Old Movies/Animated Films Soundtracks

i never said you HAVE to watch the movie to enjoy the soundtrack you inept sack of afterbirth. i was horrified at how you had NO motivation to see the phenominal film from which the phenominal soundtrack you already enjoyed came from. if you cant understand the ridiculousness and irrationale that depicts...then youre a fucking lost cause of douchebaggery.
 
i aint play this said:
It does reflect on you negatively due to your lack of coherence...it hardly makes me a retard. If you care so much about the emotional value of the soundtrack and how much it makes you shed tears because of its kvlt status... well it is your own weird faggoty psychosis, don't blame me for enjoying good music, quit bitching

are you that far gone? kvlt status?!?! on "cinema paradisio"???!? is your finger THAT fucking far from the pulse of any sort of film relevance or history? no wonder i cant have this conversation with someone like you...you dont even have the slightest clue about the topic at hand in any regard.
 
NineFeetUnderground said:
i never said you HAVE to watch the movie to enjoy the soundtrack you inept sack of afterbirth. i was horrified at how you had NO motivation to see the phenominal film from which the phenominal soundtrack you already enjoyed came from. if you cant understand the ridiculousness and irrationale that depicts...then youre a fucking lost cause of douchebaggery.

You stupid piece of shit, i didn't disregard the movie nor i said anything bad about it so i keep coherent unlike you. You being horrified at me because i wasn't PLANNING on watching it just makes you a gigantic infected pussy, do you really get shocked THAT easy? first you come with the ''sweating blue gatorade'' childish crap and now ''lost cause of douchebaggery'', you lack some skills on the eloquent insult department.
 
NineFeetUnderground said:
are you that far gone? kvlt status?!?! on "cinema paradisio"???!? is your finger THAT fucking far from the pulse of any sort of film relevance or history? no wonder i cant have this conversation with someone like you...you dont even have the slightest clue about the topic at hand in any regard.

Are you so fucking retarded that you can't see the sarcasm in something like ''kvlt satus''? i never said i know anything about the movie so you are pretty much kicking yourself in the teeth, but yeah keep acting like that...go discuss about how many doors the movie opened with your skinhead fuck-buddies because it is really not of my interest...dumbshit.
 
now whos being incoherent. ftlog, skinhead?! are you absolutely bat-shit loco? you didnt defend yourself or your irrational stance on this whatsoever...you basically just slung shit for 2 full paragraphs. back to square-one champ, congratulations.
 
in TGTBATU

death of a soldier, or that part where blondie gives the dying soldier a cigarette makes that morricone soundtrack that much more special cuz he totally captures the mood

the song with the soldiers singing (death of a soldier?) captures the whole pulse of south and mood of the confederacy at the end of that war...and the whole nation come to think of it, with all the death and bloodshed

youre retarded if you dont think watching the movie won't make you appreciate the music more, especially if the movie is a good one, much less a classic
 
Great soundtracks:
Bernard Herrmann - North by Northwest
Clannad - Robin of Sherwood
James Horner - The Name of the Rose
Angela Morley - Watership Down
 
NineFeetUnderground said:
now whos being incoherent. ftlog, skinhead?! are you absolutely bat-shit loco? you didnt defend yourself or your irrational stance on this whatsoever...you basically just slung shit for 2 full paragraphs. back to square-one champ, congratulations.

I wasn't defending myself, i was just trying to see how much you would go and try to bite your own elbow a little bit more, you pretty much exaggerate about everything when you have nothing to say.
 
Garou said:
Angela Morley - Watership Down

All I remember from that soundtrack is that Art Garfunkel song (BRIGHT EYES, BURNING LIKE FIRE!). I nearly shit a brick when it was playing on the radio in a scene from that wallace and gromit movie with the giant were-rabbit. The song's not half bad though. I'll have to watch the movie again to pay attention to the rest of the soundtrack.

I say the best Moriconne score is "The Great Silence," by far. Once Upon a Time in the West is excellent but there aren't enough themes for the three hours to not feel occasionally repetitive imo. The movie's one of the all-time best I've ever seen though.
 
These are examples of two top notch composers trying something new:

Bernard Hermann - Taxi Driver (jazz)
Ennio Morricone - The Thing (synth, almost minimalistic)
 
wankerness said:
I say the best Moriconne score is "The Great Silence," by far. Once Upon a Time in the West is excellent but there aren't enough themes for the three hours to not feel occasionally repetitive imo.

lol. the great silence was a great piece of work, but FAR from his best. But i shouldnt even argue this, even i havent heard all 250+ scores Morricone has done. But regardless, Once upon a time in the west was exactly as it should be. A Theme for each major character, and the medleys and augmenting of each for the respective scenes and atmosphere required therein. Dont be so noobtastic, it doesnt suit most people. Except maybe Metal Wrath.
 
soundave said:
These are examples of two top notch composers trying something new:

Bernard Hermann - Taxi Driver (jazz)
Ennio Morricone - The Thing (synth, almost minimalistic)

Morricone's score was thrown out for the most part and redone by john carpenter (the director of the movie). The original was very, very different and the new version is largely just carpenter's work (he is known for doing synth scores, his score to his movie Halloween is especially famous).
 
wankerness said:
Morricone's score was thrown out for the most part and redone by john carpenter (the director of the movie). The original was very, very different and the new version is largely just carpenter's work (he is known for doing synth scores, his score to his movie Halloween is especially famous).
.

Okay, that makes sense. I always thought it was odd. Would've liked to have heard Morricone's full score.
 
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The Polish composer Zbigniew Preisner has written scores for many films, including Krzysztof Kieslowski's most important films, the Three Colors, Decalog and The Double Life of Véronique. The score for Three Colors: Blue is really memorable. The scores complement the films very well, and they probably seem even better because the movies are so great.
 
check out Henry Mancini - wrote some great music for old school TV shows and some classic movies

also Eric Serra especially sndtrk to "leon"/'the proffesional"

"the good, the bad, and the ugly" definatley top 5 movie sndtrks

somethin different "six string samurai sndtrk" done by i think billy tyler and the red elvises cool stuff

check it outtt:Saint: