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    Hans Zimmer


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    Name: Hans Zimmer
     
    Birth Name: Hans Florian Zimmer
     
    Date/Place of Birth: 1957-09-12
    in Frankfurt, Germany
     
    Agent: Gorfain/Schwartz Agency
    13245 Riverside Drive Suite 450
    Sherman Oaks, CA 91423 USA

     
    View Hans Zimmer's Full Film Bio

    Currently viewing records 1 to 2 of 2



    Hannibal: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
    Hannibal: The Original Motion Picture Soundtrack Cover Image
     Music by: Hans Zimmer
     Media: CD  SPAR Code: ---
     Tracks: 12  Origin: USA

    1. Dear Clarice (featuring Sir A. Hopkins)
    2. Aria da Capo (From Goldberg Variations)
    3. The Capponi Library
    4. Gourmet Vaise Tartare
    5. Avarice
    6. For a Small Stipend

    1. Firenze Di Notte
    2. Virtue
    3. Let My Home Be My Gallows (featuring Sir A. Hopkins)
    4. The Burning Heart (featuring Sir A. Hopkins)
    5. To Every Captive Soul
    6. Vide Cor Meum
     
    Academy Award-winning composer Hans Zimmer has created a blood-pumping dramatic score for Hannibal that pulses with Wagnerian intensity. Sir Anthony Hopkins's monologue on three tracks adds a dimension of hair-raising eeriness to the already deeply affecting and suspenseful instrumental backing. (Just hearing him first enunciate on the opener "Dear Clarice" sets up the Pavlovian sense of dread.) Hopkins's Hannibal Lecter is still on the prowl 7 years after FBI agent Clarice Starling first interviewed the criminally insane doctor (and 10 years since The Silence of the Lambs hit the theaters). This sense of uneasiness is captured alternately by deep, sustained notes and the rapid attack of a full-throttle orchestra. Whether it's the dark, tonal clusters of "Firenze Di Notte"; the desperate, descending notes that punctuate "Virtue"; or the chorale solemnity of the 10-minute "Let My Home Be My Gallows," the intent to horrify never waivers.
     



    Pearl Harbor
    Pearl Harbor Cover Image
     Music by: Hans Zimmer
     Media: CD  SPAR Code: ---
     Tracks: 9  Origin: USA

    1. There You'll Be - Faith Hill
    2. Tennessee
    3. Brothers
    4. ...And Then I Kissed Him
    5. I Will Come Back

    1. Attack
    2. December 7th
    3. War
    4. Heart Of A Volunteer
     
    According to a Hollywood tradition that stretches all the way back to From Here to Eternity, there's never been anything quite so romantic as the idyllic days and hours before torpedo and dive bombers from the Japanese Imperial Navy blew the bejesus out of the unsuspecting U.S. fleet anchored at Pearl Harbor. Far be it for producer Jerry Bruckheimer and director Michael Bay to, er, rock the boat. Just as Bruckheimer and Bay did with Armageddon (where romance blossomed in the idyllic days and hours before a Texas-sized asteroid threatened to blow the bejesus out of Earth itself), they've again turned to über-hitmaker Diane Warren to set the tone; as sung by Faith Hill, "There You'll Be" strikes the perfect balance of apocalyptic bathos, as instantly inviting--and ultimately hollow--as an 89-cent chocolate bunny. Composer Hans Zimmer fares a bit better, though his piano dirge and orchestral score occasionally get mired in the syrup as they build toward the inevitable. The action sequences themselves are somewhat subdued (especially by previous Zimmer standards), with "December 7th" even echoing Platoon and Barber's Adagio for Strings. Crucially, Zimmer evokes the tragic loss that goes hand in hand with heroism, often no mean feat in a modern computer-effects-laden, megabudget blockbuster-in-waiting. --Jerry McCulley (amazon.com)
     

    Currently viewing records 1 to 2 of 2


    David Arnold | John Barry | Bruce Broughton | John Carpenter | Patrick Doyle | Danny Elfman
    Jerry Goldsmith | James Horner | Basil Poledouris | Alan Silvestri | John Williams | Hans Zimmer


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