I noticed there are a lot of hard rock fans out there, some 80's pop, and I believe someone even suggested New York, New York by Sinatra. Last one first, Queen did a version of NY, NY hard (briefly) in the original Highlander.
I'm not much of an expert in soundtracks (the songs in the movies) and I'd probably get flamed for my picks. Scores, however, are another thing entirely.
Someone I would elect to score the movie (from a list of three total):
James Horner (Aliens, Willow, Titanic, Battle Beyond the Stars, etc) - this guy has done every genre that has been thrown out there and he has NEVER done a bad job. Picture in The Tomb, Jack fleeing from the rakoshi and the booming track of "Bishop's Gambit" (number 17 on the cd if I recall) is thundering as Jack makes it out just before everything behind him turns into a huge fireball. Eh? Eh? Actually have Horner repeat what he did for "Aliens" for RJ. He could do it.
Klaus Badelt. He's been the center of controversy since he's been accused of paligiarizing (sp?) Hans Zimmer's work in "Pirates of the Caribbean." (He was accused of copying music from "Gladiator" and using it for PofC) Whatever. Ever seen "The Time Machine" from a couple of years ago starring Guy Pierce? The sequence of the Traveller going into the future, the sweeping, grandiose music accompanying that scene? I think Klaus could adapt to an RJ movie quite nicely.
Lastly, and this is an odd one, Collin O'Malley. Superman Returns the Video Game. I have the soundtrack (I have friends at DC who forwarded me a copy when I used to review comics, mostly CrossGen and DC). Collin has a couple of pieces that (basically) are identical. "Bizarro" and "Guardian of Metropolis" I truly think would apply to an RJ film with a little adjusting to make the music a little darker. The whole score is good, and might even fit with timing into an RJ movie.
Anyone wanting me to share music, I have no problem with that. SHARING, not SELLING. I'd love to know what you all think.
May the forces of evil become confused on the way to your house. - George Carlin