
Age: 59
male
Marco Beltrami (born October 7, 1966) is an American composer of film and television scores. He has worked in several genres, including horror (Scream, Mimic, The Faculty, Resident Evil, The Woman in Black, Carrie, A Quiet Place, and The Nun II), action (Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, Live Free or Die Hard, World War Z), science fiction (I, Robot, Snowpiercer), Western(3:10 to Yuma, Jonah Hex, The Homesman), and superhero (Hellboy, The Wolverine, Logan, Venom: Let There Be Carnage). A long-time collaborator of Wes Craven, Beltrami scored seven of the director's films, including the original four Craven-directed films in the Scream franchise (1996–2011). He has also worked with such directors as James Mangold, Guillermo del Toro, Tommy Lee Jones, Alex Proyas, Ole Bornedal, Kathryn Bigelow, Bong Joon-ho, Dan Gilroy, and John Krasinski. He has been nominated for two Academy Awards for 3:10 to Yuma (2007), The Hurt Locker (2008), and a Golden Globe Award for A Quiet Place (2018). He won a Satellite Award for Soul Surfer (2011) and an Emmy Award for Free Solo (2018). Description above from the Wikipedia article Marco Beltrami, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Disgraced tabloid reporter Eddy Brock's life is a wreck—fired, broke, and haunted by childhood trauma at the hands of serial killer Cletus Kasady. During Kasady's televised execution, an alien symbiote crash-lands and bonds with Eddy, transforming him into Venom, a shapeshifting, fanged antihero. Meanwhile, a second, more vicious symbiote merges with Kasady, creating Carnage, who escapes death row and plunges the city into blackout-fueled chaos. With psychiatrist Dr. Rachel Kafka caught between them, Eddy must master the monster within and face his childhood tormentor in a brutal symbiote showdown at the burned-out asylum where their nightmare began—forcing him to choose between the power of Venom and his own humanity.
