The 54th New York Film Festival starts tonight, and, as I have done for the past seven years, I have collected all the posters I could find for the films in the festival’s main slate, otherwise billed as “Twenty-five of the most exciting new feature films from around the world.”
I can’t attest to the films themselves yet, but the two best posters of the festival are those for Barry Jenkins’ Moonlight and Ava DuVernay’s 13th. Both posters feature striking and stylized images of African American men, which is fitting for a festival that is kicking off with—in its first documentary opening night ever—DuVernay’s urgent examination into America’s mass incarceration of black men.
None of the other posters are quite as exciting, though I do have a soft spot for the blatantly Photoshopped family gathering in the French poster for Cristi Puiu’s brilliant Sieranevada—the one film in the festival that I have seen so far—which continues the tradition of inappropriate posters for Puiu’s films begun by the Romanian poster for The Death of Mr Lazarescu.
I haven’t been able to find posters for the festival’s centerpiece, Mike Mills’ 20th Century Women, nor its closing night film, James Gray’s The Lost City of Z. And the new poster for MatÃas Piñeiro’s Hermia and Helena wasn’t quite ready (I’ll add it when it is). But I’ve assembled all the rest which are presented below in alphabetical order.
You can see my previous New York Film Festival poster round-ups here: 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 1988, 1965, 1963.
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