
Flash Gordon by Peter Diamond
Posted by Joshua Roberton on
Vice Press deliver a fantastic next instalment in their Flash Gordon series of posters, with an enviable pairing of the cult classic British film with illustrator extraordinaire Peter Diamond. Two of our favourites, working together, and the outcome is a real feast for the eyes.

Late Spring & Early Summer by Katherine Lam
Posted by Joshua Roberton on
With a new pair of screenprinted posters, Black Dragon Press and Katherine Lam explore the subtle gravitas of Yasujirō Ozu’s first two titles in the Noriko Trilogy. Via Lam’s effortless compositional skill at framing dark against light, we are drawn into the room, where the experience is disarmingly intimate and peculiarly first-hand.

Sound of Metal by La Boca
Posted by Joshua Roberton on
Scintillating concept and sublime execution are the order of the day for La Boca’s official Sound of Metal poster. Screenprinted in popping fluorescents, this evocation of the Oscar winning film speaks vividly about loss, acceptance, and the shape and colour of renewal.

Agatha Christie's Evil Under the Sun edition by WBYK
Posted by Joshua Roberton on
Black Dragon Press revisits the Agatha Christie classics, this time with WBYK at the artwork helm. For their approach to this first in the trilogy of prints, the Australian design duo have explored the costumes and flamboyant fashion style of the film’s era, to compelling effect.

Metropolis screen print poster by Ethan Sharp
Posted by Joshua Roberton on
Following on from his masterful Perfect Blue, Ethan Sharp has created a highly charged poster for Rintaro’s Metropolis. Compositionally and emotionally riven, Sharp’s poster nods to the original work of Fritz Lang, delivers on the promises made by every Metropolis poster that came before, and then goes one step further.

Jurassic Park by Bella Grace
Posted by Rebecca Cleal on
Bella Grace has created a superb Jurassic Park poster for Vice Press, which explores the classic Spielberg film via a series of iconic scenes and locations. Naturally, T-rex holds dominion, but what would a great Jurassic Park poster be without her snarling involvement?

Joan of Arc by Zi Xu
Posted by Joshua Roberton on
For Black Dragon Press’ recent release, The Passion of Joan of Arc, American illustrator Zi Xu turned in a painting full of tone and finesse. We offer up an illustrated history of the method that made it a screen print.

JAWS by Florey
Posted by Rebecca Cleal on
Florey shows us one of the classic Jaws scenes, but from an out-to-sea approach, where the buzzing of the beach is drowned out by the deadly underwater calm of the approaching shark. What the artist delivers is a masterclass in poster narrative.

Jurassic World by Dan Mumford.
Posted by Rebecca Cleal on
Dan Mumford takes us into the heart of Jurassic World’s epic battle between the film's true hero and villian: T-rex and Indominus Rex. All we can do is make like Owen Grady, staring frozen from the sidelines, hoping we don’t get trampled!