With more independent films than ever flooding the marketplace, it takes one hell of a marketing campaign for a project to stand out. Solid trailers, positive reviews and dependable talent in front of and behind the camera certainly play a huge role in getting word out to as wide an audience as possible, but a striking, unforgettable poster can be theMARKETING TOOL
that makes a movie too intriguing to miss. 2014 has been a strong year for independent movies and the only thing as memorable as the films themselves has been their effective posters. As we head into the second half of the year, we look back and pick the best indie posters of 2014 so far.
that makes a movie too intriguing to miss. 2014 has been a strong year for independent movies and the only thing as memorable as the films themselves has been their effective posters. As we head into the second half of the year, we look back and pick the best indie posters of 2014 so far.
Best Poster Art for the Same Film: "Enemy" and "Under the Skin"
A24 really pulled out all the stops in marketing Denis Villenueve's heady thriller "Enemy" and Jonathan Glazer's long-awaited sci-fi stunner "Under the Skin," releasing a slew of gorgeous posters for each film. The films, both visually arresting works, get the TREATMENT
they deserve with images that highlight this very component.
they deserve with images that highlight this very component.





Best Art Direction: "The Grand Budapest Hotel" and "Hateship Loveship"
Wes Anderson's "The Grand Budapest Hotel" is art directed to the max. Fox Searchlight's poster for the film does total justice to Anderson's fastidiously crafted vision. While IFC's drama "Hateship Loveship" is a more conventional looking indie, the poster for the film transfixes with its understated, dreamy color scheme and the way star Kristin Wiig's dress melds into the wallpaper that frames her, almost like a more delicate version of the same image from Zach Braff's "Garden State."


Strongest Use of Minimalism: "Interior. Leather Bar." and "Boyhood"
The poster for Richard Linklater's epic, 12-year undertaking is a still of the initial shot of the film. A young Ellar Coltrane lies in the grass, contemplating the mysteries of life. It is a shot so simplistic in its universality, that we can almost all remember a time when we were a child and sat back in quiet reflection of the world around us. Even more simplistic is the art for James Franco and Travis Mathews' "Interior. Leather Bar." The black poster seemingly tells you nothing about the film, but since the plot attempts to recreate the lost 40 minutes of William Friedkin's controversial "Cruising," the image is a subversively bold comment on censorship.










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