Stanley Kubrick - The Works
Here are a few screenshots of my poster for a fictional Wes Anderson film festival, “Pack of Strays”. The top image was the front of the poster, designed to look like a corny family photo in a plaqued frame. I used the pen tool in Photoshop to cut out each character and did my best to correct the skin tones (a lot of Anderson’s films have a different tint to them). I wanted to maintain the concept of a mixed-matched group of misfits coming together. I took the idea from a quote from Anderson who said he believed he had created such consistent worlds that a character from one movie could walk into another and it would be believable. The following photos are page by page of the back of the poster, which is folded like a booklet. It outlines the various movies that are being shown and some info about the director.
The jewish barber’s speech from The Great Dictator (1940). A poor jewish barber looks just like the bad dictator and is mistaken for him. He uses his chance to deliver a speech to the people disguised as the Dictator. A speech of love and kindness.
Chaplin managed to create one of the most beautiful and epic speeches of all time in the end scene of The Great Dictator. This was also Chaplin’s first true talking picture and his best grossing film ever. This film and speech has also great significance because it was delivered just before the WW2 broke loose.
Gregory Peck, 1938
(UC Berkeley Yearbook)



