Supernatural's extensive use of music, spanning across multiple genres, adds depth and atmosphere to the show's various storylines and emotional moments. Iconic songs such as "Beautiful Loser" by Bob Seger and "Wanted Dead or Alive" by Bon Jovi perfectly complement specific scenes, enhancing their impact and adding a layer of meaning to the characters' experiences. The show's musical choices also serve to introduce and establish important characters, like the haunting song "O, Death" by Jen Titus which accompanies the introduction of the terrifying character Death, creating an atmosphere of tension and fear.
Supernatural had a 15-season run full of monsters, death, and family, but it also had a lot of good music to accompany the long-going show. Throughout the years, the series pulled from several genres from classic rock to the singer-songwriter genre. However, without fail, each song seamlessly fits into the situation within its use of following two brothers...
Supernatural had a 15-season run full of monsters, death, and family, but it also had a lot of good music to accompany the long-going show. Throughout the years, the series pulled from several genres from classic rock to the singer-songwriter genre. However, without fail, each song seamlessly fits into the situation within its use of following two brothers...
- 10/22/2023
- by Grace Heinlein
- ScreenRant
Warning! This article contains Spoilers for Netflix's The Out-Laws!Adam Sandler’s newest movie on Netflix, The Out-Laws, revived the actor’s cameo rule after two movies went without it. This tradition is most prevalent in films from Sandler’s production company, Happy Madison, and has created a fun throughline in several of his films. However, one unexpected element of this tradition is that it makes films without it seem more notable, if only because they break Sandler’s trend. That being said, it’s fun to see this tradition brought back in The Out-Laws, and hopefully signals similar nods in future Happy Madison films set to come out this year.
Sandler’s most recent Happy Madison film, The Out-Laws, features a star-studded cast that tells the story of Owen (Adam DeVine) and Parker (Nina Dobrev), a pair of soon-to-be newlyweds. However, matters are complicated when Parker’s estranged...
Sandler’s most recent Happy Madison film, The Out-Laws, features a star-studded cast that tells the story of Owen (Adam DeVine) and Parker (Nina Dobrev), a pair of soon-to-be newlyweds. However, matters are complicated when Parker’s estranged...
- 7/12/2023
- by Alex Keenan
- ScreenRant
Kentucky songwriter Kyle Daniel shines a sympathetic light on the cycle of addiction in his new song “Born to Lose,” a personal track inspired by people he knew in his Bowling Green hometown.
“We live in a time in which addiction has somehow impacted all of our lives,” says Daniel of the song, off his upcoming Ep What’s There to Say?, out March 15th. “I felt the need to discuss the hardships of this crisis, without painting it in a negative light, coming from a place or understanding and acceptance.
“We live in a time in which addiction has somehow impacted all of our lives,” says Daniel of the song, off his upcoming Ep What’s There to Say?, out March 15th. “I felt the need to discuss the hardships of this crisis, without painting it in a negative light, coming from a place or understanding and acceptance.
- 2/22/2019
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
In a new documentary, myths and assumptions about the Oscar-nominated heartthrob who struggled with his sexuality are replaced with the little-known truth
For over 30 years, scripts have floated around Hollywood promising to tell the story of Montgomery Clift, one of the most innovative and handsome actors in history. Tellingly, they’re always pitched under working titles like ‘Beautiful Loser’ and' ‘Tragic Beauty’. Guided by the key biographies of Clift, they reliably parrot a narrative which paints the actor as a startlingly attractive and prodigiously gifted man who, according to one notably overheated tabloid TV show “became a drug-addicted alcoholic living in a self-imposed hell because he had a secret he couldn’t live with”.
Related: Tab Hunter: how Hollywood's boy next door became a gay icon...
For over 30 years, scripts have floated around Hollywood promising to tell the story of Montgomery Clift, one of the most innovative and handsome actors in history. Tellingly, they’re always pitched under working titles like ‘Beautiful Loser’ and' ‘Tragic Beauty’. Guided by the key biographies of Clift, they reliably parrot a narrative which paints the actor as a startlingly attractive and prodigiously gifted man who, according to one notably overheated tabloid TV show “became a drug-addicted alcoholic living in a self-imposed hell because he had a secret he couldn’t live with”.
Related: Tab Hunter: how Hollywood's boy next door became a gay icon...
- 10/29/2018
- by Jim Farber
- The Guardian - Film News
Eric Barbier’s “Promise at Dawn” will headline the 2018 Colcoa French Film Festival on April 23, the Franco-American Cultural Fund announced Tuesday.
“Promise at Dawn” is an adaptation of French author Romain Gary’s autobiography that stars Pierre Niney and Charlotte Gainsbourg. The film will kick off the screenings of 37 new features and documentaries competing for the Colcoa Cinema Awards at the Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles. The event will present a record total of 86 films, TV shows, digital series, and virtual reality programs, 75 of which will be considered for the Colcoa awards throughout the week’s festivities, which will culminate on May 1.
Colcoa executive producer and artistic director Francois Truffart also announced that this year’s festival will set aside a day exclusively for screening first films made by female writers and directors. The day, titled “Focus on a Filmmaker Day,” will honor writer, director, and actor Melanie...
“Promise at Dawn” is an adaptation of French author Romain Gary’s autobiography that stars Pierre Niney and Charlotte Gainsbourg. The film will kick off the screenings of 37 new features and documentaries competing for the Colcoa Cinema Awards at the Directors Guild of America in Los Angeles. The event will present a record total of 86 films, TV shows, digital series, and virtual reality programs, 75 of which will be considered for the Colcoa awards throughout the week’s festivities, which will culminate on May 1.
Colcoa executive producer and artistic director Francois Truffart also announced that this year’s festival will set aside a day exclusively for screening first films made by female writers and directors. The day, titled “Focus on a Filmmaker Day,” will honor writer, director, and actor Melanie...
- 4/4/2018
- by Christi Carras
- Variety Film + TV
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