5. I took an extra
photo of the
background
without the focal
point of one of
my actors so as
to create a
background to
graft the other
merged images
onto to avoid the
appearance of
unnatural
shadows.
6. Next I adjusted
the hue and
saturation to
create the
effect of
twilight, or even
night time
within the
image.
7. Originally chose
this image for
the Film Poster
but later remade
it into the
magazine front
cover feature as I
felt the image
would suit the
normal style for
the front cover
image, as
discovered in my
research of film
magazines such
as Empire and
Total Film.
8. My colour
scheme of red
and white text
This is my final on the blue
Magazine background
Feature front were in order to
cover. For this I create a contrast
have used with it whilst still
techniques and bringing across
details the right
discovered from connotations of
my research. For the genre
example, the theme. I feel
layout of the that this worked
magazine and as despite the
significant fact that the red
features such as is the biggest
the bar code contrast, it
including the works because
issue date, price the colour adds
and website. some ‘shock’ to
the image.
10. This image, like
my previous
alternative
poster, was also
captured as a
frame from the
moving image
shots. I felt this
was more
effective for the
poster as it was
literally showing
the character in
the midst of the
action. And the
effect of the
point of view
image angle
suggests being
watched by the
unknown adding
additional horror
to the image.
11. This is my final Film Poster. I added extra, significant details such as
the age certificate, review star ratings and disclaimer at the bottom
in order to give the poster a more authentic appearance. I made
these decisions based on my research into other film posters.
I decided to change
the tag line from the
originally chosen “If
you go down to the
woods tonight you’d
better not go ALONE”
to “you can RUN… but
you can’t HIDE” as it
links more with the
image of the poster
and is a shorter and
more concise tag line
therefore easier for an
audience to
remember.