
The sheets covering the girl are pull away sheets. You can pull them away.domino harvey wrote:They commissioned the great artwork for Like Someone in Love and that's what ends up on the cover?
Presumably it will show up on the inside art somewhere. But that lamp picture is going to move some units!domino harvey wrote:They commissioned the great artwork for Like Someone in Love and that's what ends up on the cover?
More embarrassing than the film itself? It's not as if the cover represents some random moment that, out of context, completely misrepresents the film. Kiarostami himself stakes an awfully lot on this image and the events that may or may not follow from it.pzadvance wrote:That's a truly embarrassing Kiarostami cover.
If so then Criterion should have written a checkShrew wrote:Uhh... didn't the Criterion Cast guy say that art he linked wasn't associated with Criterion? Just something linked to him that he liked? I don't actually mind the cover there that much, though it's pretty uninventive.
Almost any still from a film would hardly be misrepresentative, that wasn't my reaction. Regardless of that scene's significance within the context of the film, this cropped screengrab hardly does justice to it compositionally or otherwise, and fails to attract my eye at all in the way that good covers (or even the theatrical poster for Like Someone in Love) typically do.warren oates wrote:More embarrassing than the film itself? It's not as if the cover represents some random moment that, out of context, completely misrepresents the film. Kiarostami himself stakes an awfully lot on this image and the events that may or may not follow from it.pzadvance wrote:That's a truly embarrassing Kiarostami cover.
And as noted when it was first mentioned, that artwork is unusable as promotional art for the film, for reasons that will be obvious to anybody who has seen Like Someone in Love.Shrew wrote:Uhh... didn't the Criterion Cast guy say that art he linked wasn't associated with Criterion? Just something linked to him that he liked? I don't actually mind the cover there that much, though it's pretty uninventive.
Criterion didn't want to be out-sucked by the recent wave of bland MoC covers: awkwardly crop a screen-grab, add two symmetrical lines of clashing bland fonts, and presto!pzadvance wrote:That's a truly embarrassing Kiarostami cover. Yikes.

Made of fire. Flowing in mid-air. With credits floating alongside.feihong wrote:See, that one I like; it has a conceptual edge. The type rushes between the two leads like a river, right? A red one.
That reminds me. The poster says "In 25 years/Only three!"AfterTheRain wrote:The cover for Red River bears some similarities to the original poster for the movie: Link
That's what I was thinking, but Stagecoach was made in 1939. So either they forgot history, they hoped that people forgot about Stagecoach, or it's something else entirely.swo17 wrote:That is of course a reference to how Red River was the third Western ever made, after The Covered Wagon and Cimarron.