• About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily
Awards Daily
  • 2026 Oscar Predictions
  • 2025/2026 Awards Calendar
  • Buzzmeter
  • NextGen Oscarwatcher
  • Let’s Talk Cinema
No Result
View All Result
  • 2026 Oscar Predictions
  • 2025/2026 Awards Calendar
  • Buzzmeter
  • NextGen Oscarwatcher
  • Let’s Talk Cinema
No Result
View All Result
Awards Daily
No Result
View All Result

Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross On the Vulnerable Core for the Score of ‘Empire of Light’

Joey Moser by Joey Moser
December 11, 2022
in Interviews, News, ORIGINAL SCORE
0

You can immediately tell that Sam Mendes’ Empire of Life is a very personal endeavor. For an intimate portrait of people climbing out of their own sadness, Mendes brought on board composers Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross, and it is one of the duo’s most heartfelt collaborations to date. They skillfully tap into the delicacy of the human heart and its pulsing need to be loved and cared for.

The theater at the center of the film is its own character. The paneling on the inside of the lobby is warm and inviting. The lights glow against the cloud, grey sky. It’s undeniably alive, and Reznor and Ross discovered just how much this space meant to the director as they started preliminary work on the film.

“We spent four or five months where we were talking with Sam every couple of weeks,” Ross said. “We talked about the script and his vision, and we started with some musical experiments to try and find the world that we are in. During that process, Sam was very detailed about the space that he was going to shoot in, and he was sending us pitches about that space. He let us know how special and how magical a cinema is—that something that we both feel as well. In terms of honoring it, that opening cue was very much built around the Empire.”

“Roger [Deakins] shot it in such a way that let us know that we needed to handle it with reverence. That was very clear,” Reznor added.

As you listen to the score, you might notice the presence of a lot of piano cues. This wasn’t intentional, but Reznor feels a kinship with the instrument, and he kept coming back to it when he realized just how supportive the score was to the emotions of Empire of Light. The notes trickle and coo–almost as if they are as tentative as Olivia Colman’s character, Hilary.

“It wasn’t by design necessarily,” Reznor admits. “We didn’t know Sam and he didn’t know us before this film, but we knew that it was important to him for a variety of reason. He was very open about where he was during the script phases, so feeling that inclusion was nice for us. We would send him some improvisational cues since it hadn’t been shot yet, but it was ways for us to articulate different arrangements and different swatches. It was a way for us to connect with Margate in winter, looking out over the ocean with snow falling. This feels like longing. We wanted to show him that we could do it, but we wanted to feel out if we were matching what he thought in his head. Should this be solo piano? Should it be a string quartet? Can we delve into that world? As we got into the meat of what the music meant for this film and the emotional weight it had to carry and the precise story it had to tell at time…piano, to me, is the most expressive instrument. It’s the one that I can get to sound the way I do in my head. We didn’t set out to do a piano score, but it had a directness and a beauty and a humble, vulnerable side to it.”

(Photo: Searchlight Pictures)

There are two moments in the film that call to a specific dread. In ‘Sandcastle Breakdown,’ Hilary surprises Michael Ward’s Stephen with her intense jealousy, and their seaside detour takes an unexpected turn. Later on in the film, a group of skinheads attack the beloved theater, and it shatters, for a moment, the idyllic paradise so many of us find when we enter a movie theater. Both cues are used in obviously different moments in the story, but the danger Reznor and Ross brings to our ears is mighty.

“There was about three solid weeks—ten hours a day—of “Mod March” playing at 140 decibels in this room,” Reznor said.

“On one level, you might think that the ‘Mod March’ is a simple piece of music in that someone could read it as a drone,” Ross added. “It was one of the hardest ones to crack for unknown reasons, but what you are hearing is a very multilayered journey of the danger of a skinhead attack. The journey from there transforms into the journey to the hospital. I’m not sure why it took so long to get right, but what Trent says about the world that the piano subtly sits in…you could look at those cues and realize it’s all about honest emotions. Especially when it comes to Hilary and Stephen’s relationship.

“With ‘Sandcastle,’ we need to capture the moment where someone, who is bipolar, stops taking their meds. They are feeling good, so they don’t think they need them but it can be very unpredictable. It felt like that beautiful world that the piano sits in—like when they first make love—changes into something else. I think you can look at the ‘Mod March’ and ‘Sandcastle Breakdown’ as the music that sits behind the piano transforming into something else and becoming a bit more specific to someone coming  On their meds. There are moments of jealous and the more general threat in the second cue. One is a very personal fear.”

One of the most emotional moments in the film comes when Hilary steps into the Empire and asks Toby Jones’ projectionist, Norman, to play her a film. “Any film,” she tells him exasperatedly, and we realize that she has worked at the theater for many years and never experienced intimate moment when the lights go down. In ‘Solo Screening,’ Reznor and Ross knew that they couldn’t fake sentimentality and they needed to be as honest as they possibly could be.

‘Solo Screening’ was tough, because it was one of the last ones that we were getting to,” Reznor admitted. “We were intimidated by it, because it is such an important moment. It is the emotional revelation for three of four minutes of watching someone watching a film. We had gotten to know Sam very well by this point, and the interaction with Sam was always very open but very meticulous. When spotting a scene, every moment has been considered. You can hear cleverness or when someone is trying to show off. I can tell when I am skimming the surface. You need to be sincere. With this one, Sam knew the original submission could’ve been better, and there was a lot of back and forth with that. What we came up with was better, and we will be the first to admit when we are wrong. He made that better. I watched it last night in a theater for the first time with other people, and I was crying during that section. It is a profound moment in the film, and we are grateful that we got to do this job.”

Empire of Light is now playing in select theaters.

Tags: Atticus RossEmpire of LightORIGINAL SCORETrent Reznor
Previous Post

Carter Burwell On Capturing the Magic of the Island for ‘The Banshees of Inisherin’

Next Post

‘Banshees of Inisherin’ Leads 2023 Golden Globe Nominations

Next Post
Venice Dispatch – Will Win / Should Win

'Banshees of Inisherin' Leads 2023 Golden Globe Nominations

AD Predicts

Oscar Nomination Predictions

See All →
Best Picture
  • 1.
    One Battle after Another (Warner Bros.)
    100%
  • 2.
    Sinners (Warner Bros.)
    75%
  • 3.
    Hamnet (Focus Features)
    75%
  • 4.
    Marty Supreme (A24)
    75%
  • 5.
    Sentimental Value (Neon)
    75%
  • 6.
    Frankenstein (Netflix)
    75%
  • 7.
    Bugonia (Focus Features)
    75%
  • 8.
    Train Dreams (Netflix)
    75%
  • 9.
    The Secret Agent (Neon)
    75%
  • 10.
    F1 (Apple)
    75%
Best Director
  • 1.
    One Battle after Another, Paul Thomas Anderson
    100%
  • 2.
    Sinners, Ryan Coogler
    75%
  • 3.
    Hamnet, Chloé Zhao
    75%
  • 4.
    Marty Supreme, Josh Safdie
    75%
  • 5.
    Sentimental Value, Joachim Trier
    75%
Best Actor
  • 1.
    Timothée Chalamet in Marty Supreme
    100%
  • 2.
    Leonardo DiCaprio in One Battle after Another
    75%
  • 3.
    Michael B. Jordan in Sinners
    75%
  • 4.
    Ethan Hawke in Blue Moon
    75%
  • 5.
    Wagner Moura in The Secret Agent
    75%
Best Actress
  • 1.
    Jessie Buckley in Hamnet
    100%
  • 2.
    Rose Byrne in If I Had Legs I’d Kick You
    75%
  • 3.
    Renate Reinsve in Sentimental Value
    75%
  • 4.
    Kate Hudson in Song Sung Blue
    75%
  • 5.
    Emma Stone in Bugonia
    75%
Best Supporting Actor
  • 1.
    Stellan Skarsgård in Sentimental Value
    100%
  • 2.
    Benicio Del Toro in One Battle after Another
    75%
  • 3.
    Delroy Lindo in Sinners
    75%
  • 4.
    Jacob Elordi in Frankenstein
    75%
  • 5.
    Sean Penn in One Battle after Another
    75%
Best Supporting Actress
  • 1.
    Teyana Taylor in One Battle after Another
    100%
  • 2.
    Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas in Sentimental Value
    75%
  • 3.
    Wunmi Mosaku in Sinners
    75%
  • 4.
    Amy Madigan in Weapons
    75%
  • 5.
    Elle Fanning in Sentimental Value
    75%
View Full Predictions
Nextgen Oscarwatcher: The Race is Over, Unless It’s Not
BEST PICTURE

Nextgen Oscarwatcher: The Race is Over, Unless It’s Not

by Scott Kernen
February 2, 2026
19

Best Picture What began as a competitive field with five films landing both SAG Ensemble and DGA nods has narrowed...

The Buzzmeter: If You Care About the Oscars, Don’t Be the Grammys

The Buzzmeter: If You Care About the Oscars, Don’t Be the Grammys

February 2, 2026
Melania at $7 Mil Has Made More Money Than Sentimental Value, Ann Lee and Blue Moon and More

Melania at $7 Mil Has Made More Money Than Sentimental Value, Ann Lee and Blue Moon and More

February 1, 2026
2026 Oscar Predictions: The Zealots Come For Timothee and Marty Supreme

2026 Oscar Predictions: The Zealots Come For Timothee and Marty Supreme

January 30, 2026
The “Critics” Take Sadistic Pleasure in “Reviewing” the Melania Movie

The “Critics” Take Sadistic Pleasure in “Reviewing” the Melania Movie

January 30, 2026
The Great Catherine O’Hara Passes On

The Great Catherine O’Hara Passes On

January 30, 2026
Oscar Podcast: Frontrunners and Challengers!

Oscar Podcast: Frontrunners and Challengers!

January 29, 2026
Award This! An Indie Alternative to the Oscars This Saturday

Award This! An Indie Alternative to the Oscars This Saturday

January 29, 2026
2026 Oscars: One Battle After Another Poised to Top Oppenheimer With Wins

2026 Oscars: One Battle After Another Poised to Top Oppenheimer With Wins

January 28, 2026
Sinners, Bugonia, One Battle, Hamnet land at Saturn Award Nominations

Sinners, Bugonia, One Battle, Hamnet land at Saturn Award Nominations

January 28, 2026

Oscar News

Oscar Nominee Reactions

Oscar Nominee Reactions

January 22, 2026

Oscars 2026: Shortlists Announced!

2026 Oscars: How to Survive a Race That’s Already Over Before it Even Begins

2026 Oscars: Contenders Bringing the Glam to the Governors Awards

2026 Oscars — Best Director: There is Ryan Coogler and Everyone Else

2026 Oscars: What Five Best Actor Contenders Will Get Nominated? [POLL]

EmmyWatch

CBS Finally Ends the Stephen Colbert Show

CBS Finally Ends the Stephen Colbert Show

July 18, 2025

The Gotham TV Winners Set the Consensus to Come

Gothams Announces Television Nominees

White Lotus Finale – A Deeply Profound Message for a Weary World

  • About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result
  • About AwardsDaily
  • Sasha Stone
  • Advertising on Awards Daily

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.