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Floating Head Syndrome

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Floating Head Syndrome (trope)

"They could whip up some bad Photoshop poster in an afternoon. They do it all the time. Two big heads."
David Drayton, The Mist

A term referring to the tendency for Film Posters and DVD cover art to have a black background with the faces of the lead actors above the name of the movie. A simple one or two heads staring at you with the setting superimposed in the background with set-piece-specific art in the foreground. It could also be the entire cast in various stages of intensity... and nothing else. When done with the villain, it is Evil Overlooker. Often overlaps with Sean Connery Is About to Shoot You.

The style became ubiquitous once the age of photo editing software came about, since it meant studios no longer had to commission an artist tens of thousands of dollars to paint a carefully crafted poster for them, when they could just take stock photos of the lead actor and have interns superimpose them onto any background. The same basic principle can exist with more than just a floating head, as full body group pictures splashed across the poster in different sizes and scaling creates a similar style, while maybe more crowded with more to look at it can still evoke a sense of having a generic template.

In many cases, the main film poster may be more creative because of the larger size it will be displayed at, but the VHD/DVD/Blu-Ray will have a more generic "main actor heads against a black background" design so that a potential consumer can see who is in the movie at a glance.

Compare Framed Face Opening, as well as the visually similar Stacked Characters Poster, which people often mistake this style of poster for it, despite having the bodies of all its actors firmly attatched to their heads.

Not to be confused with Flying Face, when heads literally float as a magical side effect of Losing Your Head, or metaphorically as a Floating Advice Reminder, or Huge Holographic Head, or Sky Face. Or, for that matter, exploding head syndrome.


Examples:

    open/close all folders 

    Anime & Manga 
  • JoJo's Bizarre Adventure:
    • Diamond is Unbreakable: One visual features Yoshikage Kira overhead in the background.
    • Stone Ocean: The third visual for the anime features the protagonists overhead the Kennedy Space Center.
    • Steel Ball Run: One manga cover features Gyro above over a group of horse racers.
    • JoJolion: The cover for Volume 24 has Josuke, Yasuho, Rai, and Toru above a map of Morioh.
    • The JoJoLands: The page cover for Chapter 3 has the team floating in individual corners.
  • Zombiepowder.: One of the chapters starts with a two-spread with floating heads of all the major characters, including some that never appeared anywhere else before the manga's cancellation.

    Comic Books 
  • It's quite common in comic books, particularly back in the 60s and 70s in team books, where they'd have one character doing something interesting in the middle and every other member of the team as just a floating head watching the action.
  • '30s and '40s pulp comics tended to have a Dramatis Personae on the side of the cover, usually in the form of a strip of mug shots depicting characters from multiple stories that would appear in the books.
  • Spoofed for Damage Control Vol. 3 No. 1. "How many times can we do the same floating heads cover?"
  • This rather cheesy cover art for a Jurassic Park (1993) comic book adaptation is — excluding the raptor — comprised of nothing but floating heads on a blue background. The raptor seems comprehensibly scared.
  • A not-so-uncommon appearance in Rob Liefeld comic covers.
  • Peter Parker had his own version of this within the comic pages, which would appear whenever Peter was pensive or on the verge of death, showing the faces of his friends, his loved ones, and, one time, a casual friend named Josh.
  • The cover of White Sand has floating heads of Praxton, Khriss and Baon overlooking the group of Sand Masters on the ground below them.

    Films — Animation 

    Films — Live-Action 

    Literature 
  • Animorphs: The inside cover art for the final book shows all of the Animorphs' faces floating in space.
  • When the Doctor Who New Adventures started, there was no requirement for the cover to literally depict a scene from the book, and the cover from the first book in the series, Timewyrm: Genesys, included the Seventh Doctor's head floating in midair. Years later, when the last book starring the Seventh Doctor, Lungbarrow, was being written, there was a thought that it should have a similar cover. Since it was now the convention that the cover should depict a scene from the book, the author added a sequence where the Doctor's Huge Holographic Head appeared over London. Then that scene wasn't used for the cover after all.
  • The Doctor Who Novelisations often had the Doctor's floating head, especially on covers by Chris Achilleos who traditionally did the heads in monochrome and the rest of the picture in colour. See some examples here.
  • All three books of The Flight Engineer feature co-author James Doohan's head. Which is rather odd considering that the character who's most like Scotty isn't the hero. The third book adds the head of a Fibian.
  • The cover to Galaxy of Fear: Ghost of the Jedi has floating heads of Darth Vader and Aiden Bok in the background. Bok is understandable, as he's the eponymous ghost, but Vader?
  • Lukundoo and Other Stories: The original 1927 cover features a green head resting in the palm of his left head. No other body parts are visible.
  • The Rest of the Robots:
    • The 1968 Panther cover has a pink/red robot head in the centre of the cover and eight translucent duplicates around it, all on a black background.
    • The 2018 Harper Collins cover has a yellow robot head in the centre of the cover and six duplicates around it, all on a dynamic purple background.
  • The original paperback cover for Return of the Living Dead had a giant disembodied zombie head and hands looming behind a woman in a black void, seemingly about to grab her. Overlaps with Evil Overlooker, what with the zombies being the villains and all.
  • This was a common cover design for almost all of the Star Trek novels of the nineties.

    Live-Action TV 
  • Angel: On the British DVD boxsets, the covers tend to be floating busts but every single disc has a floating Angel head. All doing the same "Am I brooding or did I leave the iron on?" face, but separate images. You'd guess the camera team got drunk and did a giant photoshoot of this one expression at different angles, then realized they had to do something with it.
  • The Sony Bewitched DVDs had covers that each showed large versions of Samantha, Darrin, and Endora (and in later seasons, Sam's and Darrin's children as well) looming above a cartoonish city, usually cut off from either the torso up, or the shoulders up. The box for Sony's DVD of the complete series instead had a full-body shot of Sam's Animated Credits Opening self as its focal image, but did have little bordered pictures of actors' heads on the bottom. Most of Mill Creek Entertainment's Bewitched covers, including their own Complete Series boxsets, also display characters' floating heads.
  • When serials from the classic Doctor Who series were released on VHS in the 1990s, most of them had beautiful paintings commissioned specially for them. After 1997, this stopped.
    • The cover of the Limited Edition of the Series 6 boxset consists of only a giant floating Silent head in a pitch black background. (For the sake of contrast, the regular edition's cover is a non-beheaded group shot.)
  • One of the boxes of Smallville DVDs only has the faces of Clark, Lana and Lex on it.

    Magazine 

    Music 

    Pinball 

    Theme Parks 

    Video Games 

    Web Original 

    Western Animation 
  • Droners: The posters for the two seasons feature this with the head of each global Cup host. First Wyatt Whale for 1st season; then for season 2, Scarlett "The Rust Queen" from Tortuga.

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