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Lin Sunderland
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« Reply #6 on: October 15, 2010, 05:32:04 AM » |
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davytriumph
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« Reply #9 on: October 27, 2010, 05:11:49 AM » |
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£350 for the "standard" version is a little steep to say the least. £950 for the deluxe
Yikes, that sure is a hefty price tag, even the £350 version I would certainly prefer to buy a bog standard, run of the mill paperback version. What are the chances of that then? The £350 is an introductory offer valid until mid November, then it goes up to £400. Not quite sure if I can justify that for a book. Well I suppose its not JUST a book. It does look fantastic, the High Plains Drifter poster versions look stunning. I like the one with the whip over his shoulder. Not just from an Eastwood perspective, this book looks like a winner. For example - There is a great shot of a huge billboard poster of "Theres A Girl In My Soup" taken from a street corner somewhere in Hollywood. Very impressive.
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"Theres three dollars, including the tip"
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higashimori
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« Reply #10 on: November 17, 2010, 05:56:08 PM » |
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" Make my day... with a poster " Bill Gold's posters have become almost as iconic as the movies they promote. As a book of the designer's work is released, Clint Eastwood pays tribute to a creative collaborator and a true Hollywood hero The Independent Tuesday, 16 November 2010 http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/bill-gold-make-my-day-with-a-poster-2134921.html Bill Gold has created art for more than 60 years, and he's been creating great posters for my pictures for almost 40. It's hard to believe. From the early 1940s, when he was an apprentice at Warner Bros, to the early 2000s when he was still creating images for Malpaso Productions, Bill's talent and enthusiasm never wavered.
Bill has a firm belief in the power of great stories. Whether the story was about a cop trying to do what he believed was right, or a retired gunman struggling with his conscience, or three men trying to make sense of their damaged lives, Bill always matched the human emotions of these pictures with unforgettable images.
Harry Callahan was a determined man, and Bill emphasised that in his stark image for Dirty Harry in 1971. William Munny was a loner, and conflicted, and Bill's poster for Unforgiven captured that in all its silent beauty in 1992 – a poster that won most of the major awards that Bill's profession has to offer. The men played by Sean Penn, Kevin Bacon and Tim Robbins had murky, troubled pasts, which Bill illustrated by silhouetting their reflections in the icy blue waters of Mystic River.
With Bill, I knew he would bring in great ideas, and the poster he created would be one less thing we had to think about it. He respected the film, he respected the story and he always respected what we were trying to accomplish.
In all, Bill created thousands of movie posters, some of which are as classic as the movies themselves. Four of the films he worked on won Best Picture Oscars, including Unforgiven. The first image you have of many of your favourite films is probably a Bill Gold creation.
I am proud of the work that Bill has created for me over the years, and prouder still that it has been collected in a beautiful book.
Sixty years of Hollywood memories are richer because of Bill Gold. 'Bill Gold: PosterWorks', with an introduction by Clint Eastwood, is published by Reel Art Press. www.reelartpress.com
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" They just don't make then like this anymore ." " I just don't meet then like him anymore !! "
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Lin Sunderland
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« Reply #16 on: December 22, 2010, 03:19:45 PM » |
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I couldn't give you a link until after it was broadcast. Here is the link. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00wsr2z It is not the first item on Front Row. Some nice pictures of posters for Clint movies. 
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KC
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« Reply #19 on: December 22, 2010, 09:20:12 PM » |
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I thought it was worth taking the time to transcribe the part of the interview that pertains to Clint and his films. Once again, the BBC Radio 4 show is Front Row, with John Wilson, who interviews Gold: WILSON: You worked with Clint Eastwood on most of his films, didn't you? I think you worked on thirty-odd films?
GOLD: Oh yeah. Starting in 1971 or 2, I was introduced to Clint, and he was starting to work on Dirty Harry. [Sound clip: "I know what you're thinking ..."] And when I got finished a couple of weeks later, we brought the stuff in to show him, and Don Siegel was with him, and they looked at the work. And Don Siegel said, "Don't change a thing. It's great."
[Theme from Unforgiven]
WILSON: If we look at your poster for the Clint Eastwood film Unforgiven, about the aging cowboy, 1992 that film was released, you have several posters here in the book, which show the stages of development. Now this, the final poster, is the Clint Eastwood character with his back to the camera, in effect, his back to us—
GOLD: And hardly any likeness. Now, no other actor would allow you to do that.
WILSON: So it's just the suggestion of the side of his face, although you see his eye, the eyebrow ... And it is, I mean even if you didn't know that was Clint Eastwood, even if it didn't say Clint Eastwood on the poster, which in fact on this copy it doesn't, you still know instantly, that's him, don't you?
GOLD: That's what we decided. In fact, I was nervous about it.
WILSON: The hint of Clint in this photograph is the gun in the hand, a very heavyweight revolver—
GOLD: We've enlarged that up—
WILSON: Yeah, It's cocked and loaded, his finger is resting just next to the trigger, you know he means business. Again, it's all in the suggestion, isn't it?
GOLD: Yes, it is. And nobody bothers to analyze that, the reader doesn't.
[More of the Unforgiven theme]
WILSON: Also, there's something of the jazz style caught in the spotlight on stage in this photograph, because of the way the single light frames the side of the face and the coat. And it makes me think of the film Bird, which he directed, about Charlie Parker, which starred Forest Whitaker.
GOLD: It's very funny about the movie Bird. When I originally spoke to the advertising people, besides Clint, they said, "We don't want this to look like a jazz movie. We have a problem. Jazz people will go to see it anyway, because they know it's Charlie Parker. We want it to get a more general audience. Let's tell a personal story about his family, and a love story, and his kids." I said, "Well OK." Now I did a bunch of stuff in case that their request for a more general kind of story ... And I didn't really like anything. And then I finally decided, "I think I may as well try a jazz theme."
WILSON: And they were happy after that, because of course he's playing the saxophone, he's caught in the spotlight, he's silhouetted, I mean it couldn't be anything other than a jazz movie, looking at this poster.
GOLD: That's right. And they went nuts. They loved it. Clint thought it was the greatest thing he ever saw. The link directly to the BBC Player for this show is: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/console/b00wsr2z/Front_Row_Little_Fockers_music_biographiesThanks again, Lin, for calling our attention to this!  (I assume John Wilson is no relation to Clint's character in White Hunter, Black Heart!)
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