![]() ![]() " Jackman actually worked along side Zimmer which makes sense to why you hear similarities. A graduate from Eton and Oxford college with, " An avid interest in technology and contemporary culture. The man behind Captain Phillips is not Zimmer but it is Henry Jackman. For those who don't know, Zimmer is the man behind The Dark Knight, Inception, The Da Vinci Code and countless other great soundtracks. ![]() Coincidence? I dug a little deeper and decided to listen to the entire soundtrack some of it sounding similar to Hans Zimmer. Which just so happens to be the last track for Captain Phillips. ![]() I looked up the track I heard in the theater and it is Safe Now. I broke out my Inception soundtrack on my iPod on the way home and it was Time, the last track for Inception. I kept saying to myself this melody sounds just like Inception. So if you can sit through a 2 hr and 14 min movie go see it.įrom time to time I enjoy a great soundtrack and something just so happen to catch my ear towards the end of Captain Phillips. I thought it was great movie, long, but great. A big disappointment.į/moviewave | /MovieWaveDotNet | amazon.I just saw Captain Phillips staring Tom Hanks and directed by Paul Greengrass and I have to say I liked it. The finale, “Safe Now”, is a take-off of Inception‘s “Time” which is so barely disguised it’s actually rather funny. The album is listenable enough when the energy levels are high but even then it sounds like what might be dismissed as filler on a John Powell album and frankly most of it feels like fairly aimless drone. This collection of drumming serves its basic purpose, but film music can do so much more than that. The depth of Powell’s music for Greengrass is nowhere in evidence, and it’s what’s missing here that emphasises why he is easily better than anyone else to have emerged from Zimmer’s tutelage – it’s not just the things you can throw together in the computer, it’s the emotional and dramatic sense that makes a proper film score. Surprisingly, after the painful process that went into its creation, the music is really rather basic and feels like it’s at the lowest end of what you might expect in a film like this – an endless stream of percussion, sampled strings, occasional ethnic wind solos, synthetic horn pads that fade in and out. There’s more than an occasional hint of Powell about the music that resulted – the percussion of the early action piece “This is Not a Drill” could easily have come from the man himself – there are frequent hints of Green Zone and Powell’s “The End” from United 93 was actually tracked in to the film, echoes here and there also of the more percussive parts of Zimmer’s Inception (yes, even a synthetic rendition of the now-hilarious HORN OF DOOM here and there to guarantee the audience being taken completely away from the film). Jackman is the sole credited composer on the album cover and two others, Al Clay and Jack Dolman are given “additional music” credit but reportedly the scoring process was a nightmare and a large team – including Zimmer himself – were involved in countless rewrites. With Powell on hiatus during 2013, the director turned instead to Henry Jackman, one of Hans Zimmer’s team at Remote Control. Greengrass has enticed some fine scores from John Powell in the past – while the relationship has reportedly been somewhat strained on their last couple of projects together, the resulting music has been excellent. The rescue of an American container ship and its crew from the hands of Somali pirates was the subject of one of 2013’s more critically acclaimed blockbusters, Captain Phillips, from Paul Greengrass and starring Tom Hanks. ![]()
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