9 Inch Nails band members and movie composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross have united to attain The Killer, an upcoming film directed by David Fincher.
The Killer, which premieres on Netflix on November 10, will mark the composer duo’s fifth collaboration with Fincher. Since 2010, Reznor and Ross have supplied the scores for The Social Community, The Woman With The Dragon Tattoo, Gone Woman and Mank, the final of which earned them Academy Award nomination in 2020 for Finest Unique Rating.
The pair introduced their involvement within the movie through 9 Inch Nails’ official web site. “Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross have been collaborating with David Fincher as movie composers for over a decade,” the publish learn. “[They] have additionally accomplished the rating for Fincher’s subsequent mission The Killer.” Reznor and Ross additionally introduced {that a} deluxe vinyl urgent of their Mank rating is available now.
The Killer is predicated on the French comedian e book collection of the identical title, written by Alexis Nolent. The movie stars Michael Fassbender, Charles Parnell, Tilda Swinton, Arliss Howard, and Sophie Charlotte. The Killer follows Mank because the second Fincher movie to be launched on Netflix, coming as half off the director’s unique four-year cope with the streaming service in 2020.
Alongside their movie scores — which have additionally featured Pixar’s Soul, the Jonah Hill-directed mid90s and final 12 months’s Bones & All — Reznor and Ross are credited as co-producers on Halsey’s 2021 album ‘If I Can’t Have Love, I Need Energy’. Final 12 months, the pair have been introduced as co-producers on Fever Ray’s ‘Radical Romantics’, which is due for launch subsequent month.
Final September, Reznor reunited with a number of early members of 9 Inch Nails for the band’s belated Rock and Roll Corridor of Fame induction celebration. The efficiency enlisted Chris Vrenna, Richard Patrick, Danny Lohner, and Charlie Clouser, all of whom have been members of an earlier iteration of the band.
Final 12 months, Fincher responded to China’s censoring of the ending of his 1999 movie Battle Membership, saying: “For those who don’t like this story, why would you licence this film? It is not sensible to me when folks go, ‘I believe it could be good for our service if we had your title on it… we simply need it to be a special film.’”