entries Tagged as [cinema]

The Influencers

‘The Influencers is a short documentary that explores what it means to be an influencer and how trends and creativity become contagious today in music, fashion and entertainment.’

Trailer above. Watch the film here.

Hadank

‘Hadank is a display typeface developed from hand-lettered words in a German printer’s letterhead from the 1920s’

Andrew Leman makes props for the motion picture industry. And along the way, he’s built a collection of fonts to help with making said props authentic.

Order his Hadank fonts here. Website (with interview video) here.

Godard titling

A selection of trailers and title sequences from the films of Jean-Luc Godard.


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 

Super Bowl in film

The Super Bowl – as directed by Quentin Tarantino, David Lynch, Wes Anderson, Jean-Luc Godard and/or Werner Herzog.

Allen

‘The Many Faces of Woody Allen’ by Brandon Schaefer. Prints available here.

Click to view larger/jump to source.

Found via a place for pretty things & the occasional giggle

J-Men Forever!

‘Tells a tale of world conquest by sex, drugs and rock and roll’

Cult classic J-Men Forever! (1979) was a mainstay on the USA network’s Night Flight (titles below).

And after Night Flight went away, J-Men vanished – only quietly showing up many years later on DVD.

J-Men Forever! was the brainchild of Philip Proctor and Peter Bergman of the Firesign Theatre – using cobbled together footage from old serials to create a silly (actually, immature is the right word) new movie; similar to Woody Allen’s What’s Up Tiger Lily (1966).

The Caped Madman (above) and The evil Lightening Bug steal the show. The film’s score features music from The Tubes, Head East, Budgie and Billy Preston.

Watch it in its entirety/in sections on YouTube. Click above to jump/watch.

Dark inspirations


The Bat (1926)

A couple of movies that inspired the creation of The Bat-Man (1939) and The Joker (1940).

Watch them in their entirety/in sections on YouTube. Click to jump/watch.


The Man Who Laughs (1928)

Alraune

‘A frightening, erotic and highly emotional film with fine cinematography.’ – David Wingrove

Genetic experimentation, perversion, mythical alraune (mandrake) root legend stuff, silent German cinema.

Alraune (1928). With Metropolis’ Brigitte Helm.

Watch it in its entirety/in sections on YouTube. Click to jump/watch.

Metropolis reinterpreted 3

Video for Madonna’s Express Yourself. Production design by Vance Lorenzini, inspired by Metropolis. Directed by David Fincher. From 1989.

Metropolis reinterpreted 2

Metropolis poster by Pietari Posti and Underware. 6-layered silkscreen print, 2008. Run of 100.

With glow-in-the-dark lettering.

Metropolis visuals

Cinematography for Fritz Lang’s Metropolis (1927) was inspired by Paul Citroen’s 1923 Metropolis photomontage (above).

And so was Boris Bilinsky’s poster for the film (below).

Commercial artists took some liberties with how they created visual promotion for Metropolis – redrawing or recreating the ‘maschinenmensch’ (machine-man) and the modernist cityscapes. [Read more →]


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