![]() ![]() This season of Hulu’s “The Great” saw Queen Catherine of Russia (Elle Fanning) preparing to give birth to the next czar. The handdrawn quality makes it eye-catching, while laying out all the craziness and fear that will pop up over the episodes. With Flanagan already hailed as the modern-day directorial Stephen King, it makes sense that the series’ poster would feel like a King book cover. Mike Flanagan’s “Midnight Mass” continued the director’s penchant for finding horror in unique places. The image feels as if Diana is drowning in her opulent dress, a pitch-perfect metapor for Diana’s place in the Royal Family. For Pablo Larraín’s “Spencer,” Neon went with this stirring image of Kristen Stewart’s Diana weeping and turned away from the viewer. KLĪnother poster for a film starring a beloved actress that completely hides her face. “Go into this series with a strong stomach” should be the tagline. The series has been described as unlike anything on television ,and you certainly believe that when you see a girl holding a bloody eyeball in her mouth. You might not know what the plot of “Brand New Cherry Flavor” is, but it seems terrifying if this poster is indicative of anything. Leading star Rachel Sennott is front and center wearing a dress made up of cream cheese and bagels, a laugh-out-loud nod to the Jewish anxiety and neurosis that fuels everything about this skin-crawling and claustrophobic drama. ![]() “Shiva Baby” is one of the year’s most impressive directorial debuts, and this poster for the indie is flatout genius. The intimacy in this poster alone makes it sizzle. This poster took the social media world by storm, showing everyone’s favorite non-couple Roman Roy (Kieran Culkin) and Geri (J. We couldn’t talk anything year-end without discussing HBO’s “Succession,” a show nearly everyone has opinions about. Her breakout performance, the first acting role of her career, is one of the year’s most magical. It’s an appropriately retro poster with a giant Alana Haim front and center. ![]() Paul Thomas Anderson’s “Licorice Pizza” got an illustrated poster that channeled the nostaglic vibes of its 1970s setting. This one looks like a watercolor painting, fantastically showing off its powerhouse cast. Rendering Shakespeare in an abstract style, “The Tragedy of Macbeth” poster is a great primer for what the movie sets out to do.īarry Jenkins’ “The Underground Railroad”remains a critically underseen series but the posters are all so beautiful. Anyone going into Joel Coen’s solo directorial outing knows this, which is why A24 took this iconic, climactic moment from Shakespeare’s play and used it to create the official poster for Coen’s film. Spoiler alert: “The Tragedy of Macbeth” ends with Macduff decapitating Macbeth. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |