Airplane
Perviously, in regards to DVD interface, I analyzed Tomb Raider The Cradle of Life; a highly complex and large budgeted movie from 2003. So, in making my decision of what DVD to analyze for this week, I went with the movie Airplane, which came out in 1980 (four years before my birth). This movie is a comedy involving one of my favorite classic comedians Leslie Nielson.
OK, so with this movie there is a VERY clear difference between its interface and Tomb Raiders. For one, the technology was nothing close to what it is now. There have been countless advancements in how DVDs are made and produced. And, I am pretty sure that DVDs didn't even exist at this time. So this movie is originally copied from a VHS form and formatted for DVD usage.
The budgeting of movie years ago was also not nearly as high as they tend to be now (especially in the professional industry). So once again, from simply looking at the DVD menu I am able to tell this difference.
Now, to elaborate on the menu itself. The most prominent feature that I notice when I put the DVD is the player is that there is absolutely NO sound, not even when you cycle through the buttons. At first I thought maybe I didn't have my sound on, but after checking to make sure, it occurred to me that yes, my sound was on and there wasn't any music playing. The absence of sound is most likely due in part to the fact that this movie wasn't made for DVD and on a VHS you don't have interfaces therefore, don't need sound. There was not sound for an interface when the movie was created so there is no sound now for the movie as a DVD.
The second most noticeable feature, or lack there of, is there is no opening sequence and absolutely NO movement whatsoever. When the user pops the DVD in, the copy-write title comes up and then the Airplane Menu just appears; no transitions, no movement, no sounds, just appears within a split second. Once again, this could be due in part to the lack of technology, lower budgeting, and that DVDs didn't even exist. I must keep remembering that this movie was intended for VHS only because that is all that was available to movie makers at the time.
The background of this menu, consists of a static hand drawn/painted image of an airplane tied into a knot and the text "Airplane" drawn/painted into a three dimensional image, both of which are suspended in clouds; this is a comedic airplane theme movie!
The area of the menu that is used for displaying the buttons is seemingly shaped like a horribly drawn tail end of an airplane. The very bottom of the DVD menu is a red rectangle stretching across the bottom portion of the screen with a white, elongated triangle in the middle. As for the menu buttons, I can't seem to make out what kind of a type this is. The type doesn't follow any sort of rules, for instance, they aren't lined up, some letters are larger than the others or in caps.
The Buttons do seem to recognize mouse overs but the user would have to hold the mouse over the button for it to recognize that the mouse is even there. The indicator that a menu option is selected is an oddly shaped arrow that points to which ever option the user is about to select. When you select an option the arrow turns blue and then disappears. The arrow is the only element of movement and that is only if the user is manually making it move, other than that the entire Airplane menu is completely static.
The last of the Airplane interface to touch on, is the color pallet. It is very simple. a basic red and white theme with a blue sky background (the sky) and some black outlining/shadowing. Thus, the end to my Airplane blog, the interface is simple, but effective. I get what this movie is about by looking at how the airplane is drawn and I also understand that it is from a different time by the components in its menu.