Not exact matches
That character only appears in two
scenes (such is the sweep
of time
covered in «Eden»), but the script is so efficient, so specific, that we get the entire
picture in a couple
of snapshots.
Danny Trejo fans expecting him to feature prominently here given his
cover placement will be disappointed to learn that the Machete star appears in a single
scene, amounting to little more than a cameo, which perhaps explains why the same
picture of him is used on the front and back
of the case.
is more zany behind - the -
scenes stuff
covering the climax
of the
picture with more
of the same plus Candice Bergen and William Shatner taking themselves very seriously indeed.
Though deceptive advertising is nothing new in movies, the DVD
cover art
of Coming & Going takes the practice far, keeping the wheelchair out
of the
picture (save for the title logo's odd twist on the familiar handicap symbol), portraying the leads as young and hip in their jeans and tall boots respectively, and, most egregiously, placing a chihuahua poodle hybrid that features in a single 1 - minute
scene front, center, and large.
It's great if it can also truthfully represent the book, but it's always better to use a powerful
cover that doesn't quite represent the book accurately, but doubles your sales, than it is to represent the book accurately (a mistake most authors make) with a shitty
cover crammed full
of exact details and
pictures and
scenes and meanings that you can explain and talk about for an hour but nobody else gets (or even likes).
The book's hopeful quality is beautifully captured in a stunning
cover design that
pictures a lush end -
of - summer
scene viewed through a damp window.
That included the
scenes I wanted to have
pictures for, the layout, the
cover, and the size
of the book.»
Spielautomat (Slot Machine), 1999 - 2000, a self - portrait
of the artist as a slot machine, features the title object
covered with overlapping rows
of images — snapshots
of artist friends such as Lawrence Weiner, photographs
of male movie stars torn from magazines, postcards and
pictures of street
scenes and storefronts — and is topped with a portrait
of Genzken by Tillmans.
Reviewed by Chris Bevan * for The Conveyancer and Property Lawyer, 2014 The image on the
cover of this, the second edition
of Richard Harwood QC's leading text on «Planning Enforcement» depicting as it does a now infamous
scene from the traveller site once situated at Dale Farm in Essex, paints a vivid and doubtless apt
picture of the challenges and colour...
Picture the
scene: you're submitting well - structured
cover letters, you're applying for plenty
of jobs, but you're not getting over the line to any job interviews.