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With one race, the life stories of Gatlin and Bolt have changed

August 6, 2017 by  
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12:29 AM ET

LONDON — On Usain Bolt’s last day of being the fastest man alive, he crossed paths with Justin Gatlin underneath Olympic Stadium. They had just finished their first heats of the 100-meter dash. Gatlin was doing an interview in the media tunnel. Bolt, walking past Gatlin from behind, pantomimed a karate kick to Gatlin’s head, delivered his world-famous grin, and sauntered off.

That was Friday, when Bolt was still invincible, on his way to immortality and the final individual race of his career. The moment captured the gulf between the mighty Bolt, toying with lesser athletes and prevailing time after time, and the beleaguered Gatlin, track and field’s punching bag who labored in Bolt’s shadow.

Then came Saturday.

Bolt finishing third in the World Championships was as inconceivable as Steph Curry dunking on LeBron James, Ronaldo scoring on his own goal, or Tom Brady being traded to the New York Jets. Since Bolt’s first Olympic victory in 2008, no one had ever outrun him in a championship. Yes, he was often slow out of the starting blocks, but the Jamaican always chased everyone down with his unmatchable top-end speed.

Now the so-called drug villain defeated the savior. As if anyone in the sport can be truly counted on to be clean. Even Bolt, whose one-year improvement from 10.03 to 9.69 in the 100 has been questioned by such royalty as Carl Lewis, and whose country has had less-than-stringent testing procedures.

Even without the good-versus-evil narrative, Gatlin has earned redemption.

He won gold in the 100 at the 2004 Athens Games, before Bolt came on the scene. In 2006, Gatlin tested positive. (He had previously served an arguably unfair one-year suspension while at the University of Tennessee for a stimulant in his prescribed attention deficit disorder medication.) In 2008, while Gatlin was serving his suspension, Bolt took over with a 9.69 world record.

Bolt proceeded to build his legend, winning gold in the 100, 200 and 4×100 at the Beijing, London and Rio Olympics, and lowering his 100 world record to 9.58 at the 2009 worlds in Berlin. Gatlin could only beat him once, in an insignificant 2013 race when Bolt was coming off an injury. The challenge embedded itself so deeply in Gatlin’s psyche that, in the 2015 world championships, Gatlin led an out-of-shape Bolt in the final meters but tightened up, stumbled through the finish and lost by .01 of a second.

But the two life stories changed Saturday. Bolt is still the greatest sprinter in history and one of the most dominant athletes ever, but he has finally been humbled. And Gatlin will always be the Man Who Beat Bolt.

How could this have happened?

Bolt turns 31 on Aug. 21. His balky back bothered him this season. He dislikes training. He chose not to run the 200 at this meet because the preparation was too grueling. In April, he was devastated by the death of one of his best friends, British high jumper Germaine Mason, who died in a motorcycle crash in Jamaica after seeing Bolt that same night.

But Bolt had overcome injuries and lack of preparation many times before. That top gear always kicked in. It’s safe to assume Bolt was overconfident coming into London. “I’m not worried about losing,” Bolt told me in May. “The 100 meters, it’s much more technical than anything else. As long as I get in shape and work on my technical aspect of training, I’ll be fine.”

Gatlin’s winning time of 9.92 is slow for a world championship. Bolt won Rio in 9.81; Gatlin finished second in 9.89. Gatlin deserves immense credit for seizing the moment and finally conquering his nemesis, but Bolt should always regret leaving the door open for Gatlin to win.

Bolt could have retired at the pinnacle, after Rio. He will run the 4×100 here, which has suddenly become a competition rather than a valediction. Then he will retire. Gatlin, meanwhile, says his young son wants to go to the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.

In recent years, Bolt has spoken often of standing alongside the likes of Michael Jordan and Muhammad Ali, larger-than-life figures who transcended sports. Now, Bolt’s ending is more like Jordan’s and Ali’s than he would have liked. Jordan could have exited with the winning shot in the NBA Finals but came back a shell of himself with the Wizards. Ali was sadly and brutally pummeled in his final fight.

They all stayed too long.

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‘Dark Tower’ Composer Junkie XL Wants Score to "Make You Extremely Uncomfortable"

August 5, 2017 by  
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Dark Tower composer Tom Holkenborg, aka Junkie XL, has worked on some of the biggest blockbusters of the past two decades, with credits on films like Mad Max: Fury Road, Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice and Deadpool.

Holkenborg invited The Hollywood Reporter into his studio — which happens to look more like a spacecraft — for a private tour of his hit-making labyrinth and to give a behind-the-scenes look at his creative inspiration for The Dark Tower‘s emotive soundtrack. He also offered up some advice for producers looking to venture into film composing. 

“It’s very thematically driven, whereas some of my other film scores are very sound-driven,” Holkenborg says of how The Dark Tower differs from his other work. “In this case, it’s a combination of how melodies and harmonies are used in combination with sounds.”

The Stephen King adaptation, directed by Nikolaj Arcel, primarily takes place in two distinct worlds: New York City, aka our world, and Mid-World, which is where the gunslinger Roland Deschain (Idris Elba) and the Man in Black (Matthew McConaughey) are locked in a struggle of good vs. evil. Deschain’s mission is to save the mythical Dark Tower, which protects all worlds.

“I had to fall back on a lot of different types of instruments that don’t really exist, you make them up as you go,” Holkenborg says of creating the sonic aesthetic of Mid-World. “One of the things we used extensively was a guitar and a bunch of really outlandish guitar pedals.”

The process paid off.

“I made these really weird ambient sounds and then we turned that in samples and in hardware to play them a certain way. That created a really unique ambiance that you can’t really tell what it is. That combined with a cast of colors really made a nice atmosphere for the other world,” he says.

Bringing Roland to life became Holkenborg’s first task during the scoring process. Inside the gun-toting, stoic badass is a damaged man whose demons are layered into the ultra-emotive, champion theme music.

“It’s a theme that needs to be emotional. He’s the last one left,” says the composer of Roland, whose fellow gunslingers have died out. “He also lost his dad a long time ago, so it needed to have an emotional quality, a sad quality. At the same time, the theme needed to be able to develop to something really heroic when finally at the end of the movie he really stands up to what he was meant to do in the first place — and that’s being a hero and a gunslinger and protect the world.”

Meanwhile, the Man in Black’s devilish comportment attracts the complete opposite musical treatment, with his themes sounding more like a clash of distorted noises that painfully stab the ears.

“The sound approach to Matthew McConaughey’s character is not necessarily melodic-driven, it’s sound-driven,” says Holkenborg, “which I actually made with modular synthesizers and other sounds and programs. These really eerie sounds that make you extremely uncomfortable when you listen to them.” 

According to Holkenborg, the process of constructing the soundtrack was a collaborative one with director Arcel.

“He is so involved in the creative process of all the different areas in making a film, not only directing but also with the music,” he remarks. “We massaged the score constantly, then the picture would change and we need to change things here and change things there.”

Arcel even used Holkenborg’s elaborate production studio to take a mental break from long production hours on the set. 

“He was here almost once a week for the last couple of months and the last month or so he was here two, three times a week. He really felt it as a breakaway from the production office,” he says. “So many people needed his attention. For him it was just a great break to hang here in the studio and just play music, enjoy music and work on it together.”

Originally a music producer in the electronica sphere, with focuses on trance and big beat, Holkenborg gained notoriety with projects like 1997′s Saturday Teenage KickRadio JXL: A Broadcast From the Computer Hell Cabin and a world-renowned remix of Elvis Presley’s “A Little Less Conversation.” He credits his transition over to film scoring to his production skills. He also stresses the importance of seeking an apprenticeship with established composers.

“It really helped me to create more colors to score instead of just being a composer,” he says of his production skills. “[Otherwise] I would have to rely on a lot of session players and other people that would come up with ideas regarding that. The most successful road to become a film composer is actually assisting other composers for a really good amount of time.”

Holkeborg said the most valuable lesson learned from mentor and collaborator Hans Zimmer is to connect with everyone working on the project, including directors and people at the film studios.

“The job as a composer is that you are a movie maker together with the director and other people that work on it,” says Holkenborg. “The director is steering the ship where it needs to go, but you’re all storytelling with sounds and melodies and harmonies to help emphasize the characters in the film and the drama as it’s unfolding.”

The Dark Tower is in theaters now.

The Dark Tower

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