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The Dude Designs: Tom Hodge Interview

Few artists out there can perfectly capture the lurid aesthetics of exploitation’s formative years.  Creatively dense, vividly colorful and exceedingly retro.  In other words, the antithesis of the charmless poster art that invades today’s theater vestibules.  UK-based artist, Tom Hodge, has stepped up to the plate.  From his noteworthy Hobo with a Shotgun poster to his work for Ti West’s upcoming The Innkeepers, he’s evoking the vintage tones of cinema’s yesteryear.  It was a pleasure to interview him, he was insightful and informative.  Ladies and gentlemen, the dude designs…

The obligatory question, how did you first become interested in film poster/cover illustration?

 Well it has been quite a round trip, I’ve been drawing since a very early age, when i was eight my cousin and i used to bunk off of school to watch bad pirate copies of Rambo (who needs censorship).  Then I would have these sketch books full of Rambo dismembering soldiers in the jungle, mum hated them but she never threw anything I drew away.  She’s still got boxes full of all my old drawing in the loft.

So naturally I became a total film and horror nut and used to collect old sample video covers from the local video shop.  I’d also record films off the TV (buying a video back then was expensive), I literally ended up with a wardrobe full of videos and I’d draw my own video covers for them. Which I guess led me into graphic design after finished school.  I did two years at college and then a further three years at Uni doing Visual Communication/Film Studies. The funny thing is, the more I got into design the further and further away I got from illustration and doing film posters, there just wasn’t consider any real merit behind it or that industry.  Design was all about minimalism, new wave, clean lines and overly clever concepts.  Well that was the way i saw it!

After Uni, I jumped around a few different design jobs but actually spent most of my time working in the games industry working on the print side of things (packaging etc). I had been getting frustrated with design over the years and couldn’t see a way to combine what I loved and what I did (I know it seems obvious now), but I hadn’t drawn for about nine years.  The breakthrough was when I started doing flyers for the Midnight Movies, which was cool because I got to really experiment with the work and find a style.  Through that I then rediscovered the art of video covers and how much I loved them which is where I began my project to design video covers in an arty way more than anything commercial.  So out of necessity I started to draw again.  I really found my feet with my CANNON project which lead onto the Video dungeon piece for Empire Magazine and then onto Arrow Video where I really started to expand my drawing style more and gain the confidence to work on Hobo and the Innkeepers.  I’ve still got a long way to go though and get nervous every time I start a big job!  So we will see what happens!

Can you describe your thoughts on modern film posters and the creativity (or lack thereof) in the industry?

The problem with modern film posters is basically MARKETING!  It controls everything now, but they are numbers and figures people.  It’s all ‘market research’ and ‘demographics’ not creatively led.  Not to piss anyone off, but you have someone who can’t draw or design telling people who can how to do it.  So what do you expect?

In the past you would have to higher an illustrator to do a poster or video cover (there was no other alternative) and you’d have to trust what came out of there creatively to some extent.  Which gave the work personality and individuality, now with computers and Photoshop, ‘creatives’ have lost a lot of the control as marketing can request what they like, designs are kind of used like tools a lot of the time so we end up with super head posters!

Don’t get me wrong, I use Photoshop for my work, but I try not to let it use me so no layer effects.  I think, “how would they achieve this effect in the old posters and go down that route instead?”

There’s a great article from Creative Review about it all, which says “multiple executions and a tortuous approval process, this remains a complex and frustrating industry to work in”.  As many as 400 to 500 pieces of artwork can get produced for one poster.  That’s just too many choices man, can someone just make up their mind?

I think poster art is coming into its own again though through the use of the web with things like forums, blogs and newsletters etc.  They will all happily link to the poster, people want to write and read about this stuff.  You just need to provide them with an image that has a hook, which people can write about and want to see.  That then raises awareness of a film like free ad space, which is what a poster is supposed to do.  Boring posters just won’t make the cut and if they do it will just get laughed at, not doing the film any good.

I want to produce some sweet, detailed, thought through and passionate designs which can speak to people.  I’m going to be working on a few lower budget films next which is cool because it gives these film a voice that wouldn’t normally get heard due to some awful Photoshop composed poster that no one would pay attention to.  

I’m still working on getting my name about at the moment, so hopefully I’ll continue to get great responses online and make enough ripples to rock that boat.  The more people are vocal that they don’t want to see a star’s face with a bit of grain and a colour wash to sell a film, the cooler the posters will be again.

A personal favorite of mine is your cover for Jaguar Lives!, you perfectly capture the retro action VHS cover complete with Joe Lewis’ iconic flying kick.  I recall the outlandish claims in the trailer where they compare him to Bruce Lee and Clint Eastwood.  What’s one of your favorite tag lines or trailer quotes?

Hey thanks man, I’m working on a real retro video cover at the moment complete with tacky type!

Obviously IT’S ONLY A MOVIE, IT’S ONLY A MOVIE…is a legendary tag line, but I do love the strapline on the little known horror film ‘The Lift’.  Take the stairs, take the stairs. For God’s sake, take the Stairs!!!”

                                                                    

Canadian director, Bruce McDonald, released experimental failure The Tracey Fragments in 2007 to a wealth of negative reception.  He can surely be applauded for the ambitious effort, but the screen splits were more jarring than endearing.  One redeeming facet of the overwrought indulgence was the presence of The Broken Social Scene’s signature bombast.  For the uninitiated, BSS is Canada’s indie iteration of Wu-Tang, packed to the gills with members.
Bruce’s latest, This Movie is Broken, continues his relationship with the band.  The premise is barebones and is a very loose narrative framework assembled around a Broken Social Scene concert.  Boy likes girl, girl is dissinterested, boy gets girl  (SPOILER ALERT).  Although the proceedings aren’t entirely affecting, it functions quite well as a concert film.  The end, however, features a sequence entirely out of place that almost disrupts the fun completely.  Do I recommend it?  Yes, if you dig the band.

Canadian director, Bruce McDonald, released experimental failure The Tracey Fragments in 2007 to a wealth of negative reception.  He can surely be applauded for the ambitious effort, but the screen splits were more jarring than endearing.  One redeeming facet of the overwrought indulgence was the presence of The Broken Social Scene’s signature bombast.  For the uninitiated, BSS is Canada’s indie iteration of Wu-Tang, packed to the gills with members.

Bruce’s latest, This Movie is Broken, continues his relationship with the band.  The premise is barebones and is a very loose narrative framework assembled around a Broken Social Scene concert.  Boy likes girl, girl is dissinterested, boy gets girl  (SPOILER ALERT).  Although the proceedings aren’t entirely affecting, it functions quite well as a concert film.  The end, however, features a sequence entirely out of place that almost disrupts the fun completely.  Do I recommend it?  Yes, if you dig the band.

“The Rock and Roller Disco Movie of the Year!”

R.I.P. Patrick Swayze

Dopeness is the cohesive gel that binds my decidedly random selections in uniformity.  Enjoy my delicious hodgepodge.
Also, the layout was jacked inspired by a playlist layout in the A.P.C. Journal.

Dopeness is the cohesive gel that binds my decidedly random selections in uniformity.  Enjoy my delicious hodgepodge.

Also, the layout was jacked inspired by a playlist layout in the A.P.C. Journal.

Seminal Hip Hop producer, Ski Beatz, has a twenty year plus history of crafting classic material for some of the greatest.  Although his work on Jay-Z’s debut, Reasonable Doubt, is heralded as his most noteworthy, his breadth of experience is continuing to expand under the DD172 umbrella.  This year is poised to be one of his busiest yet as he continues to work with newer artists.  His legacy will be indelibly etched into the hearts of Hip Hop heads for generations to come.  Ski took some time out of his very busy schedule to discuss the creative process and some of his upcoming projects!

What signified the change from Ski to Ski Beatz?

Well me personally I didn’t change it, what happened was an artist I was working with a few years ago, his name was Hot Rite, from Winstom-Salem, NC.  In one of his raps he said, “ya’ll been sleepin’ on Ski Beatz, Ski Beatz is back.”  As soon as he said that everybody started calling me Ski Beatz, even when I came back to New York, so I never changed it.

It just spread like wild-fire…

Mmm hmm, that’s right!

Can you discuss the creative freedom of live instrumentation as opposed to sample-driven production?

The live instrumentation came into birth because of sample clearances.  We didn’t want to, plus being independent and me using a lot of samples, we didn’t want to go through the process of getting sued or paying money to clear samples.  Let’s just get some live guys to keep the vibe of the sample, but create our own music around it.

What are your feelings on Curren$y’s recent migration from indie to major?

I think it’s a natural process, I know he’s doing a one album deal with Motown that’s produced by Alchemist, which is cool.  You know, anything to help the cause, once he does that he’s coming back to BluRoc to do what we do.  That’s helping us just get the buzz out even more.

Are there any details you’re willing to dispense on the follow-up to 24-Hour Karate School or the third entry of the Pilot Talk series?

Working on 24 now, I’m probably like four or five songs in, got a lot of cool artists on it.  Got an artist from the westcoast called Locksmith that’s kinda ill, he’s on it.  Got this kid from Atlanta, who now lives in Philly, goes by the name of STS, he’s doing his thing.  I’m gonna definitely have Curren$y on it, Stalley, Rugz, my main players who are down with us.  We got a couple of other surprises I can’t disclose at the moment because I gotta make sure it’s secure (laughs).

Speaking of which, you were unable to clear Mos Def for the first 24-Hour Karate School, do you think the two of you will work again in the future?

Oh yeah, we’re cool.  We’re actually trying to put together a project where I produce the entire album for him.  He’s in the process of finding a home for us to do this album, he wants to do it on a major scale.  So as soon as he calls me up and gives me the word we’re going into effect.

Damn, that’s gonna be dope!  So which tracks do you consider the crown jewels of your production work?

Luchini and Dead Presidents, the stuff I’m known for is all dope music, but I’m kinda into Audio Dope, Address and Life Under The Scope that I did with Curren$y.  Those are my new favorite joints, stuff like that.

Yeah definitely, it’s good you brought up Life Under The Scope, I noticed the video contains a rough cut of the track.  The one released for the album was more robust.

The one that we did the video for was actually the sample and the one that we did for the album was us live playing.  When we first dropped that we weren’t even thinking about clearing samples.  We did the song and the video the same day.  I made the beat, Curren$y came in and wrote it, shot the video the same day.  We weren’t thinking about clearing samples, we just wanted people to hear the song.  Once me, Curren$y and Dame decided to put together an album, we replayed it.

Today marks the 12th year of Big L’s untimely death, do you recall how you found out and how it impacted Hip-Hop to you?

I was living in Harlem when I found out, I was obviously shocked.  I did a lot of records with Big L before his death that we didn’t get to release.  I wish I had those records, but when we recorded those songs I did it all on ADAT.  All those ADAT tapes got destroyed or lost.  His death definitely impacted Hip Hop man, definitely impacted Harlem.  At the same time, it brought artists like Ma$e and Cam’ron out because that was his crew.  That’s how I met Ma$e and Cam was through Big L.

What’s something about yourself that most readers wouldn’t know?

Probably that I’m a perfectionist when it comes to the music and I never like anything that I do.  I might make five beats a day and only like one (laughs).  I’ll keep working on it until I get the beat right, it’s not like I’m in there cranking out hits and hot beats every day.  I go through a million beats that I feel are wack before I get to one that I like, that I’ll play for anyone.  I’m kinda shy when it comes to playing my tracks.  I think that’s the reason I don’t like sending out beat CDs or anything, I prefer to work with someone on the spot until we get it right.

Special thanks to Ski Beatz!

http://www.myspace.com/skibeatzmusic
http://www.dd172newyork.com/blog/
http://www.twitter.com/skibeatz

Buzz for La Sera’s forthcoming self-titled LP, due February 15th, has just increased tenfold after she released ‘Devils Hearts Grow Cold’.  Her latest 7” has all of the dreamy hallmarks you’ve come to expect.  Gorgeous.  Can’t wait to see La Sera and Tennis at the Rock ‘n Roll Hotel this March!
Also, peep the interview I conducted with Katy last year right here.

Buzz for La Sera’s forthcoming self-titled LP, due February 15th, has just increased tenfold after she released ‘Devils Hearts Grow Cold’.  Her latest 7” has all of the dreamy hallmarks you’ve come to expect.  Gorgeous.  Can’t wait to see La Sera and Tennis at the Rock ‘n Roll Hotel this March!

Also, peep the interview I conducted with Katy last year right here.

Micro-criticism: Somewhere (2010, Sofia Coppola)

Somehow the allegorical opening long shot of a car speeding around a track reflects Johnny Marco’s (Stephen Dorff) circuitous lifestyle without being ham-fisted.  Tonally similar to Lost in Translation, the premise is unremarkable, it’s a quiet rumination on the vacuous minutiae of celebrity culture and materialism.  The film has garnered a tepid response amongst certain viewers who regard the proceedings as humdrum, but there’s a nuance that keeps it interesting.  While not as visually sumptuous as Coppola’s other work, the drab pallette suitably conveys Johnny’s life.  Mercifully it’s not all gloom and doom as his daughter’s (Elle Fanning) unexpected visit serves as his salvation and ours.