Комментарии:
Beautiful piece of music! Thanks for adding it!
Ответить"But every once in a while you get to sail on a beautiful evening like this, and sometimes be partnered with an agent from a corrupt, decadent Western power."
Ответить@ChineseCommando Exactly!
ОтветитьThis is a nice Song(Y)
Ответитьdavid arnold = brilliant
Ответить@ChineseCommando "If I may say so, you've found the right decadent, corrupt, Western, agent as a partner"
Ответитьthis sounds in this song are too beautiful to even describe.
ОтветитьDavid Arnold coolie
ОтветитьI would like to know why is this track named "Kowloon Bay". Kowloon Bay is in Hong Kong, but corresponding passage of the film is set somewhere near Saigon.
ОтветитьI really dig this, its very romantic
ОтветитьActually, just occurred to me while listening to this .... Was 'Tomorrow Never Dies' one of the first Hollywood movies to pander to China? (All of the Chinese political subterfuge bits in the original script were eliminated, leaving only a 3 second walk by and vague references to General Chan at the end) It's depiction of the Chinese Government, and especially of it's intelligence service in the form of Wei Lin, is extremely complimentary to say the least ......... Never noticed, but with all the current controversy over Hollywood bending the knee to Beijing, it sort of makes you think.
ОтветитьFatastic piece of music for this scene. Definetely Arnolds best 007-soundtrack. I also really like this brilliant movie. So underrated. Definetely Brosnans best Bond performance. I could watch the movie over and over again.
ОтветитьThis ist so fantastic. Love it, love it, love it :) Definetely one of my absolutely favourite Tracks from all Bond movies and the absolutely highlight of this (great!) movie.
ОтветитьBeautiful music
ОтветитьLove this a beautiful track
ОтветитьWow, just had to make a couple of points here as everyone and their granny seems to be stumped for some reason. Hasn't anyone ever heard of aircraft...? I always just assumed Wai Lin simply arranged a quick helicopter flight from Saigon. Not sure why everyone here is assuming they drove all the way when Wai Lin is supposed to be a high ranking special agent with enormous connections.
Also, the reason the track was called "Kowloon Bay" was just a mistake made by the people labelling the CD tracks for a soundtrack release. Nothing to do with the film-makers, the CDs weren't put together by anyone involved in the movie, not even David Arnold. Composers or anyone else making the actual movie don't give the score tracks titles, Arnold just scored scenes and advised on the editing. Some third party labelled score tracks for a CD and just made a mistake, which actually happens a lot.