Demystifying Visual Features of Movie Posters for Multi-Label Genre Identification
This addresses the problem of early genre identification for movie recommendation systems, but it is an incremental approach as it applies existing methods to a new data source (posters).
The paper tackled automated multi-label movie genre identification from poster images, presenting a deep transformer network with a probabilistic module that achieved encouraging performance and outperformed some contemporary architectures on a dataset of 13,882 posters from IMDb.
In the film industry, movie posters have been an essential part of advertising and marketing for many decades, and continue to play a vital role even today in the form of digital posters through online, social media and OTT (over-the-top) platforms. Typically, movie posters can effectively promote and communicate the essence of a film, such as its genre, visual style/tone, vibe and storyline cue/theme, which are essential to attract potential viewers. Identifying the genres of a movie often has significant practical applications in recommending the film to target audiences. Previous studies on genre identification have primarily focused on sources such as plot synopses, subtitles, metadata, movie scenes, and trailer videos; however, posters precede the availability of these sources, and provide pre-release implicit information to generate mass interest. In this paper, we work for automated multi-label movie genre identification only from poster images, without any aid of additional textual/metadata/video information about movies, which is one of the earliest attempts of its kind. Here, we present a deep transformer network with a probabilistic module to identify the movie genres exclusively from the poster. For experiments, we procured 13882 number of posters of 13 genres from the Internet Movie Database (IMDb), where our model performances were encouraging and even outperformed some major contemporary architectures.