Thanks for the update. I guess I didn't even notice it online.
bthomas98 said:
Any reason that the international poster has the positions of Rey and Luke swapped from the US version? Just different marketing?
From their point of view, the Jedi are evilAliasMan02 said:bthomas98 said:
Any reason that the international poster has the positions of Rey and Luke swapped from the US version? Just different marketing?
Different villain!
twilly said:I can snap some shots tonight after the kids go into sugar coma.TCTTS said:
Got any pics of the others? Would help to compare frames.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
LUKE
IS
HOLDING
A
LIGHTSABER
I've had them done at different places over the years. Multiple places in TX so....Michael's, Hobby Lobby, Aaron Brothers. Custom jobs. I wait until they throw out a 65% off coupon for framing, which is what Aaron Brothers has until the end of next week...hence the original question about frame color. For reference, each of the frames are 27x40.DB Coach said:
Twilly, those look nice. Where do you get your frames? I have 3 of the skinny OT theater posters I need to frame. I think they are 18x36.
dromo07 said:
why is Poe on the dark side of the poster?
Quote:
According to the Wall Street Journal, theater owners have to agree to a serious and unusual set of terms in order to earn the privilege of showing the new Star Wars movie. First, Disney is insisting on a 65 percent share of ticket-sales revenue, up from a standard 55 percent asked by most Hollywood studios, what WSJ calls "a new benchmark."
Disney is also requiring theaters to reserve at least four weeks in the largest auditorium available exclusively for The Last Jedi screenings. And if a theater violates any of the above terms? Well, then Disney reserves the right to charge an additional five percent of ticket sales revenue as penalty for the violation. This includes if the theater cancels even one screening of the film without Disney's consent.
And if you don't like those terms, as a theater owner, there's little to be done. Disney has outsized power in the modern theatrical market, with box-office sales down and Disney's significant stake in the remaining releases26 percent market share, as of last yearleaving theaters with little in the way of bargaining power. The Last Jedi is far too lucrative to pass up.