Polish Posters For English Speaking Movies Are Completely Bizarre (But Pretty Awesome)
Back during the Communist era, Poland didn’t receive any promo materials for movies so often had to improvise without even seeing the movie themselves.
Back during the Communist era, Poland didn’t receive any promo materials for movies so often had to improvise without even seeing the movie themselves.
These postcards from the future by UK artists Robert Graves and Didier Madoc-Jones show a future world that has been changed in a non-nuclear way.
Just looking through these makes our blood boil.
Cubanisto is a new rum flavoured beer and it’s launching by throwing a shitload of secret parties all over the country. It’s coming to Manchester June 27th.
Well, he wasn’t going to show up in person to collect it was he?
Unbelievably, this video just gets better and better.
What is the point of all this exactly? Perhaps someone can explain it to us.
Commissioning local artists to draw posters for big budget movies can either go horribly wrong or amazingly right. In Hungary, it was the latter.
You might think we’re joking with a headline like that, but the level of penmanship, creativity and artistry in some of these pictures is astounding.
Two Irish designers decided to create a poster series of some of the worst client comments they’ve received. The results were great and it sold out in about 4 days.
Interactive website allows you to create intensely trippy and/or stunning visuals to a chilled soundtrack. Turn On, Tune In, Drop Out, Weave Silk.
Seriously, I know it looks exactly like one but it isn’t.
The Brit Awards 2012 proved to be the final nail in the coffin of the British music scene. Lame, insipid and polite, it showcased how lazy and middle class the new breed of rock n roll heroes are.