Movies
Some people don't just watch films. They live inside them, quote them at the dinner table, rewatch them on a Tuesday for no particular reason, and feel something close to grief when a favourite gets a bad remake. Buying a gift for someone like that requires a bit more care than usual, because anything vague or generic will land as evidence that you weren't paying attention. And they will notice.
We put this collection together with exactly that person in mind. The one who has seen everything, owns opinions they will absolutely share with you, and has probably already bought themselves the obvious stuff. Our job was to find the things they hadn't thought to get themselves, or couldn't justify, or simply didn't know existed. That's a harder brief than it sounds when you're starting from a subject this well covered.
What we kept coming back to was specificity. The gifts in here that work best are the ones that speak to a particular kind of film love, not just the idea of cinema in the abstract. There's a difference between something that says "I know you like movies" and something that says "I know exactly what kind of person you are when the lights go down and the titles start." The first is fine. The second is the one worth giving.
We also thought carefully about the people who treat film as craft rather than just entertainment. The ones who care about directors, about cinematography, about what was happening in world cinema in 1974. Those people need different things from the ones who simply have a beloved film they return to every Christmas. We've tried to cover both, without watering anything down for either.
Nothing here is a poster in a frame from a generic print site. We're not interested in that and we doubt you are either. We wanted objects with a bit of weight to them, things that would mean something on a shelf or a coffee table or in regular use. Film is one of the great shared obsessions of the last hundred years. The gifts we found should be worthy of that.