Showing posts with label soundtrack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label soundtrack. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Video game review: Forza Horizon 

LOVED IT: Beautiful visuals, smooth driving controls, great soundtrack, spectacular ambie nce, nice variety of game-play modes

HATED IT: Some shaky multiplayer elements, occasionally frustrating race progression

GRAB IT IF: You’d like a more peaceful, true-to-life Test Drive Unlimited or Need for Speed: Underground 2

It doesn’t happen often. But every so often, everybody has a moment when they recall exactly why they were dying to learn to drive as a teenager. They speed along some stretch of highway, perhaps a bit faster than the police would like, and see the sun setting in the distance, trees and mountains racing by.

Think of Forza Horizon as one big, sustained, oh-so-magical moment.

There’s something hypnotic about hopping into your 2008 Mitsubishi Lancer and cruising through Colorado in this open-world racer, something that feels like one of those made-for-the-movies moments.

It makes Playground Studios’ new take on the classic racing game series completely worthwhile.

I was a skeptic of Forza Horizon in June, when it was shown at the Electronics Entertainment Expo. Microsoft’s Forza Motorsport series had long held my attention because of its hyper-realistic racing physics and attention to detail, a blend that made it one of the finest racing simulation series available.

Forza Horizon, then, didn’t seem to make sense. The spinoff seemed gimmicky, an odd grafting of the Forza series onto the well-worn open-world template, as if the folks at Microsoft were out of racing-game ideas.

But those misgivings quickly dissipated, simply because of those magical moments in Forza Horizon. The game sells you its new identity from the start, opening not with the blaring of car engines in some race scene but instead with what looks like a picnic on a hill.

Moments later, you’re hitting the open road, cruising through a reimagining of Colorado. This fictional reinterpretation of the state is magnificently vast, with mountains and winding roads here and stretches of straight road and desert there. It’s a varied and detailed tapestry, from the rows of houses in suburban areas to the foliage that dots the mountains you’ll climb and descend.

I found simply cruising around the area at breakneck speeds to be a joy. The world and the streets are well-crafted, and Forza adds other things to keep you occupied. You can try to set a speed record when you cruise through a speed trap or search for the handful of smashable boards to earn discounts on parts and cars.

Kinect gamers get Forza Horizon at its best, too. They can yell “GPS!” at any moment on the open road, then command their GPS to set a new course (which doubles as a racing line), pointing them toward another event or this spot or that spot. It’s well-integrated and seamless, and it lets you focus on the open road without ever heading back to some map screen to plot a new course.

Wild as it may sound, none of this is the meat of Forza Horizon.

Playground doesn’t simply build you this Colorado playground and let you loose; it tries to lend plot and purpose to your joyride. The so-called Horizon Festival is taking place in Colorado, and 250 fine racers have descended on the state.


Source : nydailynews[dot]com

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Movie News Release Date for the Skyfall Soundtrack Announced COMMENTS (1) Posted by: ADD COMMENTS

Set to be released alongside the film, the soundtrack for Skyfall has officially been announced:

Sony Classical announces the release of the Original Motion Picture Soundtrack of SKYFALL� on November 6, 2012, consisting of original music written by leading film composer Thomas Newman. From Albert R. Broccoli's EON Productions, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios and Sony Pictures Entertainment, the film is the 23rd James Bond adventure and coincides with the 50th anniversary of the James Bond film franchise.

SKYFALL� also marks the debut of distinguished director Sam Mendes in the James Bond franchise. Daniel Craig is back as Ian Fleming's James Bond 007 in SKYFALL�, the 23rd adventure in the longest-running film franchise of all time.  In SKYFALL�, Bond's loyalty to M is tested as her past comes back to haunt her.   As MI6 comes under attack, 007 must track down and destroy the threat, no matter how personal the cost. The film is produced by Michael G. Wilson and Barbara Broccoli and written by Neal Purvis & Robert Wade and John Logan.

Composer Thomas Newman's uniquely expressive musical style fits perfectly with the humor and slickness of a Bond movie. His expressive range goes from thunderous and dramatic for the many action sequences to broodingly atmospheric for scenes in which the dark side of the story, marked by mistrust and fear of betrayal, is at the forefront. With its big orchestral effects, this music is equal to the spectacular events that the movie portrays.

Daniel Craig, Javier Bardem, Dame Judi Dench, Naomie Harris, Berenice Marlohe, Ralph Fiennes, Albert Finney, Ben Whishaw, Helen McCrory, Ola Rapace and Tonia Sotiropoulou star in the Sam Mendes-directed film.  Skyfall opens overseas on October 26th, in domestic IMAX theaters on November 8th and conventional theaters on November 9th.

You can pre-order your copy of the soundtrack by clicking here.


Source : comingsoon[dot]net