the heart of the matter: Hans knows what he needs to know to make it sound great.
Sometimes, that is the right musicians. Sometimes it is the right sample library. Sometimes it is the right room, or engineer, or recording technique, or mixing technique. All that counts is the end result. And it always sounds spectacular.
4) HANS WORKS WITH GREAT PEOPLE. Take a look at the composers who have worked for Hans: John Powell, Harry Gregson-Williams, Heitor Pereira, Henry Jackman, Steve Jablonsky, Lorne Balfe, Trevor Morris, Ramin Djawadi, Jeff Rona, Mark Mancina, Atli Orvarsson, Geoff Zanelli, Blake Neeley, Stephen Hilton, Tom "Junkie XL" Holkenborg and on and on. And Alan Meyerson, his mixer. And Bob Badami, Ken Karman, his music editors. (Bob's credits alone dwarf about everybody in the business). His great percussionists, Satnam Ramgotra and Ryeland Allison. Sound designers, Howard Scarr and Mel Wesson. Not to mention Steve Kofsky, his business partner. And all the tech whizzes he's had over the years: Mark Wherry, Sam Estes, Pete Snell, Tom Broderick. Even his personal assistants - Andrew Zack, then Czar Russell - are remarkable.
Of course, the really amazing talents are the ones he works for: Chris Nolan, Gore Verbinski, Jim Brooks, Ron Howard, Jeffrey Katzenberg, and Jerry Bruckheimer. But he would never get the chance to work for them if he didn't hold up his end of the bargain.
5) HANS IS A CHARMER. The first time Jeffrey Katzenberg heard Hans' love theme for Megamind he said, "It sounds like 1968 on the French Riviera." It was not a compliment. And it wasn't wrong. Actually, what Hans realized - and Jeffrey hadn't - was that the heart of the love story in the movie was right out of A Man and A Woman and La Nouvelle Vague. Rather than point this out, Hans said, "Let me work on it some more." Over the next two weeks he played revision after revision for Jeffrey, each time making small changes to the arrangement or structure, but keeping the same basic tune. A couple of weeks later, after Jeffrey tore apart the music for a different scene that we'd worked pretty hard on, he said, "Well, at least we have a great love theme!" The rest of us looked at each other. When did that happen!
Hans is acutely aware of the presentational aspect of our business. His capacious control room, rather than being the strictly functional wood and bland fabric of a typical studio, is a lurid red velvet - a 19th century Turkish bordello as Hans describes it. With a wall of rare analog modular synthesizers in the back. At dinner, he serves his guests fine wine, and gives others cleverly appropriate (more so than lavish) gifts. As one of his clients said to me, "Hans makes you feel like a great chef is inviting you into his kitchen."
Not all of us can afford HZ level dog and pony shows. But most of us can use what we do have better.
6) HANS DELIVERS. Hans often gets hired for massive projects. The reason he uses an army of people is that he needs them to keep up with the demands of the directors and the studios. Halfway through Rango, Gore Verbinski suddenly changed direction, threw almost everything out, and we started over. Without a team to carry out the new directions, we'd have been dead.
Look at what happened to Howard Shore on King Kong, Marc Shaiman on Team America, Maurice Jarre on River Wild, Gabriel Yared on Troy, or the great Bernard Herrmann on Torn Curtain? In each case they were fired because the studio or director lost faith that they could shift direction quickly enough once their original approach was rejected. In 150+ films this has never happened to Hans.
BTW, he is also very aware of what the power structure is - who really makes decisions. I was fired - or more accurately not hired after a trial period - from a film because I jumped through hoops for the director who had hired me while not spending enough time figuring out what the producer - the actual power - wanted. Rather than being sympathetic, Hans told me I had failed in a fundamental task: determining who was my boss. He was right, and I haven't made that mistake again.
So, is Hans my favorite film composer? No. He's not even Hans' favorite film composer! (I'm guessing that would be Nina Rota or Ennio Morricone, but you'd have to ask him.) And he can be dismissive, condescending, arrogant, exploitative, and just plain mean. Like me. And, I suspect, you.
But he is exceptionally smart, gifted, accomplished, and hard-working. And here is the hard truth: outside of a few rare exceptions, the people who are successful in the film business are successful because they deserve to be. They have earned it. Yes, they have been lucky. But everybody gets lucky eventually. The question is what do you do when good fortune arrives. If you want to be as successful as the people you admire, you need to be as smart, resourceful, and determined as they are. As Hans is."
Ce message sous forme d'éloge est plutôt destiné aux jeunes compositeurs mais il éclaire quand même la façon de travailler à RCP.
"Why Hans Zimmer Got The Job You Wanted (And You Didn't)
I worked for Hans Zimmer for about 8 years, 5 of which were in a studio at Remote Control, his facility in Santa Monica. Since leaving Remote, many people have said to me, usually in a conspiratorial tone of voice, things like this: Hans doesn't really write his own music. The studios only give him work because he's famous. He's not a real musician. He just gets his clients drunk and all the work is done by guys in the back room. And so forth.
The underlying implication is that this underhanded semi-musician has Hollywood in his thrall due to Svengali like powers and maybe, someday, they'll wake up and hire a "real" composer - like whoever is whispering to me.
No other composer seems to stir up this kind of ire - I never hear people say, "Yeah, that John Williams only writes 12-line sketches and it's up to his orchestrators to make it into real music!"
Well, I hate to break it to you, but Hans gets what he gets because…he deserves it.
Here is why:
1) HANS IS A VISIONARY. In films there is a process called "spotting" in which the composer and director decide what kind of music is needed where. Hans is the best spotter I've ever observed. He has an extraordinary sense of what will work. But long before spotting, he will spend weeks writing a musical suite which is the source of the musical themes of the film. Oddly, this isn't really about music - it's about the essence of what the story and the characters are. Film composer great Elmer Bernstein (Magnificent Seven, To Kill A Mockingbird) once said to me, "The dirty little secret is that we're not musicians - we're dramatists." Hans is an outstanding dramatist.
But he also fearlessly pushes himself, challenging the limits of what is acceptable in our medium. In Batman: Dark Knight, long before we had footage of the film, Hans asked Heitor Pereira (guitar), Martin Tillman (cello), and me (violin and tenor violin) to separately record some variations on a set of instructions involving 2 notes, C and D. This involved a fair amount of interpretation! For those who are familiar with classical music, it was John Cage meets Phil Glass. We each spent a week making hundreds of snippets. Then we had to listen to each other's work and re-interpret that. The end result was a toolbox of sounds that provided Hans with the attitude of his score.
Later, he asked me to double every ostinato (repeating phrase) pattern the violins and violas played. There were a LOT. And a great studio orchestra had already played them all! I spent a week on what I considered an eccentric fool's errand, providing score mixer, Alan Meyerson, with single, double, and triple pass versions of huge swaths of the score. Months later, I joked with him about how "useful" my efforts had been. Alan told me that, actually, they had turned out to be a crucial element of the score, that he often pulled out the orchestra and went to my performances when something needed to be edgy or raw.
The attached video shows something from Man of Steel. Hans assembled a room full of great trap drummers to play the same groove at the same time, each with tiny variations. Is it a stunt? Maybe. But does it deliver a sound you've never quite heard before? Definitely.
2) HANS WORKS VERY, VERY HARD. When working on a project - which is most of the time - Hans usually arrives at the studio at 11 am and then works until 3 or 4 in the morning. 7 days a week. For months. As the deadline approaches, everything else fades away. Harry Gregson-Williams once told me you could tell how far into a project Hans was by the length of his beard - at some point, he stops shaving.
His late-night hours provide welcome relief from badgering studios and the noise of running a business. They proved to be a challenge to my metabolism when I was getting up at 6 a.m. to go to yoga. Which leads me to a the title of another post, "Never Keep Different Hours Than Your Boss." But I digress.
Hans is not as fast as his one-time assistant, Harry, or his current go-to arranger, Loren Balfe, both of whom work at superhuman speed. Hans once suggested that I worked too fast. I was puzzled at the time, but what I think he was really saying was that I needed to pay better attention to the little details that, cumulatively, make all the difference.
3) HANS IS THE BEST FILM MUSIC PRODUCER IN THE BUSINESS. We're not talking about technical music skills. Hans is a so-so pianist and guitarist and his knowledge of academic theory is, by intention, limited. (I was once chastised while working on The Simpsons Movie for saying "lydian flat 7" instead of "the cartoon scale.") He doesn't read standard notation very well, either. But no one reads piano roll better than he does. [The piano roll is a page of a music computer program that displays the notes graphically.] Which gets to the heart of the matter: Hans knows what he needs to know to make it sound great.
Sometimes, that is the right musicians. Sometimes it is the right sample library. Sometimes it is the right room, or engineer, or recording technique, or mixing technique. All that counts is the end result. And it always sounds spectacular.
4) HANS WORKS WITH GREAT PEOPLE. Take a look at the composers who have worked for Hans: John Powell, Harry Gregson-Williams, Heitor Pereira, Henry Jackman, Steve Jablonsky, Lorne Balfe, Trevor Morris, Ramin Djawadi, Jeff Rona, Mark Mancina, Atli Orvarsson, Geoff Zanelli, Blake Neeley, Stephen Hilton, Tom "Junkie XL" Holkenborg and on and on. And Alan Meyerson, his mixer. And Bob Badami, Ken Karman, his music editors. (Bob's credits alone dwarf about everybody in the business). His great percussionists, Satnam Ramgotra and Ryeland Allison. Sound designers, Howard Scarr and Mel Wesson. Not to mention Steve Kofsky, his business partner. And all the tech whizzes he's had over the years: Mark Wherry, Sam Estes, Pete Snell, Tom Broderick. Even his personal assistants - Andrew Zack, then Czar Russell - are remarkable.
Of course, the really amazing talents are the ones he works for: Chris Nolan, Gore Verbinski, Jim Brooks, Ron Howard, Jeffrey Katzenberg, and Jerry Bruckheimer. But he would never get the chance to work for them if he didn't hold up his end of the bargain.
5) HANS IS A CHARMER. The first time Jeffrey Katzenberg heard Hans' love theme for Megamind he said, "It sounds like 1968 on the French Riviera." It was not a compliment. And it wasn't wrong. Actually, what Hans realized - and Jeffrey hadn't - was that the heart of the love story in the movie was right out of A Man and A Woman and La Nouvelle Vague. Rather than point this out, Hans said, "Let me work on it some more." Over the next two weeks he played revision after revision for Jeffrey, each time making small changes to the arrangement or structure, but keeping the same basic tune. A couple of weeks later, after Jeffrey tore apart the music for a different scene that we'd worked pretty hard on, he said, "Well, at least we have a great love theme!" The rest of us looked at each other. When did that happen!
Hans is acutely aware of the presentational aspect of our business. His capacious control room, rather than being the strictly functional wood and bland fabric of a typical studio, is a lurid red velvet - a 19th century Turkish bordello as Hans describes it. With a wall of rare analog modular synthesizers in the back. At dinner, he serves his guests fine wine, and gives others cleverly appropriate (more so than lavish) gifts. As one of his clients said to me, "Hans makes you feel like a great chef is inviting you into his kitchen."
Not all of us can afford HZ level dog and pony shows. But most of us can use what we do have better.
6) HANS DELIVERS. Hans often gets hired for massive projects. The reason he uses an army of people is that he needs them to keep up with the demands of the directors and the studios. Halfway through Rango, Gore Verbinski suddenly changed direction, threw almost everything out, and we started over. Without a team to carry out the new directions, we'd have been dead.
Look at what happened to Howard Shore on King Kong, Marc Shaiman on Team America, Maurice Jarre on River Wild, Gabriel Yared on Troy, or the great Bernard Herrmann on Torn Curtain? In each case they were fired because the studio or director lost faith that they could shift direction quickly enough once their original approach was rejected. In 150+ films this has never happened to Hans.
BTW, he is also very aware of what the power structure is - who really makes decisions. I was fired - or more accurately not hired after a trial period - from a film because I jumped through hoops for the director who had hired me while not spending enough time figuring out what the producer - the actual power - wanted. Rather than being sympathetic, Hans told me I had failed in a fundamental task: determining who was my boss. He was right, and I haven't made that mistake again.
So, is Hans my favorite film composer? No. He's not even Hans' favorite film composer! (I'm guessing that would be Nina Rota or Ennio Morricone, but you'd have to ask him.) And he can be dismissive, condescending, arrogant, exploitative, and just plain mean. Like me. And, I suspect, you.
But he is exceptionally smart, gifted, accomplished, and hard-working. And here is the hard truth: outside of a few rare exceptions, the people who are successful in the film business are successful because they deserve to be. They have earned it. Yes, they have been lucky. But everybody gets lucky eventually. The question is what do you do when good fortune arrives. If you want to be as successful as the people you admire, you need to be as smart, resourceful, and determined as they are. As Hans is."
Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
OUI, on peu dire qu'il a su s'adapter aux exigences des producteurs et en délégant une partie du travail à une nombreuse équipe respecté les délais, c'est semble t-il un bon manager et un brave type... MAIS le résultat est là qui parle mieux que tous les efforts et toute la sueur du monde: son Superman est sans âme (comme quelqu'un l'a dit ailleurs) et ses séïdes besogneux tâcherons loin de se démarquer du Maître l'imitent avec une "ostination" désarmante.
Zimmer en a pourtant sous le capot, et certaines des ses compositions sont tout à fait recommandables, le blockbuster sans âme l'a peut-être dévoyé? OUI, c'est cela sans doute.
Zimmer en a pourtant sous le capot, et certaines des ses compositions sont tout à fait recommandables, le blockbuster sans âme l'a peut-être dévoyé? OUI, c'est cela sans doute.
Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Merci. Très intéressant, effectivement.YuHirà a écrit :Un petit témoignage très intéressant de Michael A. Levine, qui a travaillé à RCP, lu sur un forum professionnel américain d'ailleurs activement fréquenté par Zimmer.
Ce message sous forme d'éloge est plutôt destiné aux jeunes compositeurs mais il éclaire quand même la façon de travailler à RCP.
- Patrick59
- Illustrated Man
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Il ne nous propose que deux scores cette année Hans Zimmer : "Man of steel" et "Lone Ranger" ?
Grazie di esistere (Merci d'exister)
https://www.emma-marrone-fanblog.com/
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Il faut dire qu'il s'est tué à la tâche cette fois-ci.
- Doc Sidious
- Rain Man
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Dans l'interview du dernier Mad Movies, il dit que son prochain score, c'est Interstellar.
Y'a le temps quoi !
Y'a le temps quoi !
"The Battle of Crait"
Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Ben, il y aura le Rush du film d'Howard a l'automne 2013 aussi, si je ne m'abuse ... J'espere un score a pouvoir mettre ds la bagnole et faire monter l'aiguille ds les tours ! Mais pr plus d'infos il vs faut demander a Hybrid
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Il y a aussi RUSH et 12 YEARS A SLAVE à l'automne, mais ils sont déjà finis.
Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Curieux d'entendre ce qu'il va faire du matériau de Steve McQueen.
- Doc Sidious
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Re: Hans Zimmer & RCP
Ah, cool çà ! Merci pour les infos.
Hans raconte n'imp en interview alors ! Wyatt Cédric, un commentaire ?
Hans raconte n'imp en interview alors ! Wyatt Cédric, un commentaire ?
"The Battle of Crait"