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From Dusk Till Dawn: Music from the Motion Picture is the soundtrack album for the 1996 action-comedy-horror film, From Dusk till Dawn, directed by Robert Rodriguez and screenplay by Quentin Tarantino. The album is predominantly Texas blues, featuring such artists as ZZ Top, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jimmie Vaughan.
From Dusk till Dawn is an American horror franchise by the writers and directors Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez.To date, it includes a motion picture, two direct-to-video sequels, a video game, a comic book, collectable statues, and a TV series.
From Dusk till Dawn premiered on January 17, 1996, at the Cinerama Dome theater in Hollywood, Los Angeles, [5] and was released on January 19 in the United States. It initially received mixed reviews from critics, who described the film as well-made if overly violent.
It experienced a resurgence in popularity after being prominently featured in the 1996 Robert Rodriguez film From Dusk Till Dawn as the opening and closing song. It also featured as the main theme in the 2005 motion picture, Dark Night.
From Dusk till Dawn: The Series is an American horror television series developed by Robert Rodriguez.It forms part of the franchise of film, direct-to-video, and comics of From Dusk till Dawn, expanding on the chronicles of the Gecko Brothers, Seth and Richie, the Fuller family, and Santanico Pandemonium. [1]
Vampires are one of the most metaphor-rich monsters imaginable, but From Dusk Till Dawn doesn’t really bother with any of that. It doesn’t even bother with being a vampire movie for the first ...
"She's Just Killing Me" is a song by rock band ZZ Top, [1] released as the first single from their 1996 album, Rhythmeen. The single was promoting the film From Dusk till Dawn where it was featured as well as on its soundtrack, which also includes "Mexican Blackbird" from the 1975 album Fandango!.
The ending theme "From Dusk Till Dawn" is performed by Abingdon Boys School, who previously did the first opening theme for Darker than Black. The vocalist Takanori Nishikawa stated the ending's purpose was to express multiple affection in a limited time. [5] "From Dusk Till Dawn" sold 22,923 copies in Japan. [6]