TCTTS, looks fantastic.
1. Spread out the headings and center them over their respective columns. It is confusing to see "Date" with the movie title underneath, "Genre" above studio, etc.
2. The "Command + F" note is a great touch. Many people will be looking for a search box in that area.
3. Move the Twitter and Facebook icons or move the links at the end of the line. It looks unbalanced when the rest of the elements are centered.
4. Switch the name and release date. 99% of people will look for the name first, then they will read left to see the date, then they will read right for the rest of the info. It will flow better with name first.
5. You can do a Standard and Expanded view. The Standard view would hide columns like Studio and others that you may find important for some users but not all. I think is a better choice than a mouse over as it will still allow people to easily search and take in a large amount of info quickly by skimming rather than having to mouse over each title.
6a. This would be easier to show than describe, but I'll try: you can expand the category titles by mixing small and large type sizes. I would recommend Theatrical Release, Trailer Release, For Purchase Release (I don't love this one), Direct to Consumer, and Television Series. The word "Theatrical" could be the same size as your current categories and "Release" could be much smaller and centered below, putting the focus on Theatrical while also communicating clearly. I'll work on those categories I suggested.
6b. Why distinguish between theatrical release and direct to consumer?
1. Spread out the headings and center them over their respective columns. It is confusing to see "Date" with the movie title underneath, "Genre" above studio, etc.
2. The "Command + F" note is a great touch. Many people will be looking for a search box in that area.
3. Move the Twitter and Facebook icons or move the links at the end of the line. It looks unbalanced when the rest of the elements are centered.
4. Switch the name and release date. 99% of people will look for the name first, then they will read left to see the date, then they will read right for the rest of the info. It will flow better with name first.
5. You can do a Standard and Expanded view. The Standard view would hide columns like Studio and others that you may find important for some users but not all. I think is a better choice than a mouse over as it will still allow people to easily search and take in a large amount of info quickly by skimming rather than having to mouse over each title.
6a. This would be easier to show than describe, but I'll try: you can expand the category titles by mixing small and large type sizes. I would recommend Theatrical Release, Trailer Release, For Purchase Release (I don't love this one), Direct to Consumer, and Television Series. The word "Theatrical" could be the same size as your current categories and "Release" could be much smaller and centered below, putting the focus on Theatrical while also communicating clearly. I'll work on those categories I suggested.
6b. Why distinguish between theatrical release and direct to consumer?