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The Best Picture posters just got a brilliant redesign
For the last decade, Matt Needle has redesigned the poster for every Best Picture Academy Awards nominee, transforming them from big budget bores to works of art.
Ever since he was a child, Matt Needle has been obsessed with film—and not just the tapes of ’80s mainstays like E.T., Raiders of the Lost Ark, and The Goonies that occupied his earliest screens. The Cardiff, UK-based illustrator and designer was also keenly interested in the world of visuals celebrating his favorite movies.
“All the posters you loved as a kid were so enigmatic and instantly iconic,” he says.
On summer vacation from studying design and fine arts at the University of South Wales around the mid-aughts, Needle found himself in search of a creative outlet. He had just gotten his hands on a Hitchcock boxset—so he decided to create a series of minimalist modern posters based upon the films in it. He shared them and made more—and, well, it eventually turned into a career. Needle credits many of his big breaks to his affiliation with the Poster Posse, which he has been a part of for over a decade, leading to work for the likes of Disney, Pixar, Star Wars, and Marvel.Today, he balances his commercial key artwork with his self-generated output, which has taken the form of his James Bond series—for which he designed a poster for every single film in the canon—and his Oscars Best Picture series, which he has been doing for a decade.
Needle acknowledges that rarely would the main key art for a film be something as abstract and conceptual as his self-generated style, but he has found a sweet spot between the two. He also works on supplementary projects to a film’s core key art, such as imagery tied to home releases, collectible posters (often maligned as “fan art”), social media marketing, and so on. “These are a bit more creatively open and let me work in my style a bit more without the constraints of We need a massive Brad Pitt head front and center!” he notes.