
Age: 76
male
Alan Anthony Silvestri (born March 26, 1950) is an American composer, conductor, orchestrator and music producer of film scores. He has received two Grammy Awards, two Primetime Emmy Awards, and nominations for two Academy Awards and two Golden Globe Awards. He has been associated with director Robert Zemeckis since 1984, composing music for nearly all of his feature films, including the Back to the Future film series (1985–1990), Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988), Death Becomes Her (1992), Forrest Gump (1994), Contact (1997), What Lies Beneath (2000), Cast Away (2000), The Polar Express (2004), Beowulf (2007), Flight (2012) and The Walk (2015). Silvestri also scored many other popular movies, including Predator (1987), The Abyss (1989), Father of the Bride (1991), The Bodyguard (1992), Eraser (1996), The Parent Trap (1998), Stuart Little (1999), The Mummy Returns (2001), Lilo & Stitch (2002), Van Helsing (2004), Night at the Museum trilogy, G.I. Joe: The Rise of Cobra (2009), The A-Team (2010), Ready Player One (2018), and several Marvel Cinematic Universe films, including the Avengers films. Description above from the Wikipedia article Alan Silvestri, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Alan Silvestri

Composer
for Composer in Calvin and Hobbes (2018) (Blue Sky Studios)
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Calvin and Hobbes is a 2018 American animated comedy film based on Bill Watterson's 1985-1995 comic strip of the same name, produced by Blue Sky Studios and distributed by 20th Century Fox. The film was directed by Troy Quane and Nick Bruno from a story written by Cindy Davis and a screenplay by Brad Copeland and Lloyd Taylor. The film stars Benjamin Evan Ainsworth and Keegan-Michael Key as the voices of the title characters, alongside Kevin Kline, Melanie Griffith, Nhev Scharrel, Patrick Warburton, Aziz Ansari, Michelle Pfeiffer, Idris Elba, John Goodman and Angela Lansbury. Calvin and Hobbes premiered in New York City on July 30, 2018, and was released in the United States five days later on August 17. It grossed $246 million worldwide against a $99 million budget to become the 7th highest-grossing animated film of 2018. The film was met with generally positive reviews from critics, with praise for the animation, voice acting, and faithfulness to the source material, but received minor criticism for its lack of ambition. It received nominations for the Annie Award for Best Animated Feature, the Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Animated Feature and was the first Blue Sky Studios film to be nominated for a Golden Globe Award for Best Animated Feature Film, but lost to Incredibles 2.