After having his mainstream breakthrough with the Wes Craven slasher film Scream in 1996, American composer
Marco Beltrami became closely associated with his stirring, percussive orchestral scores for horror, action, and science fiction movies, including further collaborations with Craven. His first of multiple Academy Award nominations came with the 2007 remake of the western
3:10 to Yuma. Fifteen years after the first installment, 2011's
Scream 4 was his fourth straight score for the series. In 2015,
Beltrami collaborated with
Philip Glass on music for the Marvel Comics film Fantastic Four, and in 2018, his score was one of the few things that could be heard in the hit horror movie
A Quiet Place. He followed up two years later with A Quiet Place Part II, and returned to Marvel without
Glass for 2021's Venom.
A New York native,
Beltrami attended Brown University and the Yale School of Music, eventually studying with
Luigi Nono in Italy before apprenticing with none other than
Jerry Goldsmith in Los Angeles. He got his professional start in film and television in the early '90s, earning his first main composer credit on 1994's Death Match. He scored projects including the horror film The Whispering (1995) and the syndicated TV drama Land's End (1995-1996) before Scream hit theaters in late 1996. He went on to compose music for Guillermo del Toro (1997's
Mimic) and
Robert Rodriguez (1998's
The Faculty) as well as reuniting with Craven for Scream 2 (1998) before the end of the decade.
Beltrami kicked off the next decade with 2000's
Scream 3 (directed by Craven) and
Dracula 2000 (executive produced by Craven). Highlights from the next several years included
Blade II (his Marvel debut), 2003's Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, 2004's
Hellboy (again with
del Toro) and
I, Robot starring
Will Smith. In the meantime, he also contributed to the final four seasons of TV's The Practice. In 2008, his work on
3:10 to Yuma earned
Beltrami his first Academy Award nomination for Best Original Score, with a second one arriving two years later for Best Picture winner
The Hurt Locker.
Beltrami collaborated on two final films for Wes Craven,
My Soul to Take and
Scream 4, in the early 2010s. They turned out to be Craven's last directorial projects before he died of cancer in 2015.
In the meantime,
Beltrami returned to the world of Marvel for the X-Men franchise entry
The Wolverine in 2013. The year 2015 brought the release of another
Beltrami-Marvel film, Fantastic Four, and a score
Beltrami composed with
Philip Glass.
The Wolverine sequel Logan followed in 2017. A year later,
Beltrami's
A Quiet Place score was nominated for a Golden Globe.
Beltrami diversified with music for films like the 2018 Nat Geo rock climbing documentary Free Solo, a collaboration with composer
Brandon Roberts. It won them an Emmy for Outstanding Music Composition for a Documentary Series or Special. Late in the decade, he also scored the racing biopic
Ford v. Ferrari (2019, with
Buck Sanders) and the art-collecting satire Velvet Buzzsaw (2019, also with
Sanders) while working on horror projects such as
Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark (2019, with
Anna Drubich) and A Quiet Place Part II (2020). During that time, he and
Brandon Roberts also partnered on a television reboot of The Twilight Zone. Still composing collaboratively in 2021, his output included the series Nine Perfect Strangers (with
Miles Hankins) and the R.L. Stine Fear Street trilogy of films (with
Roberts,
Drubich, and
Marcus Trumpp). He took sole credit for that year's Marvel blockbuster Venom: Let There Be Carnage. ~ Marcy Donelson