Tuesday, 8 November 2011

Practise Poster 2 (By George Robinson)


As you can see in the image above is a film poster that I had personally created using Adobe Photoshop CS3’.To create this basic poster I had first used another member of my media group to take a picture of me standing infront of a plain grey wall. As the genre we have chosen is a crime thriller I had to avoid smiling so I had looked away from the camera and aimed to have a slighty serious look on my face. As you can see the mise-en scene in this particular poster I have created is not up to par as the clothes I have on in the image were clothes that I just happened to wear on that particular day we took the picture. When we create are real poster I will aim to be in a suit which was the decided costume of our main charatcer in our teaser trailer. The fonts I had used for the poster in my opinion gave a very bold and demonic feeling towards the audience. From the number of real movie posters that I had researched one of the factors that made a poster good was firstly, how eye-catching the writing was and also the effect that style of writing had on the audience. I had used a bright red font to give the audience a sense of danger and to also make the writing eye-catching. The faded London skyline behind me on the wall displayed to the auidence where the location of the film was and also made the film poster a lot more interesting for the audience. The tagline I had included ‘One man, One mission, One chance, I felt was good a it not only creates an increased sense of anxiety for the audience but also relates to the tilte of the film which is deadline. Both the title and the tagline both refer to in some way the aspect of numbers and time.

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