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Yes woohoo
by theycallmemrglass
Jan 8th, 2008
08:48:21 PM
Uhhh
by StarFoxIV
Jan 8th, 2008
08:48:22 PM
maybe
RAMBO EARNED MY GOLD TICKET
by billybobhoyle
Jan 8th, 2008
08:48:43 PM
that's right first!!
For Anyone Wondering...
by Executor
Jan 8th, 2008
08:48:53 PM
...you really have no taste in movies.
ummm...
by shmu65
Jan 8th, 2008
08:50:06 PM
a little too electronica?
Not being screened for critics.
by Kid Idioteque
Jan 8th, 2008
09:00:34 PM
Not a good sign. This is gonna suck.
Shouldn't that be...
by Funketeer
Jan 8th, 2008
09:06:26 PM
For both of you who were wondering.
The trailer played last night before There Will Be Blood
by Zardoz
Jan 8th, 2008
09:07:51 PM
and after it played I yelled, "There will be plenty of blood!" Ahh, you had to be there!
That cd cover is awesome.
by fractureJonze
Jan 8th, 2008
09:17:07 PM
Would have made a kickass poster too.
How about another Q&A with Mr Stallone?
by MaxTheSilent
Jan 8th, 2008
09:17:47 PM
The first one being, without question, the greatest thing in the history of this site. And since Bruce Willis bitched-out when DH4 miraculously made money and he didn't need us anymore, I think it's due for Mr Stallone to open himself up for another volley of questions before the release of RAMBO.
I support John Rambo in New Hampshire
by FlickaPoo
Jan 8th, 2008
09:19:08 PM
...John Rambo, you are not expendable.
He's A Metrosexual Music Machine!
by 33.3rpm
Jan 8th, 2008
09:20:23 PM
Brian, I'm told, actually conducts his orchestras with a hairdryer and a tube of Kiehl's Facial Fuel Energizing Scrub. I guess that's working out for him.
No really!
by fractureJonze
Jan 8th, 2008
09:20:32 PM
It's really starting to feel like a real classic action flick with an aweseome score. That "Let the Bodies Hit the Floor" trailer will get the masses in, but it gave me a bad feeling about how things were going. This is what I was hoping for though.
Can't fucking wait...
by Premiere Warlord Bush
Jan 8th, 2008
09:22:46 PM
for this movie. I was starting to think true action movies were dead.
You people saying he sucks...
by GeekyAnimeNerd79Beyotch
Jan 8th, 2008
09:32:40 PM
.. listen to the Rambo score. It is beautiful.
Seriously, I thought Stallone had said he'd do another session h
by Sith Witch
Jan 8th, 2008
09:40:17 PM
:(
ere before Rambo...
by Sith Witch
Jan 8th, 2008
09:40:49 PM
wait
by Halfbreedqueen
Jan 8th, 2008
09:58:38 PM
people are actually looking forward to this? a FOURTH rambo flick, 20 years after the fact? Jesus H Christ, what next, Indiana Jones 4?
Kid Idioteque
by Gil Brooks
Jan 8th, 2008
10:03:43 PM
Lionsgate almost never does screen for critics. That's how they roll.
SLY, WORD OF ADVICE... (Don't worry, it's positive)
by moto
Jan 8th, 2008
10:08:37 PM
If you're reading, I'm pumped for the return of Rambo. PUMPED. I've liked the trailers thus far but I gotta say, I would STRONGLY suggest you cut another character driven trailer... WITH that music.

I know, most will say that all of the people that will see this could care less about seeing a less action packed trailer with character moments, but truth be told, I worry about the latest TV promos with the heavy metal music and mayhem.

For me at least, what made the Rambo movies great were the balance of character and utter brutal mayhem. FIRST BLOOD had most of the character moments. But even Part 2 and 3 had some great ones.

You had a trailer out, perhaps the first, with Rambo voice over about killing and what not, played against various slow images, then Rambo appears with bloodlust in his eyes behind a soldier. That trailer hit the spot. You NEED another ones of those to get more interest for fans and the curious alike. I'm sure you have those moments in your movie, but to avoid the general audience saying, "Okay, this is boring... just a guy runnin' around killin' people," give them images and sound bites of the character we root for. Believe or not, Rambo was more than just a guy going around killing bad guys. If we want that, we'd watch those shitty Chuck Norris flicks. Show the audience that shit with that Rambo score. Then go back to that scene where he's returned to his killing roots. It'll garner an even bigger audience bringing the heart back into it.

That put a smile on my face, thanks...
by Uga
Jan 8th, 2008
10:08:40 PM
Dear Stallone
by darrenspool
Jan 8th, 2008
10:16:02 PM
I wanna see some mega-fucked-up action, take no prisoners style. Blood, blood, blood. Rambo needs to be a machine! Completely crazy like at the end of the first film. Crying and spitting blood and jerking off to corpses.
"Let the bodies hit the flo'..."
by MaxTheSilent
Jan 8th, 2008
10:16:48 PM
Holy shit! Do those down's syndrome chimps at Lionsgate still think people want to hear that nu-metal dog-shit? i thought that crappy song was retired after the FREDDY VS JASON trailer.
Let the bodies hit the floor
by Magma Suit
Jan 8th, 2008
10:18:05 PM
Remember when the guy who sung that died horribly? Is it at all sensitive to use that song in the trailer?
The answer is...
by Magma Suit
Jan 8th, 2008
10:18:47 PM
yes.
Hope the movie is as good as the music.
by kabong
Jan 8th, 2008
10:19:00 PM
At least Stallone is still trying--I hope--to put some serious action on the screen.
let the bodies hit the floor
by prunkhaft
Jan 8th, 2008
10:26:38 PM
when i wasted my money to see avp2 the other night I was treated to a new Rambo trailer that looked great, unfortunately that awful awful song "let the bodies hit the floor" ruined the whole fucking thing. Whoever thought that was a good idea should be shot. a perfectly good trailer got laughs from the audience. Not an acceptable song choice even in 1998.
RED: Gil Brooks
by Kid Idioteque
Jan 8th, 2008
10:35:19 PM
Then shouldn't the fact that this is a Lion's Gate film set off some alarms in your head? There is no way this is going to be any approaching decent. And yes, hearing that song in the trailer was depressing. It sucked when it came out and it certainly hasn't gotten better with age.
Rambo: The Western.
by CENOBITE
Jan 8th, 2008
11:39:52 PM
O.K. from just listening to the music, I'm picturing grand vistas with sunsets and guys on horseback..."HeeeYah!" *whipcrack!* not thick steamy jungles filled with death and 'splosions. It is some nice music, tho.
Seconded: Someone tell Drowning Pool they SUCK, already!
by ZeroCorpse
Jan 9th, 2008
12:16:38 AM
But this movie's going to kick ass, from the looks of it.

Nu-Metal, though, is utter shit. Drowning Pool's lead singer sounds like Cookie Monster.

Man, Goldsmith was the shit
by caruso_stalker217
Jan 9th, 2008
12:19:48 AM
STAR TREK: THE MOTION PICTURE, motherfucker!
This is nice.
by eXcommunicated
Jan 9th, 2008
02:12:30 AM
Reminds me of Rambo 1 and 2. Good stuff. Sue me, I view Rambo 2 with a certain fondness of having started my obsession with action movies as a kid. Plus, it was a daddy of all action movie cliches. it invented them. All others were pretenders to the throne of Rambo 2.
More Bad Ideas... OR. ARE. THEY?!
by bswise
Jan 9th, 2008
02:15:23 AM
Stallone Directs "Rambo: Fifth Blood," where John Rambo leads a mission to secure the oil fields of the Middle East. Charlton Heston directs "Flags of Our Uncles" and "Letters from Hanoi," which depict every single combat death of the Korean War on both sides. Zack Snyder directs 300 II, a historical epic about killing even more Persians. Bruce Willis stars in "Live Free and Die Even Harder," in which he surfs the space shuttle to the moon to battle alien terrorists. Paul Verhoeven's re-boot of "Space 1999" stars Martin Landau as the fascist moon base commander tripping on some serious sh*t. Jon Favreau directs "Micronauts" starring Ferrel, Stiller, Heder, Downy Jr., Owen, Owen, Vaughn and Jessica Alba. Robert Rodriguez directs Fantastic Four Re-Boot starring George Clooney as Mr. Fantastic, Nicole Kidman as The Invisible Girl, Bruce Willis as the Thing, Justin Timberlake as The Human Tourch, Cristopher Lee as Doom, and Rose McGowan as the Skrull Queen, guest directed by QT. Peter Jackson spends $400 million on his version of "Journey to the Center of the Earth" while also producing a ten-picture version of "The Silmarillion." Brad Bird directs the Pixar release "Dr. DeRoachco," about a lovable cockroach that wants to be a dentist. Six months earlier, after three years of full-spectrum saturation marketing, Jerry Seinfeld releases "Bee Movie 2" about a bee that wants to be a proctologist. Nicholas Cage stars in Mark Steven Johnson’s "Ghost Rider II," Tony Scott’s "National Treasure III," and John Woo's "Face Lift.” Chris Columbus directs "Treaclebot" about an alien robot boy wizard from purgatory who yearns to be human. Alejandro Cuaron directs "Harry Potter vs. Marry Poppins." Alejandro González Iñárritu and Paul Haggis co-direct "Oscarbation," which simultaneously tells a story in every country on earth, starring everyone whose ever won an academy award. Guilermo del Toro directs "The Sixth Orphan" about one of the many, many haunted orphans during the Spanish Civil War. Pedro Almodovar directs his version of "The Vagina Monologues." Werner Herzog directs "Pen Man," a mocku-documentary about a Hollywood screenwriter who wants to be eaten alive by sharks, and is. Sean Penn writes, directs, produces, and stars in "Into the Abyss.” Guy Ritchie directs and adaptation of "The Kabbalah" starring Madonna, Jeremy Statham and Vinnie Jones. George Clooney directs "Humorless Drama," about a very, very serious guy with beautiful eyes caught up in a web of humorless intrigue that hints at relevancy. James Cameron directs "Film God," a documentary about the making of "Avatar." David Cronenberg re-makes Videodrome with Viggo Mortensen as Eli Roth, a guy who directs too much torture porn and grows a talking bug in his butt. Uwe Boll directs "The Fog vs. The Mist (FvM-R)" Wes Craven and Kevin William =son launch the “Steam” trilogy. John Carpenter makes "Escape From London," starring Kurt Russell, Goldie Hawn, and Bruce Campell. Woody Allen directs "Un Autre Morceau de Merde." Michel Gondry directs "Visual Masturbation" a movie about a sleepy guy spooging out the very movie that you are watching. Spike Jonze directs a big-budget, 3-hour adaptation of "In The Night Kitchen" from a script by Charlie Kaufman, about an insane screenwriter who must get "milk in the batter" for his hyperactive director, lest he be trapped forever in his shifting Hollywood nightmare. Jonze also directs the documentary: "Lost In Translation: My Side of the Story." Sofia Coppola writes and directs "The Princess Daughter," a Shakespearean tragedy about a legendary movie director who forces his favorite daughter to act in the Worst. Sequel. Ever. And finally... M. Night Shyamalan re-boots "The Smurfs" as a haunted allegory of our depressing times, with a twist ending.
BRIAN TYLER IS NOT A HACK
by photoboy
Jan 9th, 2008
02:19:21 AM
He's done some fucking amazing scores in his time, people should be pleased it wasn't Marco Beltrami doing the film and completely ignoring the established themes.
Great theme for the shittiest hero
by CuervoJones
Jan 9th, 2008
02:20:13 AM

Grat use of the Rambo theme
by zool43
Jan 9th, 2008
02:42:51 AM
I think it sounds fucking awesome. It really harkens back to the original First Blood soundtrack. Thanks for using Goldsmith's theme, Sly. RIP Jerry Goldsmith. "It's a long road........"
Kid Idioteque...
by TheRealMoriarty
Jan 9th, 2008
02:58:19 AM
... really? Then that room full of critics I saw RAMBO with about two weeks ago is going to be surprised to hear that.

The film is being screened. I'd say they're doing the exact opposite of hiding it. Don't know where you heard that, but it's untrue.

Oh my.
by Flim_
Jan 9th, 2008
03:04:49 AM
Brian Tyler, you are my hero.
Fuckin-A Bubba! What a relief, nice job by Tyler BTW
by KillaKane
Jan 9th, 2008
03:19:09 AM
Now it's officially a RAMBO movie!
Hey, It's stallone here - I got answers, you got questions
by John_Rambo
Jan 9th, 2008
03:56:40 AM
Yo, Ain't it coolness. Sorry, been real busy doing press at the moment. Post was hectic and heavy as expected. Glad you liked Brian's score - it really pulses like only Jerry knew how. I think he did a crack on job. I hope you will all see how I remained true to the source and this film will be play true to the spirit of Rambo. Just wait and see my good friends.... Harry, what's up, do I get a black box now? .Sly.
WHERE THE HELL IS STALLONE 20 ROUNDS????
by cloudrider`
Jan 9th, 2008
04:04:30 AM
you guys keep ignoring this plea, i'll keep asking. at least tell us if there will be one.
post above mine... fake or real?
by cloudrider`
Jan 9th, 2008
04:13:10 AM
well?
Thats a damn relief....
by judge dredds fresh undies
Jan 9th, 2008
04:13:28 AM
Jerry rules, very glad Tyler is using his theme.
Listen to the score before you pass judgement mask-a-tron...
by KillaKane
Jan 9th, 2008
04:57:35 AM
Tyler's adapted the most memorable and significant of Goldsmith's Rambo motifs and integrated them into a solid score. Granted the suite on Tyler's My Space site is pretty much a medley of some of Goldsmith's First Blood cues (including the Copland-eque diad horn lines), but the action cues Tyler's scored on the OST are pretty damn good and while Tyler is no Jerry, he's honoured his work with the requisite respect and taste that I'd hoped for. I'm just grateful that this score can sit alongside the Rambo music cabal and not stick out like some Media Ventures SOP bastard offspring. Rambo fans and the Goldsmith faithful won't be dissappointed.
Sounding good Tyler.
by EvilGeek1
Jan 9th, 2008
06:16:49 AM
Trailer music must go!
by Knugen
Jan 9th, 2008
06:41:50 AM
That NU shit got to go. I agree with all talkbackers AND people without shit for brains that the music in the new trailer is HORRIBLE. I was just waiting for the new trailer to hear some Goldsmith goodness. Alas I was treated to the worst nu metal shit ever released. Great work, suit!
Osama Binladin VS Rambo
by Pipple
Jan 9th, 2008
08:36:30 AM
Who would win?
re: John_Rambo
by darrenspool
Jan 9th, 2008
08:58:45 AM
If you're really Sly Stallone, drop the phase 'Super-sadistic fuck' into your future Q&A.
What mean "expendable"?
by la_sith
Jan 9th, 2008
09:27:39 AM
No orders, Ko.
Dack Rambo
by la_sith
Jan 9th, 2008
09:29:45 AM
Should've been the title.
Ok...I officially got goose bumps.
by Cheif Brody
Jan 9th, 2008
10:31:13 AM
Don't let me down, Rambo!!
John Rambo will eat things...
by FlickaPoo
Jan 9th, 2008
11:30:21 AM
...that would make a billy goat puke.
Remember when the guy from Drowning Pool
by Kurzinski Valentine
Jan 9th, 2008
11:59:50 AM
DROWNED IN A POOL?

It's comedy gold. You can't make this stuff up, folks.

Re: Mori
by Kid Idioteque
Jan 9th, 2008
12:56:08 PM
I read that there was 1 screening in LA and that will pretty much be it. That must be the one you were referring to. The source could be wrong, because I can't seem to find the article anymore.
Mo what the hell, give us the scoop on rambo
by Pipple
Jan 9th, 2008
01:39:20 PM
fuck all this anime news and shit
Re : Hackness
by quantize
Jan 9th, 2008
02:31:21 PM
completely agree, the AVP-R music was cookie cutter shit from off the shelf sample libraries..and there was no theme to speak of...in short dogshit. Time people started calling on this shit loud and clear.
Bryan Tyler wrote all those scores?
by Abominable Snowcone
Jan 9th, 2008
02:32:29 PM
Looks kinda young to have been so prolific. Young, and serious, as his mygayspace would have us believe. But really, he didn't 'write' Rambo. Goldsmith did. He shouldn't act like he did, just because he rendered some kinda muzak version of it.
You know who Tyler looks like
by Abominable Snowcone
Jan 9th, 2008
02:36:49 PM
on his gayspace photo? Hasselhoff! He should be the new My-Kell.
Here's a tip..find a sample CD called Symph Adventures
by quantize
Jan 9th, 2008
04:22:07 PM
listen to it and come back and tell s how great this dude is as a composer.
I got goosebumps listening to Rambo Suite.
by darthbinks1220
Jan 9th, 2008
11:09:08 PM
My feeling is this film will be on a par with the exquisite Rocky Balboa. Rambo is still very relevant, especially in these troubled times. Here's hoping Sly comes through and delivers another knockout.
Brian Tyler is better than Goldsmith
by Musicballs
Jan 9th, 2008
11:34:00 PM
What a bunch of whiners. You are all caught in the past. Have you ever heard Tyler's score for Timeline or Partition? They are pure genius compared to the dogshit that Goldsmith wrote for The Blue Max and Planet of the Apes. Wake up people.
Musicballs you clearly know nothing about music
by judge dredds fresh undies
Jan 10th, 2008
12:24:27 AM
Or are you being ironic? One cue from Goldsmiths Plant of the Apes score is more innovative than anything Tyler could hope to create in his entire career...
News flash for Judge Dredd
by Musicballs
Jan 10th, 2008
12:39:23 AM
So Planet of the Apes is more innovative than Brian Tyler's score for Bubba Ho-Tep? Would you care to explain how? Some people are clearly upset than Jerry Goldsmith is dead and that Brian Tyler has taken his rightful place as one of the top composers working today. When Hollywood finally gets around to remaking Poltergeist, I hope they have the sense to turn to Brian Tyler. I'm sure he wouldn't clutter up his score with so many notes the way Goldsmith did.
Anyone with an understanding of music will know Goldsmith was un
by KillaKane
Jan 10th, 2008
04:06:45 AM
There are few living composers who are posessed of such brilliance, the man could work in any idiom and singlarly trailblazed in advancing the use of atonalism, and quasi-serialism in a mileu that was for the most part rooted in COD Hollywood 'romantisism'. His integration of synths and unique percusion and avant guard instrument textures made his works so distinctive but all the while sonorous and appealing to the masses. While he had a longstandng relationship with orchestrators Arthur Morton and Sandy Courage, Goldsmith's shorthand scores were very detailed and specific, and unlike most of the Computer Composers of today, he notated and played his music at a piano as well as sequencing mock-ups. The word genius is often used lightly, but in the eyes of the cognascenti Goldsmith truly was, and his body of work and legacy still inspires thousands of composers and musicians across the spectrum (from DJ Shadow to Alexandre Desplat). To such talkback detractors (Musicballs) who claim that such 'digital' composers as Tyler are superior (I personally think he's taking the piss and baiting Goldsmith fans) you really need to expand your appreciation and understanding of music, or better yet develop you ears, because it's the equivalent of saying a Fiat Panda is a superior car to an Aston Martin DB7! Not to impune Mr Tyler's work, I think he's a solid bread and butter composer who will no doubt grow and develop with each score, but by no means is he presently in the same league as Goldsmith, who's exhaustive back catalogue would eclipse just about any current film composers work. My personal faves are Alien, Planet of the Apes, Damnation Alley, Total Recall, The Blue Max, Outland, The Omen Trilogy, Capricorn One, Rudy and of course that uber-cool and oft temped Judge Dredd trailer cue (if only his schedule had allowed him to take on that show). Having listened to Tylers score for Rambo, I'm really pleased with the way he's deftly integrated Jerry's JR motifs and melodies as well as putting his own stamp on the score.
Undeniably a GENIUS
by KillaKane
Jan 10th, 2008
04:07:44 AM
Damn you Header limit! ;-)
Musicballs....no balls or brains
by quantize
Jan 10th, 2008
06:07:23 AM
you fucking tasteless goofball that shit is cliched fucking ear excrement.
Hey, stop the goldsmith bagging, he was a long time friend
by John_Rambo
Jan 10th, 2008
06:36:36 AM
Back just for a min, looking like troubles brewing in the aintitcooler sewer. Okay whoever said that crazy remark that Goldsmith is no good - I don't understand the logic behind that kind of language. Now Listen - in post, I gave firm instructions to Brian that Jerry's orginal scores have to stay in the film. They must be piviotal and remind the audience of Rambo's legacy and journey. No if's, no but's. The rambo themes are just as iconic as the star wars/superman themes of their day. We looked at the temp print of the film a number of times over and I think after a while - 'he got it'. Look like I always say; he's no Sinatra, but he ain't no joblo from the rough side of town either. He's done a strong and qualified job, but to say he's anything like Goldsmith is peddling horse crack. The two just are not the same. It just ain't happening. Pure and simple. Brian's a great guy, really proud of what he did, he carried his work out professionally. Jerry will be forever missed. Hey, I wish I could of hired his great composer son to score, but his scedule wouldn't allow. That's the way it goes in the business. Yo harry, I dunno what kind of black box I can get, but maybe it would be easier like my pal WalterB. Any chance? Just a thought. .Sly.
John Rambo has spoken...nuff said!
by KillaKane
Jan 10th, 2008
08:11:42 AM
Don't push him or he'll give you a war you won't believe! ;-)
Gotta agree with Judge Dredd on JG's Planet of the Apes
by KillaKane
Jan 10th, 2008
08:19:57 AM
That score is truly a thing of beauty, how the hell did Goldsmith connceive of those cues? So intricate and dynamic and what amazing otherwordly textures, not to mention some serious syncopations, the rehearsal sessions must have been challenging for the players. Most of today's Protools jockeys would have a seizure trying to write four bars in that style! I'd stack POTA up against anything by Bartok, Webern, Berg, and Part et al, a seminal atonal work.
Glad to hear your fondness for Jerry, Sly...
by judge dredds fresh undies
Jan 10th, 2008
11:01:23 AM
I think its sadly all too common for actors and directors to be unappreciative of great composers work. I just want to say, I have no problem with Brian Tlyer, I'm not really familiar with his work but the Rambo suite on his Myspace sounded great. KillaKane, nice post. One of the amazing things for me about Planet of the Apes is it is regarded by many as a difficult listen but I don't find that at all, for me its a joy to listen to. The section which I think was played on pots and pans that gives me chills.
Brian Tyler is better than Mozart
by Musicballs
Jan 10th, 2008
01:06:01 PM
You people are all out of your minds. I don't know how you can listen to scores like Wind and the Lion, A Patch of Blue, the original Alien, Mephisto Waltz and Patton and think that Goldsmith is in the same league as Brian Tyler. Who cares if Goldsmith wrote everything out by hand? Brian Tyler has found a more efficient method of playing everything into his synthesizer and having his orchestrators copy it out. It's better this way, trust me. When you hear Brian's complete score for Rambo you will wish that he had scored the first three Rambos as well. Brian Tyler for Poltergeist!
Musicballs you're Brian Tyler's Mom aintcha?! Sussed!
by KillaKane
Jan 10th, 2008
01:17:29 PM
I get it now, Musicballs get's his rocks off by baiting geeks with spurious bullsheet, just to gleefully provoke a knee-jerk! BTW: For someone so unimpressed by Goldsmith's work he seems to be suspiciously well aquainted with it.
If this Goldsmith fellow was so good...
by Musicballs
Jan 10th, 2008
01:46:35 PM
Why was he replaced by Brian Tyler on Timeline? Brian Tyler has much better samples than Jerry Goldsmith, that is the answer. That's why AVPR is the best Alien score, and Predator score for that matter. In a few years, I am sure that the music for Bubba Ho-Tep, Paparazzi and Godsend will be cherished the same way the music for Hour of The Gun, Damnation Alley and The Great Train Robbery is.
Yeah Dredd those were rattling Mixing bowls in POTA
by KillaKane
Jan 10th, 2008
02:02:53 PM
Goldsmith loved experimenting and looking for new sounds, be it a 'Serpent' for a buzzing Alien texture, a DX7 for Rambo's Rattlesnake signature, or a 'Blasterbeam' motif for VGER on Star Trek. I was fortunate enough to see Jerry in concert with the RNSO and with the LSO, The Hunt cue from POTA always went down a storm, he introduced a lot of the unorthodox percussion and instrument effects before hand (Squealing Bassoons, rasping French Horns without mouth pieces and col legno strikes in the strings etc). It was truly awe inspiring hearing those players 'pushing air'on that piece. It's strange how some fans can't get their heads around the POTA score, I know a lot of Jazz heads and Modernist composers absolutely adore it (including the great 'Crimper' Julian Barrat of the Mighty Boosh), but people who're comfortable with conventional 'tonal' scores and diatonic fare just dont now what to listen for and fall back on the "it's just random noise! plea" It's sad really that there are some bods who can't step out of their comfort zone and embrace such evolved and beautifully crafted music.
s anyone surprised Goldsmith isn't doing this...(and a note for
by Playkins
Jan 10th, 2008
05:17:33 PM
...being that he's NO LONGER WITH US?!?!? I don't see anyone's issue. The music I heard on that myspace was FANTASTIC. I'll iTunes that one as soon as it's up.

Sly, I was a doubter of yours when I heard you were doing another Rocky AND another Rambo. You knocked it out of the park with Rocky B. Can't wait to see this one.


by bazookajoe
Jan 10th, 2008
06:41:34 PM
Well, hearing those old scores sure sent a chill down my spine... I cannot fucking WAIT to see this film!
As Sly stated, Goldsmith's music is intrinsic to a 'Rambo' movie
by KillaKane
Jan 11th, 2008
03:27:24 AM
For me, that was the only remaining expectation/anxiety I had for this movie, all the other boxes were checked, now it's all there, I can't wait to see this!
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