Deco King wrote:What total garbage!! If you think the Dutch cover is "classy" your aesthetic appreciation is clearly not on the same planet!
"Opinions are like a$$holes. Everybody's got one and everyone thinks everyone else's stinks."
-Home for the Holidays, 1995
"If you can't say something nice, don't say nothing at all."
-Bambi, 1942
Yes. We know.Deco King wrote:I have constantly criticised the new cover art as anyone who reads this forum will know!
I'm going to do something crazy and go inside Deco King's to try and figure out how he'd respond...KubrickFan wrote:It's just an apple, for god's sake.
- It's more than an apple. It's the entire film. It's every little frame, every line from the animator's finger tips. It's the music and the characters and the stories and the voices and the colours and the emotion and the feel of the movie. It's not just about the movie anymore. It's about how we perceive the movie. And for something as grand and majestic as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, a mere apple is a horrible way to represent the film. You must have every single character, every single emotion, every single facet of production, squeezed into one image. And it must be beautiful. It must rival the film itself in[/i] terms of what those marvelous animators accomplished so many years ago. It must be LIFE!
This is why I stay out of people's heads.
I agree. After all, sometimes less is more. If I were inclined to base my DVD judgments on the cover art, I think something with one or two iconic objects/symbol looks better than a busy and crowded piece trying to shove in every major character.BrandonH wrote:I'd have to disagree that studios must use full-color artwork of characters on their DVD covers. Using an iconic image from a film on the cover can be extremely effective and classy. For example, the outer box of The Lion King's gift set has Rafiki's drawing of Simba against a black background. A non-Disney example would be the use of the Batman logo for the cover of the Batman (1989) DVD. There are times when showing major characters on the cover works, but covers like that are frequently too cluttered for my taste.
<snip>
I just tend to come down on the side of more minimalist artwork on posters and DVD covers.
Example:

The simplistic "Doctor + Companion" cover for Series Three (the same is done for Series One, Two, and Four)
versus

The crowded cover for the Easter Special "Planet of the Dead" featuring the Doctor, Lady Christina, a Tritovore, a bunch of metallic stingrays, the bus, etc. I'm surprised Malcolm Taylor and Captain Magambo aren't randomly inserted somewhere.
Or, for a Disney example:

Peter Pan and Tink, with Captain Hook's ship in the background
versus

Peter Pan's head (with a second star to the right) and Tink, with Hook, Smee, the Crocodile, Wendy, John, what little of Michael you can see, pixie dust, Hook's ship, the Indian tents, etc.
albert

[/quote]






