ScreenFonts: Killers, The A-Team, The Karate Kid, I Am Love, The Killer Inside Me, Knight And Day

新闻|The FontFeed|Yves Peters 2010-07-17 03:25:42

I just made an executive decision. Hold on, what did I just say? Me, an executive decision? Moo-whahahahaaah, I am drunk with POWER! Bow to me, puny humans! OK, chill, calm down, breathe normally … So, what I've decided is that I will start looking at the European movie releases again. Well, the Dutch and Belgian ones that is – the amount of posters has to stay manageable. Those were covered in the The FontFeed I started basing my reviews on the monthly lists on IMDB, the Internet Movie Database. As a result this series has become very US-centric, and we're missing out on some good posters from movies that don't get released in the US and A. Hey, adding the first European posters this month is the only reason why we're having such a titillating and voluptuous header image for this episode. I am not excluding the possibility that ScreenFonts will eventually get a European spin-off if I decide to reintroduce the original series on Unzipped after the summer. I am still considering the options.

Another decision, but one that was kind of imposed on me. At the polite request of FontFeed reader "laidlow" I will do my best to work less, get out more, and "get a life". Maybe I could try playing in dancing once in a while, read comic books, and have sex with my wife from time to time. All this for the greater good of humankind, to avoid turning into "Charles Manson" and "slash [your] asses for using the wrong font". I sincerely hope this will turn me into a kinder, gentler blogger, and help me turn a blind eye to talentless hacks churning out poorly designed and appallingly typeset, disgusting eyesores as if they weresuffering from graphic designarrhoea!

So this "new me" would better not get upset over formulaic movie posters for equally formulaic rom coms, and refrain from calling the poster for Killers insipid and particularly uninspired. So let's gloss over the white-background-with-lead-actors-doing-hapless-attempts-at-looking-funny type designs that are a dime a dozen. I am also going to ignore that the movie title is set in – once again – tired old Futura. Furthermore I won't mention the similarities between this poster and Katherine Heigl's previous outing The Ugly Truth, for which she pulls an almost identical ho-hum funny face. No, let's have none of this and cover this utter waste of the stock it's printed on with the cloak of charity. Ahhh, I feel all warm and fluffy inside. What an improvement; thank you so much for the excellent advice, laidlow. ; )

There's nothing like a stencil typeface to establish a military theme, and the distressed stencil sans Capture It by Magique – similar to Arston Stencil and Cargo – seems to be quite popular with movie poster designers. It shows up a first time on the poster for The Shock Doctrine. The combination with stencil graffiti-style graphics remind of Banksy's trademark wall-painted social commentaries, making the design fit the film's subject matter to a T.

Capture It appears a second time on the movie poster for The A-Team, the movie based on the popular television series from the eighties. It shares screen time with the unavoidable Stencil, the grand-daddy of all stencil faces which was used for the original television show's logo as well.

The poster image is a perfect candidate for Photoshop Disasters. Now this is a very bizarre assembly of studio pictures composited on top of an unrelated background. The actors have light sources coming from different directions, the shadows on the ground look weird, and can somebody please explain how Face and B.A. can occupy the same space, and even share the bottom half of a leg?

Personally I think the September 2009 episode of ScreenFonts. So, yes it looks a lot like an iPod advertisement. And no, the texture added to the background and the type – Helvetica Extra Condensed for the movie title, and Helvetica for the credits – is not sufficient to move this design away from iPod territory. But is this outright plagiarism? I doubt it.

Kellerhouse, Inc. does it again, delivering yet another great poster, this time for the documentary Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work. The vintage-looking design references illustrative movie posters from the 1950s/1960s. The almost monochrome design in different tints of pink puts an interesting twist on horror vacui. All the type – beautifully hand lettered in a delicate, slighty naive style – snugly fills the remaining area not occupied by the actress' profile. I think it is a lovely solution that evokes the heydays of movie stars like Audrey Hepburn and Peter Sellers.

We go even further back in time for another illustrated movie poster, for L'Illusioniste (The Illusionist), the new animated feature by Sylvain Chomet, the director of Les triplettes de Belleville (The Triplets of Belleville). Although the illustration itself looks contemporary, the movie logo has a distinct Art Deco quality to it. Unfortunately, instead of properly customising the inline sans to achieve the perspective effect, its letters were digitally stretched, resulting in undesirable distortions – compare both "S"s for example.

On the movie poster for Tournée – Mathieu Amalric's tribute to the art of American burlesque – on the other hand the letters in the movie logo are properly proportioned. The irregularities in the character shapes really bring their hand drawn quality home. I am not bothered at all by these little "mistakes", because they harmonise nicely with the gorgeous drawing of a burlesque performer. The tasteful yet naughty depiction of the curvaceous dancer oozes sensuality. It establishes her as a woman totally at ease with her body, and in control of her sexuality, using it to affirm herself. Her imposing presence makes the cartoonish little producer look frail and insecure, effectively reversing the balance of power.

The simplicity of the composition and the primary colour scheme really work in favour of this splendid design. It looks like a modern re-imagining of the classic Vintage Ad Browser or a similar gallery. For the fans – Luiz Da Lomba designed a suite of digital fonts, creating entire alphabets from just a few sample letters of Toulouse-Lautrec's most famous posters.

Coco Chanel & Igor Stravinsky is another movie poster with Art Deco references, this time for the simple reason that the film is set in 1913 and 1920, during the ascension of the eclectic artistic and design style. However there is something not entirely right. For starters the frame around the movie title is designed in an indiscriminate style, certainly not Art Deco. Then, the typeface used on the poster is Eccentric, the digitisation of a 1881 design by Gustav F. Schroeder. It may look the correct period style to the uninitiated, but it is a typical Art Nouveau design, thus creating a minor discrepancy between historical setting and typographic representation – Art Nouveau peaked in popularity at the turn of the 20th century, and was over by the first World War when the movie's story starts. Does all this truly matter? Not really, yet as a (typo)graphic designer I think it's important one should at least pick-up on and research this type of information.

Oh, and I have no clue why they replaced the Eccentric ampersand with Trajan. There is nothing wrong with the original design, plus this solution disrupts the typographic integrity.

The movie poster for I Am Love is an unusually sophisticated design for The Refinery. Their work usually is very mainstream and often even crass commercial. This poster however is typographically refined and well thought out. The knocked out copperplate script beautifully matches the warm glow and luxury of the interior. By placing the swirling text as big as possible on the image the typography becomes a surprising and striking motif. It is interesting to note how the white letters obfuscate the faces of all the actors on the poster but Tilda Swinton. As her head sticks through the loop of the capital "L", she could be considered literally "in" Love. One minor qualm – the exaggerated kerning between the "o" and "v" results in a faulty connection of the characters. The outgoing stroke on the "o" should connect, not overlap.

Although it is typographically speaking not in the least interesting, the movie poster for 8: The Mormon Proposition is perfect for this documentary, translating the insidious and revolting manipulations which led to Proposition 8 and the abolishment of same-sex marriage in California into a simple but effective image. I would have preferred a more interesting graphic treatment though. And come on, give me a break – Helvetica Condensed Bold? Put a little more heart into your type selection, please …

By the by, I wonder if the people in the Mormon community responsible for the gay-marriage ban would prefer homosexual men to marry their daughters, or lesbian women to marry their sons then? Just a thought. Watch this documentary at your peril – it will leave you heartbroken, outraged at the inconceivable injustice, and you'll want to punch your fist through the screen.

Whoa, what a treat – two Kellerhouse, Inc. designs in a single month. The movie poster for The Killer Inside Me effectively conveys the noir atmosphere of the film. Instead of falling back on genre clichés and relying on period typography, expressive hand lettering in feverish white brush strokes evoke the psychosis of the main protagonist. At first sight it may look a little haphazard, yet the composition is anything but, striking a delicate balance between spontaneity and structural integrity. The colour palette is wondrous, with undefined hues of blue and olive and sickly flesh tones enhancing the overall atmosphere of unsanitary insanity. Yeah, that's probably not proper English, but I like the sound of it. Sue me. ; )

If you're looking for something similar in digital type, maybe take a look at Tim Sale Brush, or some of the offerings in our FontList of child-like scripts.

I was surprised to discover rather non-mainstream posters for Knight And Day, the Tom Cruise–Cameron Diaz blockbuster. Personally I prefer the teaser poster with its heavy emphasis on typography – Standard Extended – and the dynamic white silhouettes against a black backdrop with coloured paint splatters. But even adding the actual photographs of the movie stars doesn't ruin the movie poster. Thankfully the interaction between the two looks real this time, not Photoshopped.

You know I like to occasionally check out localised versions, and this time I'm glad I found the Korean poster. Before you start, yes, I realise there's something bizarre with Cameron Diaz's face. Nevertheless you have to admit this stylised black-and-white design looks way cool. I don't know where Asian cinema's fascination with guns pointing at opposite directions comes from, but it makes for striking images. The tilted photo creates a very nice diagonal axis, with the ideograms Korean Hangul syllabic blocks creating intriguing – to me at least – patterns on the white background at the top and in the bottom half of the poster.

ED Design

ED Design

Justi

Justi