Showing posts with label movie art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movie art. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

More reimagined movie posters

I am quite liking this trend.

Last October, the New York Times served up a piece on Mondo, "an offshoot of the Austin, Tex., theater chain Alamo Drafthouse. It commissions artists to design alternative versions of posters for films considered cult or genre pictures." Before that, Wired gave some feature attention to a number of the artists I link to below.

I could click through Mondo Archive and Reelizer ("The fine art of film art") all day. And I want to write books just so Olly Moss can do the cover art.

Alex Kittle  (via Fuck Yeah, Movie Posters!)



Joel Amat Güell at unHollywood


Bart van Ackooij

Eye Noise via Alamo Draft House | Reelizer

Jason Munn via Mondo Archive (If there's already a classic of the form, that Bonnie and Clyde art is it.)



Olly Moss via Mondo Archive


Nick Hollomon via Rectangular Film via Collections | Reelizer

Oliver Barrett via The Astor Theater | Reelizer


Laz Marquez via Hitchcock Re-Envisioned | Reelizer


Martin Ansin via Universal Monsters | Reelizer


Related posts:



Monday, January 23, 2012

For your consideration — "So much for that 'Intermission' " edition

Addenda to my December 21 collection of "the Year's Best Movies" lists:


Also not surprisingly, you'll find some titles shared across both of those lists.

Meanwhile, Julie at Misfortune Cookie offers the Best overlooked and underappreciated performances of 2011 and Roger Ebert declares They wuz robbed.

IndieWire/Press Play: The winners of the Vertigoed contest — In response to the foofaraw (given a wobbly rocket boost by Kim Novak) over that pivotal scene in The Artist scored to a distinctive Bernard Herrmann cue from Hitchock's Vertigo, the Press Play staff launched a contest among their readers. Rule #1:

Take the same Herrmann cue -- "Scene D'Amour," used in this memorable moment from Vertigo -- and match it with a clip from any film.... Is there any clip, no matter how silly, nonsensical, goofy or foul, that the score to Vertigo can't ennoble? Let's find out!

And so they did. The results are in. Click here for the full scoop on the contest, its criteria, and the judges, followed by the Grand Prizewinner — STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN, by Jake Isgar — the four finalists, and some special awards (e.g., Citation for Homoerotic Grandeur: TOP GUN by De Maltese Valk).

My glowering assessment of that Vertigo cue in The Artist is here.


NPR: Movie Titles That Might Have Been — From Teenage Sex Comedy That Can Be Made for Under 10 Million Dollars, That Your Reader Will Love But the Executive Will Hate to (wait for it) American Pie.


How many movies will we watch over a lifetime? AD Jameson is keeping track of his own number — 1,925 so far:
That doesn’t sound like too many, not after fifteen years of avid cinephilia. But to put it in some perspective, that’s roughly 128 feature films/year, or about one every three days. ... We found last week that there have been at least 268,246 features made. (Since then, the IMDb’s count has grown to 268,601.) So I’ve seen little more than .7% of them—and remember, I think that IMDb count far too low.
Why he has given so many poor ratings to contemporary movies:
The more you watch from the present day, the more garbage you’re bound to see—but your conclusions will be your own. Conversely, the further back you go, the more you’ll be guided by the opinions of others. (If nothing else, what’s available will be largely determined by what’s remained popular.)


"What if..." Movies reimagined for another time & place — Artist Peter Stults asks "...what if movies we were all familiar with were made in a different slice of time? Who would be in it? Who would direct it?"





Saturday, December 17, 2011

Classic movie posters reimagined

Artist David O'Daniel silk-screens by hand new movie posters for San Francisco's Castro Theatre. Every film gets a unique treatment with metallic and iridescent inks in a style that hits my eyes as some elaborate Deco-Mucha-metallo-snakeskin-retropunk fusion that I find irresistible.

And you know what's really cool? You can buy limited-edition prints of them at his website (at least those that haven't already sold out).
















Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Polish posters for classic movies

I bought one of these Chaplin prints and became so mesmerized by the rest of the striking, eyeball-yanking pieces available that I have to share a small sample here. I can easily imagine collecting these prints in a serious (and expensive) way. At Polish Posters Shop you can learn about the artists and buy all sorts of mind-noodling Polish posters. The site has an entire category dedicated to film art from various countries. Links to sales pages for individual titles are below.


Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator, The Gold Rush, and The Kid
Designers: Joanna Górska, Jerzy Skakun
Also Polish Posters Shop (Dictator, Gold Rush, The Kid)
Related: "Chaplin" tagged posts


The General, Buster Keaton
Designed by Waldemar Swierzy


Rosemary's Baby, Roman Polanski
Designed by Wieslaw Walkuski


The Elephant Man, David Lynch
Designed by Leszek Zebrowski


The Time Machine, George Pal
Designed by Marian Stachurski


One Million Years B.C., Don Chaffey
Designed by Bohdan Butenko


Raiders of the Lost Ark, Steven Spielberg
Designed by Andrzej Krajewski


One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Milos Forman
Designed by Leszek Zebrowski


Chinatown, Roman Polanski
Designed by Andrzej Krajewski


Cabaret, Bob Fosse
Designed by Wiktor Gorka


Alien, Ridley Scott
Designed by Jakub Erol


Aliens, James Cameron
Designed by: (unavailable)
 sci-fimovieposters.co.uk


Annie Hall, Woody Allen
Designed by Joanna Gorska, Jerzy Skakun


Young Frankenstein, Mel Brooks
Designed by Jerzy Flisak


Raging Bull, Martin Scorsese
Designed by Leszek Zebrowski


Son of Godzilla, Jun Fukuda
Designed by Zuzanna Lipinska


Ran and The Seven Samurai, Akira Kurosawa
Designed by Andrzej Pagowski
Polish Posters Shop (Ran, Samurai)


Close Encounters of the Third Kind
Designed by Andrzej Pagowski
Found via Boing Boing


Also see:
A Gray Space Poster Gallery
Make Polish Movie Posters!