Category: Movie poster

Coogan’s Bluff / House Of Cards

Spot the difference? This is an interesting example of movie poster artists copying each other… Both Coogan’s Bluff and House of Cards were released in 1968. I’m unsure which one went to market first, but you can bet that one of these artists got lazy and simply copied the design of the other poster. The…


Dune

David Lynch’s 1984 version of Dune is widely recognised to be something of a disaster. The producers probably thought they were investing in the new Star Wars. What they got was weird and incomprehensible beyond belief. Lynch himself subsequently disowned the movie and whilst it has become something of a cult, campy favourite, my memory…


Gunfight In Abilene / Incident At Phantom Hill

Sometimes a movie poster should simply be appreciated as a work of art, irrespective of the qualities of the movie itself. I have never seen either Gunfight in Abilene nor Incident At Phantom Hill and am highly unlikely to ever do so. They are both obscure Westerns from the mid-60s. But I am writing about…


Horror movie books

Denis Gifford’s A Pictorial History Of Horror Movies was the first movie-related book I ever bought. This would have been back in the 70s. It was quite instrumental, in retrospect, in me developing a love of movies in general, and horror movies in particular. I still have my copy! Author Gifford shows great affection for…


Farewell My Lovely / The Long Goodbye

Here are a pair of posters for very different interpretations of Raymond Chandler’s classic private eye tough guy Philip Marlowe. The most famous incarnation of Marlowe is of course Humphrey Bogart in The Big Sleep, although former song-and-dance man Dick Powell’s surprisingly tough Marlowe in Murder My Sweet (an adaptation of Farewell My Lovely) runs…


Skyfall

Skyfall is one of my absolute favourite James Bond movies, and my favourite post-Connery Bond by a mile. Having seen this originally in the cinema I subsequently ended up watching it many times on long-haul flights, and it really bears up well to multiple viewings. It is probably the best-looking of all the Bond movies,…


Halloween / Halloween II

The original Halloween was and still is my most terrifying experience in a cinema, for reasons that only partly relate to the film itself.    True, John Carpenter’s 1978 original is a masterpiece of horror cinema. He practically invented the whole slasher genre, and unwittingly ushered in a slew of inferior imitations. I saw Halloween…


The Misfits

The Misfits, Marilyn Monroe’s final film, was written for her by her (ex) husband, the great American playwright Arthur Miller.  Monroe stars alongside fellow greats Clark Gable and Montgomery Clift, and the movie has a poignant sadness about it seeing movie stars past their prime playing characters past theirs, and knowing it too. Gable died…


The Breakfast Club

I saw The Breakfast Club with low expectations when reviewing movies for my student newspaper. It turned out to be one of the classic teen movies of the 80s. It is my favourite from the late director John Hughes, who also gave us teen classics Ferris Bueller and Pretty In Pink, amongst many more. These…


Gloria / The Killing Of A Chinese Bookie

I must admit I was never much of a fan of John Cassavetes’ movies. These, however, are two of his more commercial efforts. Cassavetes made his living as a character actor (in The Dirty Dozen and Rosemary’s Baby amongst others), but his passion was directing. HIs movies were usually low budget and partially self-financed.  They have…