Minggu, 24 Oktober 2010

Oscar Awards for Latest Movie Websites for Better Designing..Surprised ????

How-to-train-your-dragon-gr in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Many of us today probably use the Web to book tickets and find information about movies. By selling tickets and entertaining visitors, websites help movies succeed at the box office and earn public approval. And yet, website developers don’t get any public recognition for the success of movies. Isn’t it a bit unfair in the Internet era not to bestow a single bit of appreciation for the presentation of movies online?

Most modern movie websites are built in Flash, even when it’s totally unjustified. The websites often lack usability standards and require users to click through splash pages and introductions in order to access content. They have the luxury of being able to neglect common principles and standards because they garner attention merely by their association with the movies they promote. Let’s suppose, though, that these developers got their own Palmes d’Ors, Oscars and Bears. Wouldn’t this be strong motivation to create outstanding and usable websites?
In this post, we imagine Oscars being given to both movies and their websites. This is, of course, not a new award from Smashing Magazine and far less an attempt to assume the right and honor of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. It’s just a fun way to observe the latest trends in movie website design and to showcase the best websites of the 2009 blockbusters, as well as recent and upcoming movies.
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Nomination: Graphics

This is perhaps the most prestigious category in our virtual ceremony. It refers to the way a design uses photos, illustrations and graphic elements to create a pleasing and memorable visual experience.

The Nominees Are…

Law Abiding Citizen
For its use of bold and expressive photos.
Law-abiding-citizen in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Transformers
For the Transformers models (of course).
Transformers in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Ice Age 3: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (UK official website)
For the icy illustrations.
Ice-age-3 in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Alice in Wonderland
For achieving wonders with illustration and photo manipulation.
Alice-graphics in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs
For the tasty illustrations and delicious little elements in the design.
Cloudy-graphics in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
How to Train Your Dragon
For some red-hot graphics.
How-to-train-your-dragon-gr in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
A Town Called Panic
For the funky plasticine illustrations.
A-town-called-panic in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

The attention to detail on the Alice in Wonderland website is impressive. A seamless combination of digital illustrations and photographs and plenty of small Wonderland-style graphic elements makes this design eye candy.

Nomination: Interactivity

Many movie websites, especially ones for animated movies and action blockbusters, rely on interactive elements to engage visitors. The following websites of popular movies from 2009 deliver a solid interactive experience and are deserving nominees.

The Nominees Are…

Broken Embraces
For the beautifully executed stack of torn photos, which serves as the navigation menu.
Broken-embraces in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Halloween 2
For the terrific (and terrifying) 3-D elements.
Halloween in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
District 9
For the interactive panoramic views of District 9.
District-9 in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs
For the customizable food rain and lively characters.
Cloudy in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
For the magical image gallery.
Harry-potter in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

The website for Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs is a joy to explore, mainly because of its interactive features.

Nomination: Dynamic Effects

Movie websites have invariably included at least one trailer on the home page or on a splash page. The trailer usually plays automatically. But a growing trend is to use clips from the movie as a pre-loader or background. In doing so, film websites typically employ Flash animation and motion graphics for maximum visual impact. The following websites feature some excellent dynamic effects of various types.

The Nominees Are…

Halloween 2
For the spooky and shimmering video clips.
Halloween-dynamics in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Where the Wild Things Are
For the beautiful and organically integrated video.
Where-the-wild-things-are in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Transformers
For the animated Transformers (showing actual transformations would have been better, though).
Transformers-dynamic-effect in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Watchmen
For the incredible dynamic effects.
Watchmen in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Terminator Salvation
For the well-styled video stream.
Terminator in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Lovely Bones
For the seamless combination of video fragments and images.
Lovely-bones-dynamic in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Star Trek
For the fantastic transition effects.
Startrek in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

The navigation on Star Trek‘s official website simulates the experience of walking around the spaceship. This effect is excellently implemented and takes the visitor deep into the movie’s atmosphere.

Nomination: Harmony With Movie

Movie websites are of course all about the movies they promote. But screenshots, trailers, photos and images alone may be not enough to convey the atmosphere of a film. A lot more can by done by weaving the story and concept in with the design elements. Each website showcased below does a great job of recreating its movie’s feel and drawing visitors in.

The Nominees Are…

Alice in Wonderland
For the gallymogger details throughout the design.
Alice-in-wonderland-incorpo in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Star Trek
For the great use of space-themed material, which everyone loves.
Startrek-incorporation in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Drag Me to Hell
For the shiver-inducing fly animation.
Drag-me-to-hell in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Surrogates
For the futuristic robot features.
Surrogates-incorporation in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Up in the Air
For the nifty airplane-style elements and icons.
Up-in-the-air-incorporation in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
District 9
For the great use of alien-themed material.
District-9-incorporation in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

Our virtual Oscar goes to District 9. The movie’s dismal atmosphere is communicated well on all of the website’s pages. In fact, District 9 offers six distinct “experiences” apart from the official website. Features include interactive panoramic images, stylized graphics and video clips, as well as separate pages for humans and aliens (being faithful to the movie’s spirit).

Nomination: Best Exclusive Content

Thousands of online resources and databases are available where users can find out information about past, current and upcoming movies, watch trailers and book tickets. So, exclusive content is a kind of trump card for official movie websites. Without it, the websites are almost useless. Still, many studios continue to offer a minimum of content, such as trailer, screenshots, synopsis and a couple of posters for downloading. By contrast, all of the nominees for our Best Exclusive Content award offer treats for even the most fastidious of movie fans.

The Nominees Are…

Alice in Wonderland
For the fun facts about the movie.
Alice-content in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Nine
For the screenplay, which is available in PDF format.
Nine-content in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
An Education
For the extensive information about the film.
Education-content in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Up in the Air
For the precise “departure” and “landing” info.
Up-in-the-air-content in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Watchmen
For the incredible character profiles.
Watchmen-content in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
The Wolfman
For the fascinating insight into werewolf legends and mystery.
Wolfman-content in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

Besides its comprehensive overview of the movie and a number of videos and photos, The Wolfman website offers a good amount of information in the Features section about the mysterious events depicted in the movie and the horror legacy of Universal Studios. Both the content and presentation are wonderful.

Nomination: Typography

Typography greatly affects the user experience. Everyone loves beautiful typography, and we just couldn’t leave this element out of our categories. In most cases, a movie website’s attention to typography amounts to choosing an appropriate font family. On some websites, though, you’ll find some really nice work with styling and arranging.

The Nominees Are…

Halloween 2
Halloween-typography in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Watchmen
Watchmen-typography in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Nine
Nine-typography in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
How to Train Your Dragon
How-to-train-your-dragon-ty in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Inglourious Basterds
Inglorious-bastards-type2 in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Where the Wild Things Are
Where-the-wild-things-are-t in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Broken Embraces
Broken-embraces-type in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

The Inglourious Basterds website is practically the only design here that expands the work of the film’s art through typography. Both the selection and arrangement of type here evoke the spirit of the film and make the website easy and enjoyable to read.

Nomination: Fun Games

Games, fan kits and other activities of the sort can be found on movie websites from various genres, from family comedy to horror. This entertainment engages visitors, in turn further promoting the film. Truly unique and engaging activities have made it into this category.

The Nominees Are…

Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs
For its five ways to play with food, one of which is in 3-D!
Cloudy-extras in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Fantastic Mr. Fox
For the lovely game interface design.
Fantastic-mr-fox-extra in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Transformers
For the fan kit and fan art sections.
Transformers-extra in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Sherlock Holmes
For the clever test of deduction.
Sherlock-holmes-extra in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Surrogates
For the virtual surrogate creator.
Surrogates-extra in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
District 9
For the “non-human” support.
District-9-extra2 in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
How to Train Your Dragon
For its wide range of craft activities.
How-to-train-your-dragon-ex in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Avatar
For letting you create your own avatar (not as beautiful as the movie’s, though).
Avatar-extra in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

The website for How To Train Your Dragon offers seven online games and fifteen activities to print out and play. Good enjoyment for the whole family.

Nomination: Cross-Media Interaction

The increasingly popular mobile Web and social networks just can’t be ignored by movie companies. Many movies are represented on Twitter, Facebook and other social networks and bookmarking services. Many movie websites have social media panels and widgets that let users get updates and share information about the movies on their own websites and social network pages.
iPhone and iPod apps have become common promotional tools as well. Some movies even have community websites that bring people together around certain topics discussed in a film. The deepest and most versatile social media integration is exemplified by the following websites.

The Nominees Are…

Alice in Wonderland
For the wonderful mobile applications.
Alice-media in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Star Trek
For the complete collection of social network links.
Startrek-medi in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Pandorum
For the deep media interaction (widget, social networks, iPhone game, etc.).
Pandorum-widget in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
District 9
For the earthling and non-human communities.
District-9-media in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Avatar
For providing numerous ways to spread word about the movie.
Avatar-media1 in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
The Twilight Saga: New Moon
For attending to all kinds of Twilight fans (take the TwilightMOMs community for instance!).
Twilight-media in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

With 5 official streams on major social networks, over 15 community websites and 4 items in the App Store, The Twilight Saga: New Moon is the clear winner in this category.

Nomination: Best HTML Website

Many movie websites use Flash when HTML, CSS and a couple of good JavaScript effects would do. The four websites below break from this convention and prove that good movie website design does not necessarily have to include Flash.
The Cove
The-cove in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Music by Prudence
Music-by-prudence in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Food Inc.
Food in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
When You’re Strange
When-you-are-strange in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

The website for Music By Prudence fully deserves this award. The website was created by New-York based design duet Bartlett de Boer, which explains the idea for this design this way: “Together with our client, we decided on a Flash-like site, to be supported by WordPress’ content management system. We combined bold typography, huge background images and a smart jQuery application that creates a dynamic effect, presenting all the info in semi-transparent sections. This was one of the most exciting projects we’ve worked on so far.” No doubt, the Music By Prudence website is a credit to Matt Mulleneweg’s brainchild, WordPress, too.

Nomination: Best Flash Website

Movie websites usually contain a massive amount of media content, which is why Flash is the most popular platform on which to build them. While many websites either overuse animations and dynamic effects or don’t justify their use of Flash at all, some Flash movie websites deliver attractive, entertaining and informative experiences quite well. Below are six movie websites that are worthy of our imaginary Best Flash Website Oscar.

The Nominees Are…

Alice in Wonderland
Alice-in-wonderland in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
How to Train Your Dragon
How-to-train-your-dragon in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Inglourious Basterds
Inglorious-bastards in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Lovely Bones
Lovely-bones in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Surrogates
Surrogates in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Up in the Air
Up-in-the-air in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?

And the Winner Is…

Inglourious Basterds! An attention to detail at all levels of the website, nifty yet unobtrusive effects and plenty of information make this Flash movie website stand out gloriously from the others.

Red Carpet Stars

Some movie websites that did not win our imaginary Oscars are still worth being showcased. Most of these, though not all, are done in a minimalist style, containing some basic information and a minimum of Flash effects. They are quite easy to navigate and their interfaces are visually appealing. Despite not being nominated here, they deserve some serious Hollywood buzz.
City Island
A lovely combination of photographs and sketches makes the website for City Island special.
City-island in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Mid-August Lunch
This is more an interactive movie poster than a website. The page contains practically no information about the film itself, referring visitors instead to the studio website. Still, it features an original theme that we just couldn’t pass up.
Mid-august-lunch in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Invictus
Like the films of maestro Clint Eastwood’s oeuvre, the website for Invictus tries to show the present through the prism of timeless values. How else to explain the use of Flash for this elegant and contemporary design, which could have been done with plain HTML and jQuery?
Invictus in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
The Hurt Locker
Grungy typeface, sandy colors and good still images make this website a worthy online counterpart to the movie.
The-hurt-locker in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Green Zone
Some really great styling in the navigation menu.
Green-zone in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Diary of a Wimpy Kid
Funny cartoons and a graph paper texture contribute to the theme for this movie website.
Diary-of-a-whimpy-kid in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
The Square
The content here is contained in a stylized grid, which doesn’t in the least impair readability and usability. Dark colors and bold grungy textures make for a true “website noir.”
Square in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Kick-Ass
Plenty of games are integrated smoothly in the content here, resulting in a kick-ass movie website!
Kick-ass in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Shutter Island
The website for this brilliant movie is another black pearl in our collection. The focus here is on the dark island landscape, complemented by little polished details.
Shutter-island in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Brooklyn’s Finest
This is one of the few websites that have a good splash page. Overall, the website for Brooklyn’s Finest has some great photos and unobtrusive Flash effects. The city line shown as a film negative is the cherry on top.
Brooklyns-the-finest in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
The Road
The website for this impressive film, based on the Pulitzer prize-winning novel by Cormac McCarthy, is lean as can be. The minimalist design builds mainly on still images from the movie. The quotes from the novel that appear while the page loads (an feature also seen on the Inglourious Basterds website) contributes to this information-rich website.
The-road in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Hot Tub Time Machine
The headshots that appear when you mouse over the menu items would make anyone smile. The short introduction is a nice touch, too. The Hot Tub Time Machine website certainly won’t leave you cold.
Hot-tub-time-machine in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Moon
This website is notable for its atmospheric, pseudo-3D background images. The graphics are enriched by transparent elements with frames that mimic a plating effect.
Moon in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Lbs.
This website has what you could call a camouflage design: it looks like pure HTML but is fully Flash. But don’t let that annoy you. The website loads relatively quickly and is easy to use. Also, the panorama on the main page is adorable.
Lbs in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
The Secret in Their Eyes
When the subject matter is secrets, a dark laconic design is the way to go.
The-secret-in-their-eyes in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Precious
The website for the Oscar-winning film (really!) Precious shows great use of video to get visitors involved in the story.
Precious in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Valentine’s Day
The website for Valentine’s Day has a social network-ish look and feel, mainly because the background photos look like the profile pictures on a social network.
Valentines-day in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
Please Give
Although this is only a “Coming soon” page, showing a trailer, press notes and a Facebook link, the typography merits its inclusion on this list.
Please-give in What If Oscars Were Given To Movie Websites?
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