00 - 00 : 00 : 00

Banner

Film Listings

Fri Sep 10, 2010

Wed Sep 15, 2010

Fri Sep 17, 2010

Wed Sep 22, 2010

Fri Sep 24, 2010

Wed Sep 29, 2010

Fri Oct 01, 2010

Wed Oct 06, 2010

Fri Oct 08, 2010

Wed Oct 13, 2010

Fri Oct 15, 2010

Fri Oct 22, 2010

Wed Oct 27, 2010

Fri Oct 29, 2010

Wed Nov 03, 2010

Fri Nov 05, 2010

Fri Nov 12, 2010

Fri Nov 19, 2010

Wed Nov 24, 2010

Wed Dec 01, 2010

Fri Dec 03, 2010

Fri Dec 10, 2010

Fri Dec 17, 2010

Wed Dec 22, 2010

Sat Dec 25, 2010

Wed Dec 29, 2010

Fri Dec 31, 2010

Wed Jan 05, 2011

Fri Jan 07, 2011

Fri Jan 14, 2011

Fri Jan 21, 2011

more listings



Art of the Movie Poster #1: The Baader Meinhof Complex

Posted by Gino Pagliuca on Sep 16, 2009
Source: Studio No.1
btn news email btn news print

It's unlikely I'd find someone who'd argue with me when I say that a memorable movie poster is a rare thing. With that in mind Ioncinema.com brings you the first in our new Poster Spotlight series; The Art of the Movie Poster. Each column will showcase a poster that made us pause, and an interview with its creator(s).

Our first eye-catcher is the gritty and stylish North American poster for the seemingly gritty and stylish film, The Baader Meinhof Complex; courtesy of Studio No.1. An adaptation of Stefan Aust's book of the same name, the film focuses on the rising of the RAF (Red Army Faction), a violent terrorist group formed in the late 60's/early 70's in West Germany, that stood against what they considered a fascist state.

Since the film's release in Germany on Sept. 2008, it has gathered numerous awards and nominations including an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film. In honor of it's North American premiere almost 1 year later, the talented folks at Studio No.1 (founded in 2003 by Shepard Fairey, of Obey Giant/Obama Hope poster fame) take a moment to discuss process, politics and the pros and problems with posters.

 The Baader Meinhof Complex poster by Studio No.1

GP: Given the film's social-political themes, this poster seems like a logical addition to the studio's work. How were you approached to do this poster?

SN1: We had worked with Vitagraph Films, the American distributors of The Baader Meinhof Complex, in the past, and had established a solid relationship with them. When they came to us for this poster, they knew that we would take the most engaging aspects of the film and refine those aspects to their essence, and the result would be something special and authentic. I don’t know if politics played into it, other than an understanding that we could recognize that the politics of the film were endemic to their place and time, just as we see the causes we address in some of our other work as particularly relevant here and now.

GP: Of the many memorable posters Studio No.1 has created, would you say you're highly selective on which campaigns you sign up for, especially when it comes to movie poster art? Am I wrong in assuming that your last movie poster project was for WALK THE LINE? If so, why so few?

SN1: Since Walk the Line, we’ve done posters for the Larry Clark film Wassup Rockers, The Youngest Candidate, a documentary about teenagers running for political office, and What We Do Is Secret, the biopic of punk rocker Darby Crash and his band, the Germs.

The posters we’ve done have been cases where a studio or production company has come to us asking us to develop a unique aesthetic true to their movie that can help enhance the storytelling experience. We’ve turned down requests to do posters where the producers just wanted something formulaic, or they already had an aesthetic in mind that we didn’t think would fit the movie.

Walk the Line, Wassup Rockers, The Youngest Candidate, and What we do is Secret posters

GP: How extensive was your research & development process when it came to creating THE BAADER MEINHOF COMPLEX? Is this poster your visual interpretation of equal parts the film and the subject/novel, or did you pull from one side more than the another?

SN1: Some of us knew about the Baader Meinhof group before we began, so we shared what we knew with each other. Then we watched a screening of the movie and paid close attention to the tone we needed to capture through the graphics. The film used a combination of stock footage and dramatic representation, so we decided to mimic that mixture in the poster as well. We were inspired by the collages of Emory Douglas, who was the Black Panthers’ minister of culture in the ‘60s and ‘70s and created a lot of poster art for them, and we also looked at a lot of news clippings and graphics from the French student revolts in the ‘60s.

GP: Can you give us a breakdown of your creative process - perhaps discuss the genesis of the aged newspaper clipping collage work merged with the graffiti-like outline of Meinhof and Baader.

SN1: We styled the graphic elements based on the aesthetic of some of the more notorious radical left-wing activist groups of the ‘60s and ‘70's: the Red Army Faction (Baader Meinhof), the Weather Underground, the Symbionese Liberation Army and the Black Panther Party, all of which created things like posters, radical graffiti and leaflets, typically done by anonymous and often untrained designers. In creating the “clippings,” we were fortunate that the filmmakers had taken some very action-packed stills, and the tone of the shots felt true to the content of the movie. The main characters in the foreground were drawn by hand, then cut out as a stencil and spray-painted, and then scanned into the computer. The black and orange and the type were specifically used to give the poster a heavy German feeling. We wanted it to feel authentic to the place and time where the film takes place, because the poster is a storytelling device.

GP: Going back to your WALK THE LINE poster; with that poster it actually helped that Joaquin Phoenix was illustrated and we were left with the essence of his portrayal of Johnny Cash. Considering the relevant visual impact of that image and how unique it was to that film, what are your thoughts on the general approach to movie posters (large heads, actor's names, slogans)?

SN1: Yeah, the Walk the Line poster was all about refining the imagery to capture that essence, and in fact one of the things we did to create an iconographic image was a sort of mash-up with some of Joaquin Phoenix’s facial features and some of Johnny Cash’s.

The most important thing in creating a movie poster is engaging people the way a film is engaging, drawing them in. When people get immersed in a movie, they see a story, not actors on a set in front of a camera. There are a lot of posters that just come off like they’re saying, “This is an announcement for an upcoming movie,” instead of saying, “We’re going to tell you a great story, and it all starts here.”

GP: If you had to remake a poster: which one would you like a shot at?

SN1: I'd like to do one for an adaptation of Kurt Vonnegut’s Breakfast of Champions—a new one, not the late ‘90s Bruce Willis one—or the film Being There.



Comments

  • user icon

    Posted by Vitagraph Films on 2009-10-09 at 09:46:22

    Vitagraph Films, THE BAADER MEINHOF COMPLEX'S U.S. Distributor also brought WHAT WE DO IS SECRET and WASSUP ROCKERS to Studio Number One. www.vitagraphfilms.com

  • user icon

    Posted by FD on 2010-02-14 at 10:14:57

    What is the technical term nowadays to define the line that describes the essence of the movie? For example: Twilight, the line they use is "When you live forever, what do you live for?"

ADD A COMMENT

You must be logged in to add a comment
Banner

 

September Surprise!

September Surprise!

The filmmaker featured as this month's IONCINEPHILE hails from the country represented by this flag. Stay tuned as we soon release the identity of the director. Here's a clue: the person is premiering their film in two major international film festivals this month.

See My All Time Top 10 Films

deco

Reviews

Review: Spring Fever

Review: Spring Fever

A heavily flawed film that does a disservice to its quintet of characters by abruptly ending each character's final chapter before it even begins making Spring Fever a film that never manages to find itself. Audiences who've followed his past efforts such as Purple Butterfly and Summer Palace will be puzzled by erotica without reason, by the undefined terms in which the characters are set in and the lack of dramatic focus.


more reviews

Interviews

main feature right

Interview: Amir Bar-Lev (The Tillman Story)

Pat has a very wide appeal and people who admire him come from different parts of ideological spectrum. So we didn't want to alienate a part of our audience because the film is about Pat more than anything. So we wanted to invite everybody to the dialogue of what actually happened to him and the country at the time.


right column more interviews

Festivals

festival photo

2010 Telluride Film Festival (37th)

The Telluride Film Festival history section offers a comprehensive look at the past 35 years of Shows, guests, and memories of Labor Day Weekends spent in the mountains.


festival link more

Community Film Ratings

community link more