Showing posts with label Sleeping Beauty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sleeping Beauty. Show all posts

New Posters: ‘Sleeping Beauty,’ ‘Page One,’ ‘Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark,’ ‘Melancholia’ and Many More


New Poster From Sleeping beauty
There have been a great many new posters in the past few days. Just this afternoon we’ve seen new one-sheets for the doc Page One: Inside the New York Times, the horror remake Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark, Miranda July‘s odd-sounding new drama The Future, and Lars Von Trier‘s Melancholia. Plus earlier this week there were new sheets for tantalizing Cannes debut Sleeping Beauty, The Art of Getting By, What’s Your Number?, The Ledge, The Beaver and Troll Hunter. They’re all after the break, along with info on each film and links to the trailers.




New Poster From Page One

New Poster From The Future

New Poster From What your Number


New Poster From Troll Hunter

New Poster From Beaver

New Poster From Don't Be Afraid Of Dark

New Poster From To Melancholia

New Poster From The Getting By



New Poster From The Ledge


Related Post:

New Poster : Sleeping Beauty (Julia Leigh) ft. Emily Browning, Michael Dorman, Mirrah Foulkes, Rachael Blake



Director: Julia Leigh
Screenwriter: Julia Leigh
Starring: Emily Browning, Michael Dorman, Mirrah Foulkes, Rachael Blake
Genre: Drama

Plot Summary: "Sleeping Beauty" is a haunting erotic fairytale about Lucy, a young university student drawn into a hidden world of beauty & desire.


With this poster, the Julia Leigh film Sleeping Beauty continues to look like the arthouse alternate-reality Sucker Punch. Emily Browning stars in the movie as a student who becomes a prostitute specializing in an unusual service: she ‘works’ while drugged into slumber, and cannot remember her clients after they take advantage of her. The poster is a little bit American Apparel, a little bit Sofia Coppola, and quite pretty, but combined with the known plot and the look on Emily Browning’s face, there’s an uncomfortable undercurrent there, too. The trailer (embedded again below) is equally gorgeous and unsettling. Both are after the break.