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Puddle of Love by Dan Armstrong
Puddle of Love by Dan  Armstrong












Puddle of Love by Dan Armstrong

The result is a wholly unique piece of film music that crackles with the spark of innovation and revels in the electronic, yet darker, more dangerous tones continuously find their way through-just as the character of Mark Zuckerberg presents an innocent veneer that hides a more merciless drive to succeed. Reznor and Ross didn’t attempt to conform to traditional film scoring methods, but instead infused the film with their own sounds and unique musical approach. Filmmaker David Fincher reached out to Nine Inch Nails members Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross to try their hand at film scoring, and the result is a truly iconic piece of film music. The best film score of the decade comes from all the way back in 2010, but boy does The Social Network hold up (in more ways than one).

Puddle of Love by Dan Armstrong

The Social Network – Trent Reznor & Atticus Ross To see all of Collider's Best of the Decade content, click here.ġ. But looking back at this precise moment in time, these feel like the cream of the crop. As with any list of this kind, it is certainly subjective, and there are innumerable fantastic film scores of the decade that are not on this list. So let’s look back and celebrate the very best film scores of the 2010s. That this decade gave us both Junkie XL and Nicholas Britell is a testament to the breadth of diversity in film music that was on display.

Puddle of Love by Dan Armstrong

Others simply leaned on samples and electronic cues to create an indistinguishable sea of sound.īut traditional film scores still remain, and everyone from veterans of the trade to exciting newer talents made use of full orchestras to tug at our heartstrings or make our palms sweaty. The real craftspeople used this new technology to their advantage, combining it with their understanding of music to craft unique and striking soundscapes. The 2010s saw digital musicmaking take leaps both for better and worse. And sometimes the score itself is so radical, it elevates the entire atmosphere of the movie to another level. A film score has the power to either ruin or make a movie-just the right piece of music playing in just the right spot is what iconic film moments are made of. While many were busy at the end of 2019 putting together their lists of the best films and TV shows of the decade, it felt prudent to get granular and really single out some of the astonishing filmmaking craft that’s been showcased over the past 10 years.














Puddle of Love by Dan  Armstrong