
Age: 48
male
Brian Theodore Tyler (born May 8, 1972) is an American composer, conductor, arranger, multi-instrumentalist and musician best known for his film, television, and video game scores. In his 26-year career, Tyler has scored seven instalments of the Fast & Furious franchise, Aliens vs Predator: Requiem, Rambo, Eagle Eye, The Expendables trilogy, Iron Man 3, Now You See Me, Avengers: Age of Ultron alongside Danny Elfman, Crazy Rich Asians and The Super Mario Bros. Movie among others. He also composed and re-arranged the current fanfare of the Universal Pictures logo, composed initially by Jerry Goldsmith, for Universal Pictures' 100th anniversary, which debuted with The Lorax (2012), and composed the 2013–2016 Marvel Studios logo, which debuted with Thor: The Dark World (2013), which he also composed the film's score. He composed the NFL Sunday Countdown Theme for ESPN, the Formula One theme (also used in Formula 2 and Formula 3), and the anthem for the Esports World Cup. He is also behind the soundtracks of many television series, including Yellowstone, 1883, and 1923, all with Breton Vivian. For his work as a film composer, he won the IFMCA Awards 2014 Composer of the Year. His composition for the film Last Call earned him the first of three Emmy nominations, a gold record, and induction into the music branch of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. As of November 2017, his films have grossed $12 billion worldwide, putting him in the top 10 highest-grossing film composers of all time. Description above from the Wikipedia article Brian Tyler, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Brian Tyler

Composer
for Composer in X-Men Part One: Uprising / X-Men Part Two: The Iron Law / X-Men Part Three: Aftermath
Suggested by sergeykirievskiy

Part One: In a near-present world where mutants have only recently become publicly known, society begins to fracture under fear, misinformation, and rising violence. Professor Charles Xavier forms the X-Men not as traditional superheroes, but as a crisis-response team designed to prevent catastrophe and stabilize an increasingly volatile world. Meanwhile, Magneto and the Brotherhood of Mutants conclude that coexistence is already a failed idea. Their actions begin as calculated strikes against systems they see as oppressive, but the movement fractures as younger radicals push it toward uncontrolled violence, while Mystique operates in the shadows, accelerating conflict through manipulation, infiltration, and political sabotage. Part Two: As governments enforce sweeping mutant control measures under the guise of security, society quietly shifts into surveillance and detainment. The X-Men become a covert rescue force operating in an increasingly authoritarian world. Rogue and Gambit navigate an expanding underground network of mutant resistance, while Magneto’s ideology hardens and the Brotherhood fractures under rising extremism. Mystique escalates covert manipulation across both human and mutant institutions.The introduction of the Sentinel program marks a turning point, evolving from protection into systematic persecution. Part Three: As mutant-human tensions reach a fragile plateau after the Sentinel crisis, the world is not yet at peace—but at the edge of it. During this uncertain transition, evidence surfaces pointing to Mister Sinister, a geneticist who has been quietly observing and subtly influencing key moments of escalation—not as a direct controller, but as an analyst studying how conflict shapes evolution. His discovery reframes years of history, forcing both humans and mutants to confront an uncomfortable truth: the cycles of fear and retaliation were not imposed from above, but amplified from within.
