This is Herb Lubalin’s logo for The Sound of Music, used on a souvenir brochure for the movie.
Interesting fact:
“Rather than accept payment by royalty, Lubalin insisted on a large fee. By doing so, he missed an opportunity to make a great deal of money. The Sound of Music, released in 1965, went on to be one of the most successful movies of all time.”
This is a poster that Tim Doyle designed for the Castro Theater.
“Murphy’s Frankenstein existence is designed from head to toe to be a Cop who acts on his pre-programmed directives, but who he is comes through regardless- much to the disappointment of his employer/manufacturer. And that’s what I wanted to depict here, the man coming through the machine.”
This is a poster that designer Jay Shaw created for the Alamo Drafthouse.
“It makes sense to watch a film and say, ‘the story is about that so this image should communicate that idea well.’ Every idea can be broken down to some base image, it’s just a matter of figuring out what the image is.”
This is a really cool poster for the movie Unfriended from earlier this year. Still want to see this one, especially after watching Chris Stuckman’s review.