Movie Poster of the Week: Movie Trilogies
For auteurists in New York there can hardly be a better series playing right now than "Trilogies" at Film Forum: a four-week extravaganza of 78 films comprising 26 mini director retrospectives from Angelopoulos to Wenders and 24 other auteurs in between. Many of the groupings in the series are actual sequential trilogies, like Kobayashi’s The Human Condition or Satyajit Ray’s Apu Trilogy, while others more loosely stretch the term, such as Lucrecia Martel’s "Salta Trilogy" or Hou Hsiao-hsien’s "Coming of Age Trilogy," very welcome though those are.
Very few of the trilogies in the series, however, have posters that were conceived as trios themselves, the French posters for Kieslowski’s Three Colors, above, and Albert Dubout’s cartoony designs for Marcel Pagnol’s Marseilles Trilogy being the major exceptions. There are two terrific matching posters by Jan Lenica for the first two films in Mark Donskoy's Maxim Gorky Trilogy, below, but he doesn't seem to have completed the set.
So I’ve tried to find posters that at least seem to imply some homogeneity to each series, mainly by choosing posters from one country for each triptych. There are bombastic Italian posters for John Ford’s "Cavalry Trilogy," quote-centric U.S. posters for the Apu Trilogy, Polish abstractions for Antonioni’s "Alienation Trilogy," and a lovely set of Japanese posters with circular motifs for Pasolini’s "Trilogy of Life." Click on each set to see them large.
In addition to what’s shown here, the Film Forum is also showing holy trinities from Ingmar Bergman, Francis Ford Coppola, Sergio Leone, Roberto Rossellini, Fritz Lang, Carol Reed, Theo Angelopolous, Aki Kaurismaki, Nicholas Winding Refn, Whit Stillman, and Jean Cocteau. Trilogies runs through May 16.
from The Daily Notebook http://bit.ly/2IYXUPg
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