| Fan Art / Digital Art / Drawings / Movies & TV | ©2012-2013 ~UtterlyLudicrous |
"It is indeed the time to run,
this is the part where I start to have fun."
Ponymount Pictures and Maretual Film Company present a Lauren Faust production
In association with Neighdos Interactive, Ltd.
A Diamond West Film
Brenda Crichlow in "Zecora Croft: Brew Raider"
Starring Bloom Voight, Sweetie-Belle Glen, Scoot Tayloo, Rainbow Craig
Music by Octavia Revell
Sound Effects Supervisor: Vinyl Aftermare
Co-Executive Producers: Cadance Kenny, Shining-Armor Klein
Costume Designer: Hoity Toity
Edited by Twilight Sparkle, A.C.E., Tara Canterbury, Princess M. Petruccellestia
Director of Photography: Photo Finish, Jr., A.C.S.
Based on the Neighdos Interactive Game Series by Ze-Core-A Design
Executive Producer: Princess Luna
Produced by Lauren Faust, Celloydstia Levin, Coluna Wilson
Story by Apple J. Ack and Flutt R. Shy & Rare I. Ty
Adaptation by Diamond West
Screenplay by Twilight Sparkle and John Zinmare
Directed by Diamond West
Read the Novel from "Ponies Don't Have Pockets" Books
Official Film Companion Published by Care-lton Books
Music from the Motion Picture Available on Elektavia Compact... Wait... cDs don't exist in Equestria.
PPP.BREWRAIDERMOVIE.PONI
Rated PG-13 [Ponies Strongly Cautioned] for Excessive Amounts of False Magic, Diagnosis of Diabeetus, and Some Silly Incantations
Presented by Ponymount Pictures, Maretual Film Company & Lauren Faust Productions
IN THEATRES SOMEDAY...






A grainy filter has been applied across the whole image, echoing classic adventure films like Indiana Jones. After it is removed, the underlying vector is top-notch and separates itself from the background with its consistent smooth strokes. Even the long credits list, often regarded as supplementary and secondary to the poster's subject, is ponified beyond doubt while preserving the link to the real cast and crew. Auxillary filters (ie. for the dark grey sun, the blue on which it rests and - to a very small extent - Zecora's ends) could not have been used with more skill. Despite movie poster parodies being themselves quite developed, this one breaks new ground: it fuses a colourful and intrepid human explorer with a reclusive yet knowledgeable zebra (an archetype of Faustism, the mixing of pop art and abstract expressionism) into an unambiguous personality.
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