
Died at 56
male
Jóhann Gunnar Jóhannsson (19 September 1969 – 9 February 2018) was an Icelandic composer who wrote music for a wide array of media including theater, dance, television and films. His work is stylized by its blending of traditional orchestration with contemporary electronic elements. Jóhann released solo albums from 2002 onward. In 2016, he signed with Deutsche Grammophon, through which he released his last solo album, Orphée. Some of his works in film include the original scores for Denis Villeneuve's Prisoners, Sicario, and Arrival, and James Marsh's The Theory of Everything. Jóhannsson was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Score for both The Theory of Everything and Sicario, and won a Golden Globe for Best Original Score for the former. He earned a second Golden Globe nomination for Arrival. He was a music and sound consultant on Mother!, directed by Darren Aronofsky in 2017. His scores for Mary Magdalene and Mandy were released posthumously. His only directorial work, Last and First Men, premiered at the Manchester International Festival in 2017, where he also performed the score live with the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra.

In 1933 Nazi Germany, young William Blazkowicz watches as his father, a gentle chemist, is arrested by the Gestapo. Eleven years later, now a U.S. Army Ranger Captain, "BJ" is recruited for a secret mission behind enemy lines. Parachuting into Bavaria, he teams with British agent "Agent One" and the German resistance to infiltrate Castle Wolfenstein. Their objective: assassinate Adolf Hitler. Inside the castle, they discover a nightmare of Nazi science—cloned Hitlers, a zombie army, a robotic war machine called the ÜberSoldat, and a doomsday rocket aimed at London. BJ must rescue his long-lost father, stop the weapon, and survive the night.
