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Stunning Mondo Screenprints for ‘The Birds’, ‘Vertigo’ and ‘Rear Window’ by Laurent Durieux

Laurent Durieux has been creating some of the best screenprints over the past few years, and he isn’t slowing down. In fact he is getting better with each and every new design. We recently showcased his Back to the Future 2 poster art, and now The Collider has premiered a few of Durieux’s Mondo screenprints …

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Mondo Announces SXSW Disney Gallery Event and Unveils Gorgeous Ken Taylor ‘Alice In Wonderland’ Print

Mondo, the superb poster boutique, announced today that they are partnering with the Oh My Disney blog, as they unveiled Nothing’s Impossible, a gallery which will take place during this year’s South by Southwest Film Festival in Austin, Texas from March 7-11. The gallery will feature what’s sure to be some incredible Disney-inspired prints by …

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Mondo’s Incredible New Prints for ‘The thing,’ ‘Son of Frankenstein,’ and ‘White Zombie’

Tomorrow Mondo will be selling three prints, previously sold at this year’s Texas Frightmare Weekend: The Thing by Randy Ortiz, Son of Frankenstein by Rich Kelly, and White Zombie by Ghoulish Gary Pullin. Follow them on twitter for the on sale announcement. These posters will be available online at a random time on Thursday, May …

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Fantastic Fest 2011 Mondo Art

  Fantastic Fest officially kicked off today, but our coverage started a few days ago. Today Mondo the collective boutique of the Alamo Drafthouse announced their exclusive posters series for this year’s event, and well the poster art is as expected, stunning. The posters will be on sale at the fest, so if you can’t …

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Mondo Posters To Be Archived By Academy Of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences Including This New ‘Frankenstein’ Poster

  I’m a huge fan of movie poster art and so I love to follow the projects created by The Alamo Drafthouse boutique Mondo. Anyone who browses through our Movie Poster column will see some of the artwork we’ve posted from them during the past two years. Today Mondo sent out a press release announcing …

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The Alamo Drafthouse collectible art boutique Mondo announces a “Director’s Series”

The Alamo Drafthouse collectible art boutique Mondo recently announced a “Director’s Series” of highly stylized posters, beginning with the work of renowned filmmaker Guillermo del Toro. Mondo is known for its beautiful poster art for such as the Rolling Roadshow or Fantastic Fest and famous movie franchises and now they are expanding. The posters for …

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Meet Christopher Shy, Your New Favorite Movie Artist

A while back, while aimlessly wandering the internet, I came across this impossibly gorgeous Alien poster. I originally found it on Rekall, a site devoted to awesome retro technology and sci-fi stuff, but the poster sadly came without any indication of who the brilliant SOB who created it was. Then, earlier today, I found out: …

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Best Movie Posters of 2014 Part One

Movie poster artists are without a doubt some of the most vital yet overlooked contributors to cinematic history. Long before the invention of the television and the internet, filmmakers relied on movie posters to persuade audiences to watch their films. Ever since the late 19th century, posters (or then simple 8 x 10 inch lobby …

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The Evolution of Handheld Consoles

During the last four generations of gaming, handhelds have gone from monochromatic 8 bit games, to portable consoles with stunning graphics and the ability to do more than run video games. The handhelds evolutionary journey is an interesting one, and it begins with four legendary consoles: Game Boy, Lynx, Game Gear, and TurboExpress.   Nintendo officially …

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‘Diamond on Vinyl’ offers a distant and lonely look at how the socially inept live

Diamond on Vinyl Directed by J.R. Hughto USA, 2013 When Beth (Nina Millin) discovers that her fiancé Henry (Brian McGuire) has been secretly recording themselves having sex, and more disputably, rehearsing his marriage proposal, she storms out of their celebratory hotel room and emotionally stays dominant in her car at a nearby parking lot. When …

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‘Ocean’s Twelve’ a deliciously self-aware sequel musing on the challenges of stardom

Ocean’s Twelve has a reputation that will always precede it; some have called it an anti-sequel, and publications like Entertainment Weekly have dubbed it one of the worst sequels of all time. Though both reactions are, perhaps, understandable, neither is remotely accurate. Ocean’s Twelve is an inherently self-aware sequel, possibly the most self-aware follow-up in modern history. What Steven Soderbergh, screenwriter George Nolfi (whose original script, Honor Among Thieves, was completely unrelated to Ocean’s Eleven and was sold initially before that remake had been released), and the slightly larger-than-before ensemble cast did was make a sequel to a critically and commercially lauded caper film that was wholly cognizant of the fact that it was a sequel to a critically and commercially lauded caper film. Ocean’s Twelve toys with audience expectations, because to cave into them would’ve promised something potentially more disturbing and commonplace than what many perceived to be an ambitious creative flop: something boring.

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‘The Fifth Element’: Masterpiece or Mess?

Quick question; does a flamboyantly camp and knowingly ridiculous science-fiction adventure costumed by Jean-Paul Gaultier and written by a teenager obsessed with 50’s and 60’s Belgian/French futuristic pulp comics sound like a good idea? The idea that any cynically minded executive would immediately stab his thumb in the air at the pitch of The Fifth Element is as fanciful as the bizarrely hypnotic and anachronistically beautiful world (or worlds) in which it is set.

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‘The Killing of America’ Movie Review – Can Exploitation be Profound?

The Killing of America is an impassioned and emotional showcase of violence in America from the period of the early 1960s into the early 1980s. Resting on the thesis that the society quickly devolved into increasingly acts of senseless violence, the film utilizes rare and disturbing footage of both familiar and unfamiliar events. Rift with a somewhat confused ideology, the film nonetheless packs a punch and suggests where many others haven’t that access to guns are part of the problem, an issue that continues to be debated within American society to this day. Is this little more than a parade of greatest hits for snuff fans or does it reaches deeper, revealing darker truths and realities that we are unwilling or unable to face.

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Tim Doyle’s “Unreal Estate” Re-Imagines Popular TV Show Locales

Austin-based illustrator and screen printer, Tim Doyle is back, with his second solo art show titled, UnReal Estate II. The event kicks off Thursday February 7 at Spoke Art in San Francisco, CA. Last year, Doyle created beautiful artwork for some of the most memorable locations from popular TV shows, including The Sopranos and The …

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‘Cosmopolis’ would have got the readers of Wired jolly excited a dozen years ago but now feels like a period piece

Cosmopolis Directed by David Cronenberg Written by David Cronenberg Canada / France, 2012 ‘I know this’  is a frequent mantra of many of the broadly stricken characters in David Cronenberg’s film Cosmopolis, his new adaptation of the 2003 novella by Dom Delillo, as a statement of fact it is as reliable and secure as this wildly uneven post-millennium study which feels at …

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