Internet has a strange talent for convincing everyone that a random design is part of a major studio release. One minute it is just a playful concept, the next it is being treated like lost cinematic history. The line between parody and promotion gets thinner every day, and nobody seems too bothered by it.
Fake movie posters that look almost real sit right in that blurry space where imagination meets overconfidence in Photoshop skills. Everything looks polished enough to trick a quick scroll, but odd enough to raise suspicion after a second glance. Typography tries its best, lighting does some heavy lifting, and somehow it all holds together just long enough to spark confusion.
At this point, mock film covers and parody posters have become their own genre of visual noise.

























































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