16. –Robert Rodriguez, Carl Thiel. Robert Rodriguez, Carl Thiel. Robert Rodriguez, Carl Thiel - Frank Miller's Sin City: A Dame To Kill For (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) (CD, Album).
Sin City: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the 2005 film Sin City. It features music composed by Robert Rodriguez, John Debney and Graeme Revell, performed by the Hollywood Studio Symphony, as well as the orchestral track "Sensemayá" from Mexican composer Silvestre Revueltas and the electronica piece "Absurd" by Fluke. Because the film is based on different comic book stories (written by Frank Miller), each composer was assigned to score a different story
Directed by Frank Miller, Robert Rodriguez. With Mickey Rourke, Jessica Alba, Josh Brolin, Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Some of Sin City's most hard-boiled citizens cross paths with a few of its more reviled inhabitants. Nine years is a long time to wait for a sequel, but in the case of Frank Miller's 'Sin City: A Dame to Kill For', it's as if it was just yesterday.
The original soundtrack to the film "Sin City: A Dame to Kill For", which is a continuation of the movie "Sin City" in 2005. The film is based primarily on the second graphic novel by Frank Miller's series "Sin City". Great soundtrack by Robert Rodriguez feat. Carl Thiel will not leave you indifferent and will make listening to again and again! Track - Nancy's Kiss Of Death Soundtrack, OST, Music, Game, Movie, Original Soundtrack, Original Game Soundtrack, 2014, Original OST, Theme, Track, tune, new, new OST, playlist, Score. Appears on these pages
Frank Miller and Robert Rodriguez join forces again in this long-delayed, self-admiring sequel to their 2005 hit. By Justin Chang. Justin's Most Recent Stories. Set in motion not long after the 2005 release of Sin City, but delayed following the commercial failure of Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino’s Grindhouse (2007), this long-gestating sequel proudly announces itself, like the first film, as a work of slavish fidelity to its source. The full title is Frank Miller’s Sin City: A Dame to Kill For, as if to reassure those pulp purists in the audience that nothing they see and hear, from the silky black-and-white images to the sub-Spillane hard-boiled dialogue, will deviate from the graphic novelist’s original vision. Like most stories that come out Sin City, A Dame to Kill For is about a broken man unable to resist the spell of a woman in trouble.