yesterday my wife and I saw it "rocknrolla" on TV.
The movie is his Guy Ritchie. It's his 2008.
I had not seen her.
It is of course in the style of "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels" and "snatch".
In no case, however, does it reach them.
Especially the "smoked barrels" were awesome.
But here we will deal with the soundtrack.
Get ready because we have a lot of music.
Guy Ritchie is one of the directors who does not commission a musician to write original music for their films but chooses various pieces that he likes.
It's the "recipe" we know from Stanley Qubrick, Martin Scorseze and - above all - Qeuntin Tarantino.
This thing is difficult because it presupposes that you have a lot of good listening and the "mastery" to tie the pieces to the rhythm of your film.
Guy Ritchie gets excellent on both.
As in his first films, so here his choices are amazing and the "binding" is flawless.
Ritchie prefers material from the 70's onwards. To be precise from punk onwards. Stir no older sometimes.
So in rocknrolla the playlist is amazing.
The movie is his Guy Ritchie. It's his 2008.
I had not seen her.
It is of course in the style of "Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels" and "snatch".
In no case, however, does it reach them.
Especially the "smoked barrels" were awesome.
But here we will deal with the soundtrack.
Get ready because we have a lot of music.
Guy Ritchie is one of the directors who does not commission a musician to write original music for their films but chooses various pieces that he likes.
It's the "recipe" we know from Stanley Qubrick, Martin Scorseze and - above all - Qeuntin Tarantino.
This thing is difficult because it presupposes that you have a lot of good listening and the "mastery" to tie the pieces to the rhythm of your film.
Guy Ritchie gets excellent on both.
As in his first films, so here his choices are amazing and the "binding" is flawless.
Ritchie prefers material from the 70's onwards. To be precise from punk onwards. Stir no older sometimes.
So in rocknrolla the playlist is amazing.