Tyrannosaur poster |
- Rule of thirds, centrally framed connoting this man as the protagonist
- However, prop (wooden baseball bat), lighting, mise-en-scene etc connote he could be the antagonist
- Own binary opposition - creating narrative enigma
- Serif font signifying a drama genre
- Wrinkles - older man - older audience
- Skin head, vest top - working class
- Terraced houses on edge of poster - working class
- Dark weather - drama
- High key lighting on only one side - reflects his two different personalities - drama
- Small 'a film by Paddy Considine' denotes auteur theory
- 2 awards won & reviews to lead promotion
- High angle - surprising for protagonist
- Bare tree - drama
- Violence - in this shot - violence to himself - self-loathing
- Contemplating - not stupid like the stereotypical working class
- Narrative enigma - what is he regretting?
- Names but not big or bold
- All upper case
LE DONK & SCOR-ZAY-ZEE
Le Donk & Scor-zay-zee poster |
- Bright colours with title, stars, graffiti (not serious)
- Fat character signifies comedy in this case
- Wearing scruffy clothes, therefore not glamourising the working-class
- Underwear hanging connotes a comedy genre
- Setting = covered in graffiti (connotation of rough area) + (typical warp)
- Intertextual reference of 'Spinal Tap'
- Stereotypes = short hair, relatively masculine colours
- rule of thirds - centred on the cover (protagonist)
- more inviting as character is directly referencing the character with hand gesture
- Text = scruffy serif font
- Narrative enigma as we don't know who the character is + his eyes are covered by sunglasses
- Long-shot/extreme long-shot
- Mid angle
- Shane Meadows made clear on cover = denotes the auteur theory
- Small text showing the actors (not famous actors, therefore no need to have their names clear on the cover)
- Not a star vacuole + film ratings on cover
- Showing off film festival ratings
- intertextuality with name (Martin Scorsese)
- Two shot
2 comments:
Mostly excellent: great range of terms, good presentation. Some elements of denotation/EX (Tyr: ‘prop’?) + EAA (LeDonk ‘upper class’??) need checking.
Add a summary at the top of the post of what this has taught you about Warp (Indie!) production/marketing.
Post a Comment