The Art Of Drew Struzan
Drew
Struzan & David J. Schow/2010/Titan Books (Book Review)
Rating: B
There was a time when movies were so rich in their
presentation that even the promotion was an art that was enjoyable in itself,
as recent collections of movie trailers on DVD we have covered shows. Another aspect of the art behind this art is
the poster. Posters were king back in
the day when films were silent and TV was decades away, though the studios
would go out of their way to do displays and other ballyhoo, it was the way to
show how good a film promised to be. Not
that they always lived up to what was on the poster, but this was also a time
long before computer graphics, so many great artists (too often not getting
credit) were called upon to come up with great art to make the great sell. Drew Struzan is sadly the last of a long lone
of great artists to create such art and you can see it in extremely well
reproduced pages of the fine new coffee-table sized hardback book The Art Of Drew Struzan.
Turns out he has been a favorite of the Lucas/Spielberg
team as well as of many other filmmakers who wanted more than big fat headshots
of the actors that we get all too often today.
Struzan’s work proves that the classic approach is not an indication of a cheap production but a confirmation of how
great art begets memorable filmmaking.
Here is a list of some of the titles here, including art that was never
used:
Raiders Of The Lost Ark (unused)
Legend Of The Lone
Ranger (unused)
John Carpenter’s The Thing
Under Fire
Back To The Future
Mad Max Beyond
Thunderdome
(unused)
The Money Pit (unused)
Big Trouble In
Little China
Police Academy 3: Back in Training (unused)
Masters Of The
Universe
Adventures in
Babysitting
Coming To America
Indiana Jones &
The Last Crusade
Harlem Nights
Back To The Future
II
Back To The Future
III
The Rescuers Down
Under (unused)
An American Tail:
Fievel Goes West
(final altered)
Hook
Boomerang (unused)
Buffy The Vampire
Slayer
(1992/unused)
Angels In The
Outfield (unused)
The Flintstones
Radioland Murders (unused)
Waterworld (unused)
Harry Potter &
The Sorcerer’s Stone
Harry Potter &
The Chamber Of Secrets
Creature From The
Black Lagoon
(special retro commission in 2001 of 1954 classic)
Star Wars Episode
II: Attack Of The Clones
Hellboy (unused)
The Shawshank
Redemption (2004
DVD reissue)
Sahara (unused)
Zathura (unused)
Star Wars Episode
III: Revenge Of The Sith (unused)
The Green Mile (2005 DVD reissue)
Pan’s Labyrinth (unused)
The Mist (unused)
Blade Runner (2007 DVD reissue)
Indiana Jones &
The Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull (unused)
Hellboy II: The
Golden Army
(unused)
There is a pleasant, smart, rich character to all of his
work and it is hard to imagine the blockbusters that started showing up in the
1980s being as fun, exciting or as interesting without Struzan’s work. The detail and way in which his particular
work enhances the narrative of the film before and after you have seen it is
what all good poster art is about. The
book is good on text, with a forward by Frank Darabont and is mostly personal
comments (often extended) by the artist.
I even wanted more, but these are the decisions you make and the book is
only going to have so much room.
But there is also the story of Struzan not being
respected, his work being ignored or lesser versions being derived for the
final release. You can be sure his story
is not unique as more and more real talents in all aspects of the film business
(and other businesses) are tossed aside to cut costs and make things generic to
squeeze the last penny out of anything.
The problem is that this is not working in the arts and especially in
filmmaking.
It is no coincidence then that has real art for posters
has been replaced by bad photo art another unimaginative ways of promotion (I
could name radio ads better than much of the promotion I am seeing and hearing
these days), the actual product is becoming as generic and weak, which is why
the Summer 2010 box-office was so bad and if you remove the computer animated
features, a wasteland with few films anyone will remember in a few years.
The Art Of Drew
Struzan shows the
amazing work of an amazing artist whose work is as iconic as anyone in film
today and he deserves much thanks and respect for what he achieved. Maybe when the movies become the movies again
(versus the overly processed jokes of bad sequels, remakes and cynical gimmick
atrocities we get almost every week), we’ll get such great art. We and Mr. Struzan should not have to wait
that long. I hope this book makes an
impact and difference and the so-called critics and serious fans start to rally
for a return to this kind of greatness in poster art. This book is well worth your time.
- Nicholas Sheffo