Dylan wrote:I'm not sure what you're driving at; aside from the two red CC logos, it's the same cover. Meanwhile, I agree that it sucks.
The logo color change is, I believe, what he is referring to. Although the change is subtle, it does affect the feel of the piece, mainly because it is completely in greyscale now. It has a even more of "newspapery" feel than it did before. I think I preferred the red. I hated it when was first released, but it had grown on me. Perhaps this will too.
So Stranger Than Paradise is totally NOT a digipack and is instead one of the figure 8 cases. I think maybe they did this so it would match up with the look of Night On Earth, but this is incredibly disappointing.
He mentions in the Hands Over The City piece that the launch of the new logo was brought forward, which might explain why it felt like some of the earlier covers didn't intergate the wacky C properly.
TheGodfather wrote:Good thing that the Breathless cover is changed. This looks better than it did with the ugly red.
Personally I preferred that red, I can see why some saw it has garish though and I suppose the grey is more "fitting" to the overall ascetic of the cover.
I really like what Criterion are doing (artwork-wise) these days, it's actually making me buy releases I probably wouldn't have before seeing the covers.
The red worked a little better, it kept the Criterion content on one level and the film content on another. Eitherway, I think its cool to have a typographic cover for once.
I'm just about to pick up the "Monsters & Madman" set and noticed it comes in 2 keep cases even though the Criterion website as individual artwork for all 4 films. I don't suppose anyone could tell me, or even better knows where there's pics of, what artwork the cases use?
125100 wrote:I'm just about to pick up the "Monsters & Madman" set and noticed it comes in 2 keep cases even though the Criterion website as individual artwork for all 4 films. I don't suppose anyone could tell me, or even better knows where there's pics of, what artwork the cases use?
I read somewhere that it's an attempt at branding, but forgetting for a moment that UK labels release most of their titles in clear cases already, plenty of American labels have been releasing clear cases, such as THINKFilm. They were better when they had the wide 2-Disc sets, I miss those more than anything.
I suppose I'm part of the minority here when I saw I love the clear cases. Especially for sets where the art work continues on the otherside of the insert.
I especially love the lack of 2 discs in widers cases, and are instead put in digipacks.