“Don’t Judge a Book by Its Cover” is a proverb whose simple existence proves the fact impressionable souls will do so without fail. This monthly column focuses on the film industry’s willingness to capitalize on this truth, releasing one-sheets to serve as not representations of what audiences are to expect, but as propaganda to fill seats. Oftentimes they fail miserably.

With January 2012 poster selection leaving a lot to be desired—dump month movies don’t appear to get the same marketing budget as critical darlings—we’ve decided to better spend our monthly entry with the past year’s greats.

You won’t see any text on faces a la The Adjustment Bureau, In Time, or Warrior gracing this list nor that fantastically framed Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol poster that just missed scoring a spot. Instead there is a lot of white space and the fearless exclusion of celebrity faces. Originality reigns supreme and the realization it was a pretty darn good year for one-sheets prevails.

Honorable Mentions

Dark Horse Ides of March Dirty Girl One Day The Skin I Live In
#15
Dark Horse
Mojo
#14
Ides of March
Ignition Print
#13
Dirty Girl
cold open
#12
One Day
Mojo
#11
The Skin I Live In
Juan Gatti

Winnie the Pooh #10
Winnie the Pooh
The Arterie
When you’re as iconic as Winnie the Pooh, Rabbit, Piglet, Owl, Roo, Kanga, Tigger, and Eeyore, text is unnecessary. Taking a page from George Washington crossing the Delaware, these childhood favorites of mine sail through a page of honey on their way to start a new adventure. Two-thirds devoid of anything but the solid murky yellow sea telling us exactly where to keep our eyes affixed; The Arterie shows that some firms out there still have the capacity to refuse pandering to the status quo.

Another Happy Day #09
Another Happy Day
Showing off even more gorgeous white space, the falling silhouette of a limp and motionless man perfectly contrasts the adjective of the film’s title. Enclosed by a yellow intertube to give the one-sheet a glowing flourish, the feeling of malaise as the bottom literally drops infers an emotionally resonant metamorphosis to express what went wrong. We don’t need Barkin, Bosworth, or Burstyn showing us faces wrought with pain or joy, the subtlety of composition does it all.

Beginners #08
Beginners
Mojo / Mike Mills
A charming poster for a charmingly delightful film, the use of a scrawled cursive font gives a quaintness mirrored in the artwork drawn by Ewan McGregor‘s character. With little details like ‘Beginning Soon’ at the bottom elaborating more on the title as well as the juxtaposition of pensive and happy amongst its stars, a sense of the dramedy’s ability to make you laugh and cry at will emanates forth. The only thing that could make the advert better would be a dialogue bubble coming from Cosmo the Jack Russell’s head asking if we’d please buy a ticket.

Drive #07
Drive
The Refinery
What better way to portray a film that exudes cool at every turn than a James Dean-esque larger-than-life visage of star Ryan Gosling? Chomping on a toothpick with the sort of thinking man’s sternness he can barely let disappear when hanging with love interest Carey Mulligan and her son, the dirt-streaked mechanic’s thousand yard stare only shows the troubled soul beneath. Topped off by a hot pink title treatment in a font that could be used on a lipstick commercial and The Refinery simply has no fear. As stylish as the film itself, this image is as iconic as it gets.

Martha Marcy May Marlene #06
Martha Marcy May Marlene
Empire Design
A movie dealing with dream and memory seeping into reality, the use of an ethereal transparency is a stroke of genius. A similar style to the likes of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo and A Dangerous Method from this year, this entry is the only one combining its images in a precisely measured composition. The meeting of neck and shoulder from one Elizabeth Olsen kisses the curve of a second’s cheek as wisps of hair flutter in the wind. Sexuality and mystery fuse with the dangerous blur of John Hawkes lumbering behind—it’s a puzzle as intricate and yearning to be solved as the film itself.

Submarine #05
Submarine
Like the title’s metaphor for a family drowning underwater from the painful depression waiting on its surface, this one-sheet’s visual representation of the same is both succinct and exacting. The wide-eyed awkward stare Craig Roberts gives throughout the film is on display, color stripped down to a blue tinted Xerox-like contrast of black. A periscope above water watching his parent’s marriage dissolve and the emotionally stunted neediness of his girlfriend leading him along, the poster is all about Oliver Tate. Stamps of bright colors on white like the sharp bursts of dry comedy through a methodically paced droll coming of age tale, minimalism enhances like excess never could.

Pariah #04
Pariah
Mojo
Captivating in its crop, clean in its fully justified text block at center, and stunning in its unique character. Adepero Oduye‘s face expresses the sorrow, isolation, and humanity of Alike that a Photoshopped montage of actors or a hipster pen and ink drawing could never capture. Mojo really hits a home run here to cement the firm’s fourth inclusion to this list with superb artistic intelligence. When you’re creating a vertical piece to represent a horizontally widescreen medium, it takes a peerless vision to make the transition seamless.

The Artist #03
The Artist
Black and white and silent, this is a film from a past generation renewed earning a resounding “Yes! More, please!” from the public lucky enough to have seen it thus far. Stripped down bare to the essentials of what makes cinema great, the poster aligns perfectly with its black abyss cut by a brilliant white chiaroscuro of an adoring duo in love. There is a magical aura surrounding the faces that draws you in and the old fashioned thick to thin stroke of the tall font at bottom to help instill a tone of yesteryear. With the single piece of color standing between image and text beautifully, it only makes your eye travel its loops back to the top’s striking example of love’s purity.

Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy #02
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy
Ego Communications
An amazing series of character posters doing their job so well that Ego Communications didn’t see the point in creating a singular piece to lord over them, their use of code to create its image is brilliantly conceived. With extremely tight leading and kerning, the numbers and letters are sized to perfection and allow all shadows and highlights of their dramatic portraits to be retained. It’s simple, direct, and so good that its American counterpart tries hard to copy it with much less success. A film of intrigue and espionage, the contemplative looks portray its thriller aspects and the mysterious strands of code another puzzle to solve.

Shame #01
Shame
Mark Carroll
Mark Carroll understands this film and the import of its lead actor Michael Fassbender‘s need to hide his desires. A performance of unparalleled bravery, only an advert with equal amounts of courage could think about representing it with a single image. NC-17 and widely discussed among cinephile circles, what better way to feed into the hype than a poster refusing to show even one frame? An empty bed made dirty, personal, and embarrassing by the title’s directness, it only enhances its secrets by keeping them out of frame, begging to be discovered.

What is your favorite poster of the year?

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Follow: The Film Stage’s 2011 Year-End Features

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