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The Act of Seeing, Synthetically: James Benning's "Ruhr" (2009, USA)

25Jan10

by Matthew Flanagan

Master filmmaker James Benning turns for the first time to digital video for his documentary on the Ruhr valley.

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Jean Simmons, 1929 - 2010

23Jan10

by David Hudson

A roundup of appreciations of the great actress, star of Angel Face, Elmer Gantry, Black Narcissus, and more.

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Sundance 2010.

21Jan10

by David Hudson

A roundup of all the essential coverage and reviews from the Sundance Film Festival.

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Peeking Around Corners: Writing "A Letter to Uncle Boonmee" With Joe

21Jan10

by Ryland Walker Knight

An appreciation of Apichatpong Weerasethakul's new short film, now playing globally on The Auteurs.

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Movie Poster of the Week has been at the International Film Festival Rotterdam this past week, scouting some brand new poster art from around the world. Next week I'll be posting a larger selection of what I've been seeing, but this is one of my favorites and one of the first to catch my eye. Directed by Robert Patton-Spruill, and having its world premiere in Rotterdam, Do It Again documents Boston rock critic Geoff Edgers' quest to reunite The Kinks. A glorified episode of Bands Reunited (which I don't mean disparagingly since I mourn that show's demise), though as much a portrait of the overly optimistic Edgers than of his favorite band, the film features a remarkably accommodating Sting, a wide-eyed Zooey Deschanel, and a marvellously pissed off Paul Weller among its interviewees.

The superb poster was drawn by Dave Plunkert of Baltimore-based Spur Design, more of whose remarkably witty illustration can be seen on his website. He also designed this poster for the gaming doc The Dungeon Masters, which won the best poster award at last year's South by Southwest.

Related Films

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Do It Again

Dir Robert Patton-Spruill

2010 United States

4 Comments

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The stark and gorgeous Japanese poster for Martin Scorsese’s long-awaited Shutter Island eschews the one thing that has dominated the posters for the last four Scorsese features, and that’s the looming noggin of Leonardo DiCaprio. In anticipation of that film I thought I'd gather together some other foreign Scorsese posters, with the help of our friends at Posteritati.

Last year I wrote about Peter Strausfield’s superb woodcut designs for the Academy Cinema in London, but the holy grail for Strausfield collectors is his Mean Streets poster, one of which sold at Christie’s in 2006 for $11,400.

Mean Streets seems to have inspired more different designs than any of Scorsese’s films. Below we have two Italian and two Spanish-language posters (one Argentinian, not sure of the provenance of the one on the far right). Then one Czech and two Japanese Raging Bull posters, and three Polish posters: for Taxi Driver, New York, New York and an especially striking, and typically surreal, design for After Hours.

Related Films

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Shutter Island

Dir Martin Scorsese

2010 United States

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Mean Streets

Dir Martin Scorsese

1973 United States

4 Comments

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To accompany the IFC Center’s inspired midnight movie series “Base Instincts: Verhoeven in the U.S.A.” I wanted to find something pretty special. Verhoeven’s Hollywood posters are all iconic and effective and way too well known (scroll to the bottom if you need a refresher). And with the exception of the superbly trashy painted posters for Flesh + Blood they are all very much of a kind. Even the Polish poster for Robocop (“Superglina”) is not particularly interesting, at least by Polish poster standards. But a year ago Austin’s Alamo Drafthouse Cinema commissioned this superb Robocop poster from illustrator Tyler Stout. With his original designs for, among others, The Warriors, The Big Lebowski, Inglourious Basterds, Blade Runner, The Thing and Verhoeven’s Total Recall, Stout has become the art star of the Alamo. His intricate, crowded, multi-character canvases are instantly recognizable with their vector art updating of the style of Drew Struzan’s more populous canvases. Though Stout often works on a computer, the Robocop poster was completely hand drawn in one piece. What makes this poster extra-special though is the ultra-limited edition printed on a sheet of metal, which of course makes perfect sense. Only 35 were made and sold for $400 a piece.

Stout’s screen prints can be purchased from Poster Cabaret, or his own website, though they sell out quickly. And you can read interviews with him here and here.

Related Films

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RoboCop

Dir Paul Verhoeven

1987 United States

5 Comments

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I was thrilled to get an email this week from Akiko Stehrenberger, the designer of my favorite movie poster of the last decade. She had been told by friends about her chart-topping appearance and agreed to do an interview for this column. Akiko is an illustrator and art director who lives in L.A. and has been designing movie posters since 2004.

***

ADRIAN CURRY: First of all, the one thing I've always found most alluring about the Funny Games poster is that I’ve never been quite sure whether it’s an illustration or a photograph.

AKIKO STEHRENBERGER: You are correct in not being sure. It is a digital illustration with a ton of noise on it to roughen it up. Warner Independent expressed interest in a certain scene from the film. We had such an incredibly limited budget that there were no resources to get a hi-res film grab. I literally sat at my personal computer and, in slow motion, chose a frame from the movie I thought would work best. I worked off a very tiny dvd screenshot, maybe 4"x4" and 72 dpi at best and used it as the base. With a background in illustration, and a stubborness for painting tangibly for many years, it was the first time I had decided to illustrate digitally, but I felt it was appropriate.

CURRY: Did you want people to think it was an illustration or a photograph, or was that deliberately unclear? It always reminded me of a Photorealist painting, like an early Chuck Close.

STEHRENBERGER: It sort of spontaneously took a life of its own. It was clear from the get go that the DVD screen grab was unusable as is. The client mentioned that we may eventually have access to a hi-res film pull, but I knew if I wanted it to have a chance, especially while being presented with a plethora of other polished posters by other designers, I knew I was going to have to put some serious magic into it. At first I was just going to try to retouch the screen grab blown up to a poster size, but clearly it was impossible. Next thing I knew, I became obsessed with digitally painting it, and it became what you see today. The look is what drew people to it. And while the client could have used the digital illustration as a place holder until there was eventual access to the film grab, it's the look the client ended up taking and running with.

  Read More

Related Films

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Funny Games U.S.

Dir Michael Haneke

2007 United States

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500 Days of Summer

Dir Marc Webb

2009 United States

5 Comments

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After a few weeks of round-ups of the decade's and year’s best posters I figured it was time to step back in time to something a little more classic.

At a screening of Andrea Arnold’s excellent new film Fish Tank at the Brooklyn Academy of Music this week, actor Michael Fassbender talked about Arnold’s unusual working methods: how she never lets her actors see a complete script and how they only know what’s going to happen to their characters a week ahead of time. Fassbender, who plays a charming young Irishman who lights up the lives of a mother and her two daughters on a bleak Essex council estate, said that he wondered if the film was going to turn out "like that Italian film with Terence Stamp where he ends up sleeping with the whole family." That film of course being Pasolini's 1968 Teorema in which Stamp beds an entire upper-class Milanese family, including the maid.

The gorgeously spare and wintry Japanese poster for Teorema is dominated not by Stamp but by mirrored images of the lovely Silvana Mangano who plays the mother. Posteritati also sells a stunning 20" x 58" version though it doesn't come cheap. The US poster below, though quote heavy (but what quotes!), is also very striking.

Related Films

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Teorema

Dir Pier Paolo Pasolini

1968 Italy

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Fish Tank

Dir Andrea Arnold

2009 United Kingdom

3 Comments

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Since it’s no secret by now that The Girlfriend Experience is my favorite movie poster of the year and since I already selected a few of these for my Best of the Decade post I decided not to rank this selection of my twenty favorites of 2009—except aesthetically. Happy New Year, thanks for reading and here’s to more dazzling design in 2010.

Related Films

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Wild Grass

Dir Alain Resnais

2009 France

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The Headless Woman

Dir Lucrecia Martel

2008 Argentina

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Two Lovers

Dir James Gray

2008 United States

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Antichrist

Dir Lars von Trier

2009 Denmark

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The Limits of Control

Dir Jim Jarmusch

2009 United States

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Ricky

Dir François Ozon

2009 France

10 Comments

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Last week I posted my selection of the decade's best movie posters: a post which attracted a remarkable amount of attention, not least from the estimable Roger Ebert, who posted his rival choices on his blog. The Auteurs contributor Andrew Grant, a.k.a. Filmbrain, was also inspired to post his own favorites, many of which are absolute knockouts. We also received a phenomenal and rather humbling response on our forum, enough to convince me that I need to do a follow-up post. There were some rather dubious choices which I won't name, but there were also plenty of stunning foreign posters that I had never seen before, which is what we were really hoping to see. I'd like to give a special shout-out to “Samantha” who has posted an extraordinary selection of good stuff.

More than a few people suggested that I should have included the poster for Vincent Gallo’s The Brown Bunny in my top ten, but there was less agreement on which poster for The Brown Bunny, as there seem to be quite a few. This one is my favorite and was definitely a contender. In that spirit, I have selected eleven more suggestions that I hadn’t seen before from the forum and from the comments, ones which could have quite easily made the grade. This process has definitely crystallized what it is I love in movie poster design: minimalism, abstraction, use of negative space and bold color, among other things. And occasionally I even sway from my love of minimalist typography (as in Funny Games) in favor of something florid and unusual (see Tropical Malady and Innocence below, as well as Palindromes last week).

Many thanks to Stan Oh at Posteritati for showing me the amazing Japanese poster for one of my favorite films of the decade: Bela Tarr’s Werckmeister Harmonies. The Japanese posters for The Darjeeling Limited and Paris je t'aime below are also quite lovely. The first of my choices below is for the oddly titled Korean film With the Girl of Black Soil (which is actually a live-action film) and the rest should be self-explanatory. Of course there are plenty of other great posters on the forum but these in particular stopped me in my tracks.

Related Films

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Werckmeister Harmonies

Dir Béla Tarr & Ágnes Hranitzky

2000 Hungary

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Paris, I Love You

Dir Olivier Assayas, Frédéric Auburtin, Emmanuel Benbihy…

2006 France

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Innocence

Dir Lucile Hadzihalilovic

2004 Belgium

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Last Life in the Universe

Dir Pen-Ek Ratanaruang

2003 Thailand

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Tropical Malady

Dir Apichatpong Weerasethakul

2004 Thailand

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Syndromes and a Century

Dir Apichatpong Weerasethakul

2006 Thailand

5 Comments

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Trawling through databases of all the movie posters released in the past ten years and trying to remember my ten favorites, two things stand out: that only a very small percentage qualify as great pieces of design in their own right (there are far fewer contenders for movie poster of the decade than there are for movie of the decade for sure); and that my favorite posters have little bearing on my favorite films. In fact, I haven’t even seen the first two films on the list (OK, I just started watching the first one on HBO the other day, but I have yet to finish it). I present this list as an eclectic personal selection of posters in which graphic simplicity and typographic elegance count most of all, as well as one poster which has neither but which I love for different reasons.

We welcome your own picks for Movie Poster of the Decade on our brand new forum thread where we especially hope to discover great posters from around the world that we might not have seen before. And feel free to agree or disagree with my choices in the comments below.

1. FUNNY GAMES (2007)

I realize that it is ironic that this is my pick for the best movie poster of the decade since we all know that the enemy of good movie poster design is the big celebrity close-up or the floating head. The Funny Games poster is after all nothing more than a giant close-up of Naomi Watts. But this poster both subverts and transcends that convention. I've never actually been sure whether this is a photograph or a Chuck Close-like Photorealist painting. If it is a painting then it is an exact rendition of a frame of the film, though rendered monochrome and with the background blacked out. That frame is a moment of abject terror and misery for Watts' character in the film, and yet the image on the poster, while vibrant with emotion, is also beautiful and eerily calm (and reminiscent of course of Anna Karina watching Falconetti in Vivre Sa Vie). Add to that the perfectly restrained and impeccably placed Helvetica type, and that tagline practically begging the viewer not to watch the film (if you’ve seen the Austrian original you know exactly what you’re in for) and I would challenge you to find a more striking and more indelible movie poster these past ten years.

2. THE SAVAGES (2007)

There is not enough illustration in movie posters these days, which makes Chris Ware’s poster for The Savages all the more special. Once again every element of this poster is perfectly arranged (OK, maybe the credit block is a bit too dominant for my liking), and I could look at it for hours. Philip Seymour Hoffman was memorably illustrated by Daniel Clowes (Ghost World) in 1998 in the poster for Happiness and so I initially thought this was by Clowes, but it definitely has more of the geometric precision and interest in typography of Ware (Jimmy Corrigan, the Smartest Kid on Earth). See also the Motel poster among the runners-up for another great graphic-novel-style design.

3. THE 40 YEAR-OLD VIRGIN (2005)

The face that launched a couple of careers, and a whole slew of copy-cat movie posters: the Sears photo portrait genre. As eerily unsettling in its way as the Funny Games poster. Read More

82 Comments

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I like the new poster (see below) for the re-release of Francois Truffaut’s 1976 film L'argent de poche, but for me nothing can beat the kitsch charm of the original British poster which takes a number of memorable vignettes from the film and turns them into what looks like a teen romance paperback. In the UK the film was called Pocket Money (the literal translation) and legend has it that it was Steven Spielberg who suggested the American title Small Change.

L’argent de poche was Truffaut's biggest hit in France since The 400 Blows, and, after opening the 1976 New York Film Festival, went on to great success in the US too. It's a strange film: mostly plotless, a combination of gentle humor, bitter social commentary and lovely magical realism ("Gregory went Boom!") populated by shaggy haired youngsters in bell bottoms. I've seen it twice before over the years and each time I revisit it it hits me with the force of barely remembered snippets from my own childhood.

The Film Desk's new poster for their re-release (now playing at the IFC Center in New York) is drawn by Nathan Gelgud and based on the original French poster which is itself the credit shot from the end of the film. The only US poster I can find seems to be the quote-laded broadsheet which looks more like a New York Times ad. If anyone knows of any others I’d love to see them.

Related Films

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Small Change

Dir François Truffaut

1976 France

2 Comments

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What better title for Thanksgiving weekend? And what better film for the annual urban exodus than this superb debut feature by French-Swiss director Ursula Meier: a film which deals with both domesticity and travel (and monstrous traffic jams). Home, which opens today at Cinema Village in New York, is a brilliant piece of deadpan surrealism about a family who live right next to the deserted highway that they have incorporated into their existence as their own endless back yard. But when the highway reopens, thundering with trucks, their playground becomes more of a prison.

Starring Isabelle Huppert and Dardennes-favorite Olivier Gourmet, Home is pellucidly shot by the great Agnès Godard (who worked on it right before Claire Denis’ 35 rhums). Meier, a former assistant director to Alain Tanner, stages the film as a unique combination of Tatiesque distance and Pialatian engagement, but she has also mentioned as an influence the photographer Jeff Wall, whose work seems to inform this excellent poster with its tableaux quality, its depth of field and its elusive narrative. I love the typography (especially the rounded Pump typeface for the names) but what really grabs my attention is not the bird-flipping sunbather in the background but the detail in the foreground: the mid-century table and chairs, the bowl of fruit, and, especially, that bread basket.

Lorber International has adapted this French poster for the US release, although the poster below (which may be either the Swiss or Belgian design) is also quite evocative. (However, the less said the better about the Photoshop disaster that is the Italian poster.)

Related Films

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Home

Dir Ursula Meier

2008 Switzerland

0 Comments

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“A thing of beauty is a joy for ever: Its loveliness increases...” This gorgeous French poster for Jane Campion’s Bright Star (which doesn't open in Paris until January) is quite a departure from the canoodling big heads of John Keats and Fanny Brawne on the US one-sheet, though the title treatment remains the same. At 47 by 63 inches (the French “grande” size) it must be a knockout. I love how the designers have darkened the field of lilacs, and Fanny’s dress, from the already lovely film still (see below), adding deep purples and blacks, giving it a richer, more painterly look. Enough to drive a man to poetry.

And now at once, adventuresome, I send
My herald thought into a wilderness:
There let its trumpet blow, and quickly dress
My uncertain path with green, that I may speed
Easily onward, thorough flowers and weed.

 

Related Films

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Bright Star

Dir Jane Campion

2009 United Kingdom

4 Comments

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If anyone merits the “big head” poster treatment so expertly parodied by Funny or Die it would be everybody’s favorite movie star George Clooney. Lately, however, Clooney has started to disappear from his own posters: his eyes were obscured by the title in the Syriana poster and his face was out of focus and again covered in lettering for Michael Clayton. The poster for Up in the Air, however, has his most subdued presence of all: a small dark silhouette dwarfed by the movie title in sober Helvetica high up on an airport information board.

What I like about this poster, beyond its symmetrical simplicity, is how it looks up close, when you can see the pixels of the monitor, something that is lost when you see the poster at anything but full size. I do feel the poster is maybe a little too pleased with itself (which is exactly how I feel about director Jason Reitman’s films in general) and in its slick anonymity it looks a little too much like a commercial for something other than a movie, but it is refreshingly low-key. Of course the absence of a full credit block on this makes me wonder if this is just a teaser and there will eventually be a big head poster to follow.

But what I really want to talk about is not George Clooney, but the other star of this poster, which is everybody's favorite Swiss sans-serif typeface. Used mostly for signage and advertising since it's creation in 1957, Helvetica was rarely used on movie posters in the past (though I welcome exceptions to that rule) because it just wasn’t seen as expressive enough. As Dutch graphic designer Wim Crouwel says in Gary Hustwit's excellent 2007 documentary on the subject: “We were impressed by [Helvetica] because it was more neutral, and neutralism was a word that we loved. It should be neutral. It shouldn't have a meaning in itself. The meaning is in the content of the text and not in the typeface.” Movie poster titles on the other hand are usually trying to convey an awful lot of information through lettering.

in the ’00s, and just in time for its 50th anniversary, the straight man of typography has seen a huge resurgence in popularity and hipness. The use—if not overuse—of Helvetica in movie posters in recent years can perhaps be traced back to the posters for Hard Candy (2005) and Little Miss Sunshine (2006). A horror movie and a quirky comedy: two genres usually delineated by very specific styles of title treatment: something distressed and ominous for horror, something wacky and jaunty for comedy. That these two posters matched their striking visuals with something as undemonstrative as Helvetica is a testament not just to their designers’ faith in the strength of their images but also to the fact that they were saying that these films aren’t your usual family comedy, not your mother’s horror movie. Helvetica was a quirky choice by virtue of being not at all quirky.

Two of my favorite posters of recent years, those for Margot at the Wedding (2007) and Funny Games U.S. (2008) both used versions of Helvetica to great effect. Margot used a stylish Neue Helvetica Thin in pink, with the actors’ names in the same size and type as the title, while Funny Games uses an unusually small point size for a movie poster title to great effect.

This year more than ever I feel as if I've been seeing Helvetica on movie posters wherever I turn: on Zac Efron and Typer Perry comedies, where it doesn't really serve any particular purpose:

...on biographical documentaries where it seems to be being ironically unexpressive about it’s subject (after all, wouldn’t you expect at least the name “Valentino” to be written with lovely dramatic flourishes?):

...used in enormous point size to declaim the five-letter name titles of two of the most memorable (and not at all low-key) characters of the year:

...and used beautifully on two of the most striking designs of the year:

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Cold Souls

Dir Sophie Barthes

2009 United States

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The Informant!

Dir Steven Soderbergh

2009 United States

Uita_w192

Up in the Air

Dir Jason Reitman

2009 United States

Bruno_w192

Bruno

Dir Larry Charles

2009 United States

P_w192

Margot at the Wedding

Dir Noah Baumbach

2007 United States

P_w192

Funny Games U.S.

Dir Michael Haneke

2007 United States

P_w192

Julia

Dir Erick Zonca

2008 France

Valentino_w192

Valentino: The Last Emperor

Dir Matt Tyrnauer

2008 United States

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Herb and Dorothy

Dir Megumi Sasaki

2008 United States

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Little Miss Sunshine

Dir Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris

2006 United States

3 Comments

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I wasn't intending to feature a third horror movie poster in a row for this column, but then I saw Hausu, and, more importantly, I saw this poster.

Made in 1977, Hausu (or just plain House) is a cult Japanese comic-horror film never previously released in the US and directed with bonkers abandon by Nobuhiko Obayashi. Obayashi, who now has some 35 features to his name, started out making experimental Super8 films in the 1960s (you can see one of them here) which led to a career making commercials, often with American movie stars. (His priceless Charles Bronson commercials for the cologne Mandom can be seen on YouTube). He is best known in the U.S., if at all, for 1989’s Beijing Watermelon which played at New Directors/New Films in 1990 (even though it was his 22nd film) and which Vincent Canby described in The New York Times as “in every way a rather ordinary conventional movie.” He has just one film on DVD in the States, 1999’s Sada, a chaste and kooky retelling of In the Realm of the Senses.

Hausu, however, was his breakthrough feature and in no way a rather ordinary conventional movie. As Obayashi tells it in a filmed prologue to Janus’s re-release of the film, it was his attempt to bring some child-like playfulness to an industry that had become stodgily middle-aged. Ostensibly a classic haunted house tale, Hausu follows seven wonderfully monikered schoolgirls—“Gorgeous,” “Fantasy,” “Melody,” “Sweet,” “Mac,” “Prof” and “Kung-fu”—on a visit to Gorgeous’s mysterious wheelchair-bound aunt for a deadly summer vacation fraught with homicidal pianos, bloodthirsty clocks, dancing skeletons and demonic kittens. Directed as if there was no tomorrow, Hausu is a cornucopeaia of filmic effects: animation, cheesy musical numbers, dreamy slo-mo, comic undercranking, and luridly fake backdrops. I have seen the film aptly described as “an episode of Scooby Doo directed by Dario Argento” and that doesn’t even come close to conveying the inventive madness Obayashi throws at the screen.

The brand new kitty-from-hell poster was designed by Sam Smith—aka “Sam’s Myth”—a Tennessee-based designer and musician (he drums for Ben Folds) who has recently been making posters for Nashville’s historic Belcourt Theater. His design for a midnight screening of Hausu this summer caught the eye of Janus who took it on for their national release. Smith has finessed the original title treatment for the film (hand-drawn lettering with the O animated as a gaping mouth with jagged incisors) and combined it with an image of the aunt’s possessed housecat which flashes on screen during the film’s demented climax, and everything fits together perfectly to create one of the most striking posters of the year.

Below are some of Smith’s alternative designs, which play knowingly on some of the film’s imagery. I like these designs for themselves but they don't really capture the mad élan of the film the way the final poster does. But scroll down for a couple of Smith’s very fine Godard posters for the Belcourt and check out his Flickr page to see more designs, including a lovely one for Miyazaki’s My Neighbor Totoro and a hilarious take on Antichrist.

3 Comments

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Though this French poster for the 1961 Hammer horror The Curse of the Werewolf—with a lycanthropic Oliver Reed bursting through a window (and his shirt) against a garish pink sky—is terrific by itself, it is as part of a series that it is particularly memorable. Designed by French illustrator Guy Gérard Noël, who often made more than one design for each film, the posters for The Horror of Dracula, The Mummy, Kiss of the Vampire and The Evil of Frankenstein are all notable for their lurid fields of color and their dynamic yet stripped-down mise-en-scène (victim cowering in the foreground, monster looming behind).

One of the great French movie poster illustrators, Guy Gérard Noël was born in 1912 and started designing movie posters in 1943, after two years in a German prisoner-of-war camp. He worked steadily for the next 23 years producing countless posters in every genre. According to a recent book on the artist, despite his reputation, but as was the custom in his profession, he had to audition throughout his career, submitting proposals for each film to the heads of publicity at production and distribution houses. “What a young artist endured to gain recognition became more and more difficult to bear as he gained experience, and he suffered toward the end of his career from having to pass tests that should have been reserved for newcomers.” When offset printing took over definitively from lithography in the mid 60s and illustrators became less in demand Noël stopped designing movie posters and retired to the countryside to devote himself to illustrating books and record covers as well as painting for pleasure. He died in 1994 at the age of 82. I will feature some of his other, non-Hammer designs in a week or two, but I thought these needed to be seen today. Happy Halloween!

 

1 Comments

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I love this poster for Ti West's blandly titled but reportedly quite impressive horror flick The House of the Devil most of all for its perfectly realized retro look. Already available on VOD and coming to theaters next Friday, The House of the Devil is an ’80s-set babysitter-in-peril movie shot in echt ’80s style and starring newcomer Jocelin Donahue, the great Tom Noonan, Warhol superstar Mary Woronov, and mumblecore darling Greta Gerwig. The posters for the film (and there are a few) complete the stunt, with their old school look, faded edges and faked fold lines. They were designed by L.A. design studio Kellerhouse, whose superb work has graced many a Criterion DVD cover (including the award-winning Mishima box) and who were, I only just discovered, also responsible for one of the other best movies posters of 2009, The Girlfriend Experience. The poster below is, I believe, the official release poster that will hang in theater lobbies, but I prefer the version above, with its old dark house silhouetted against a green sky and the crescent of a lunar eclipse, as well as its chorus of grabbing hands reminiscent of those on the Antichrist poster. This poster feels more 70s than 80s with its graphic simplicity, and the white band at the bottom with the credit block is a nice touch. Actually the whole thing is quite similar in feel and style and color scheme to another of my favorite horror movie posters, the 1968 one-sheet for Rosemary's Baby.

5 Comments

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