Your project should have an "image gallery" -- a collection of at least 3-5 images, and you can add text about or links to places with other graphics if you want to call attention to them.
- Ask yourself, what pictures would users/researchers most want/need/be interested in? -- With luck, the various researching you have been doing throughout the project has yielded examples of or at least ideas about good candidates for your image gallery. Please keep in mind that your image selection should relate directly to the context, analysis, and essay for your film.
- Examples of things that might be in your image gallery include but are not exhausted by:
- Key film stills
- Pictures of actors and directors
- Pictures of the real persons or places
- Newspaper headlines or articles dealing with the event or person
- Movie posters (see the Online Film Resources page)
- Newspaper ads (like posters, these would be very relevant -- how the movie was "sold" to the public)
- Paintings -- book jacket illustrations
- Cartoons, caricatures -- autographs, letters, "real" documents
- Maps
- Original art, sketches, doodles (by you or friends, etc.)
- Each image will need a brief explanatory caption and a citation of where you got it.
- We'll list some resources for images for those of you who will need help, but your research is the best mine to exploit or at least to identify needs to seek elsewhere. Seek credible resources. To find out more about finding, evaluating, and using online resources, see Lehigh University's Navigating Information tutorials at https://www.lehigh.edu/library/infolit/students/index.html