Syzygy wrote:On the other side of the coin the right music does wonders. i.e. Gladiator's score was done by Hans Zimmerman and I think it was brilliant and suited the scenes perfectly. It was subtle when it needed to be and epical at other times.
I totally agree. Hans Zimmer does really nice orchestral scores. When I'm writing stuff for my Werewolf: The Apocalypse group, I always listen to the Black Hawk Down soundtrack. Even though it has a strong Middle Eastern feel to it, which isn't exactly what I would qualify as my ideal music, my stories ideally have a certain suspensful mystery. Would something along the lines of the Black Hawk Down soundtrack work for Freeborn? That... depends.
All of the ideas suggested would probably be really good... depending upon the kind of movie Freeborn is going to be. What is the emotional "flavor" of the movie? If the movie is going to be about an ordinary human-being being turned into a werewolf, and it's all mysterious with wolves darting from one shadow to the next just out of the character's peripheral vision... signs and hints of what's happening, but the characters are really in the dark (either figuratively or literally), then an eerie Hans Zimmer(esque) score would be perfect. If on the other hand, it's going to be an Underworld/Matrix knock-off gothic action kind of flick, then the whole Nine Inch Nails Techno crowd are on the right track. If it's going to be a more traditional horror flick, then another approach could be used (on a side note, if they wanted to stay with the whole low-budget idea, remember Blair Witch. No music worked great because it was a "reality" kind of look. Freeborn as a personal video diary of a character who gets infected with lycanthropy might be cool.) Without knowing what the atmosphere of the movie will be (mysterious, suspensful, angry/angsty/action, or something else entirely) it's sort of an irrelevant question (what should the music be like, that is). I'm tempted to start asking questions along these lines, but I want to be surprised (same reason I haven't requested to preview the script... even though I'm dying to know). Ican'twaitIcan'twaitIcan'twaitIcan'twaitIcan'twait!
