
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 The S.C.P Foundation: The Sculpture
Suggested by misterwolf

The S.C.P Foundation: The Sculpture is a 2025 American science fiction action film based on SCP-173 / The Sculpture. It was produced by Legendary Pictures and RatPac-Dune Entertainment and written by Ridley Scott and Guillermo del Toro. Directed by Matt Reeves, co-produced by Zack Snyder, and edited by James Wan, the film stars Lauren Cohan, Vera Farmiga, Jude Law, Norman Reedus, Donald Glover, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Danai Gurira, Laurie Holden, David Harbour, and Laurence Fishburne. Alice is told of an S.C.P creature called the Sculpture, known scientifically as SCP-173. She heads out to seek the help of her sister Carol and others so she can succeed in capturing or killing the creature. The Sculpture premiered in Los Angeles on January 5th, 2025; releasing on February 16th, the film received generally positive reviews, with praise for the action sequences, visual effects, and Cohan's performance. It was also a financial success like the other two films, grossing $987 million worldwide against its break-even point of $146 million. A sequel entitled The S.C.P Foundation: The Last Hunt was released a year later.