
Age: 58
male
Michael Giacchino (/dʒəˈkiːnoʊ/ jə-KEE-noh; Italian: [dʒakˈkiːno]; born October 10, 1967) is an American film, television, and video game score composer. He has received many accolades for his work, including an Academy Award for Up (2009), an Emmy for Lost (2004), and three Grammy Awards. Giacchino is known for his collaborations with directors J. J. Abrams, Brad Bird, Matt Reeves, Pete Docter, Colin Trevorrow, Jon Watts, Gareth Edwards, Drew Goddard, J. A. Bayona, The Wachowskis, Taika Waititi, and Thomas Bezucha. His film scores include several films from the Mission: Impossible, Jurassic World, Marvel Cinematic Universe, Star Trek reboot series, eight Pixar Animation Studios films, multiple Disney films, Rogue One, The Batman, and several other films. He also composed the score for the video game series Medal of Honour and Call of Duty and the television series Alias, Lost, and Fringe. In 2018, he ventured into directing and, in 2022, directed the Marvel Studios Disney+ special Werewolf by Night. Description above from the Wikipedia article Michael Giacchino, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Michael Giacchino

Composer
for Composer in Shadow Infinitus: Primal Island
Suggested by alecgroskreutz1

hadow Infinitus: Primal Island is about when Shadow, Sonic, Silver, Calibur, Tails, Amy, Knuckles, Sally, Rouge, Charmy, Vector, Espio, Omega-123, Lirium, Andy, Elise, Luna, Silver Fox, and Susana are on their journey to island along with the military soldiers including Col. John Rambo and their helicptors are going to the island as well known as Marshosborn Island, named after both Othniel Marsh, and Henry Osborn. The strange primitive island is packed with dinosaurs and other extinct animals, with native humans, early human-like apes, and terrorist lizard people who take women hostage, and forced them to strip nude and make them as their sex slaves, or placed them to sacrificial stone when they'd cut their chests open and rip their hearts out, or sacrificed them by feeding them to predatory dinosaurs, but they not sacrificing women, but men too. it's kind of reminds me of the rip-off version of Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park, Turok, Sid and Marty Krofft's Land of the Lost, and Sir Arthor Conan Doyle's The Lost World.