L / O :- T O K N O W T H E H I S T O R I C A L C O N T E X T O F F I L M T I T L E S A N D C R E D I T S
- T O K N O W H O W F I L M T I T L E S A R E S T R U C T U R E S A N D A P P L I E D I N F I L M S- T O B E A B L E T O A P P L Y T H E S E R U L E S / I D E A S T O Y O U R O P E N I N G
S E Q U E N C E S
ASSIGNMENT 10: FILM BILLING
KEY TERMS
• Film title• Film credit• Billing • Opening sequence• Title sequence• Opening credits• Closing credits
• Possessory/possessive Credits• Cold open / teaser
• Top billing• Last billing
KEY TERMS DEFINITIONS
Film Title
FilmCredit
Billing
(Top & Last)
Opening Sequence
(Cold-open/Teaser)
Title Sequence
Opening Credits
Closing Credits
Title of film
Name and/or role of person worked on film
The process of placing titles and credits in a film
The opening of a film
More modern films that set a scene in the opening which creates enigma (like a trailer) is called cold open or teaser. Example = 4-3-2-1 opening
The opening credits of a film in which the title and credits are separate from the film itself
Ex James Bond
The credits and the beginning of the film
The credits and the end of the film
Top = most important
Last = least important
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4uaYiWu7uZs&safe=active
THINK OF HOW TITLES AND CREDITS HAVE CHANGED OVER TIME
-used to just be text on blank screen!http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pwwxklLotJ8&safe=active
http://www.artofthetitle.com/title/the-girl-with-the-dragon-tattoo/
Now there are:-music-CGI-text animation-images/footage etc-separate narratives from the
film
-symbolism and enigma
DEFINITION (WIKI)
• In a motion picture, television program, or video game, the opening credits are shown at the very beginning and list the most important members of the production.
• They are now usually shown as text superimposed on a blank screen or static pictures, or sometimes on top of action in the show.
• There may or may not be accompanying music.
• Where opening credits are built into a separate sequence of their
own, the correct term is title sequence (such as the familiar James Bond and Pink Panther title sequences).
HISTORY
• In 1900/20’s big film studios didn’t want actors names to be at beginning as they felt it would create the ‘star’ culture that existed in Broadway. This would cause the stars to expect big salaries. Also, the stars who were in films didn’t want their names at beginning as it wasn’t really the thing to do (as it were more popular to be a big Broadway star)
• In the 1950’s the film industry changed and studio’s/directors/stars decided on if their names were billed.
• American films also tended to list the names of the actors before the names of the directors, screenwriters, etc. (before the crew and film makers were more important than actors)
• After the 60’s the big stars started demanding that their names be put at the beginning of the film for recognition. Billing demands even extended to publicity materials (i.e. posters, trailers, billboards), down to the height of the letters and the position of names. Big actors have top billing and small actors have last billing.
• Up until the 1970s, closing credits for films usually listed only a some of cast members with their roles identified, or even simply just said "The End”• Example: ‘Oliver in 1968’ had nearly all the titles of cast and crew at beginning = 3.5 minutes long!
• Opening credits since the early 1980s, if present at all, identify the major actors and crew, while the closing credits list an extensive cast and production crew.
• Generally, the billing order signifies the importance (1st = most important, last = least important)
• By the 90’s a lot of films completely omit (leave out) the title and credits until the end (for different styles of opening sequences) such as Avatar, Star Wars, Dark Knight trilogy
SOLVIET (RUSSIAN) INFLUENCE
• Most Soviet films presented all film-related information in the opening credits, rather than at the closing which consist of just a "THE END“
• A typical Soviet opening credits sequence starts with a • film company's logo (Mosfilm, Lenfilm, etc.)• the film's title• followed by the director• the film's chief administrator-in-charge, the production
director• then the cast, usually in actor-and-role format for main actors, in
an alphabetical cluster• The final credit screen identified the studio corresponding to the
logo at the beginning, and the year of the film's production.
RECENT TRENDS
• Many major American films have done away with opening credits, not even displaying the film title until beginning of closing credits• Van Helsing in 2004 • Batman Begins in 2005
• George Lucas is credited with popularizing this with his Star Wars films which display only the film's title at the start.
• His decision to omit (leave out) opening credits in his films Star Wars (1977) and The Empire Strikes Back (1980) led him to resign from the Directors Guild of America after being fined $250,000 for not crediting the director during the opening title sequence.
• However, Hollywood had been releasing films without opening credits for many years before Lucas came along, most notably Citizen Kane, West Side Story, and The Godfather.
EVOLUTION (WIK)
• Some opening credits are presented over the opening sequences of a film, rather than in a separate title sequence.
• In some films/TV shows, the title and opening credits may be preceded by a "cold open," or teaser (brief scene), that helps to set the stage for the episode or film
4321 Scream 4
Is a ‘teaser’ as it previews a section later in the filmIt cuts off suddenly to create enigma, in which the film will answer the ultimate question as to why she jumped off bridge
Next slide….
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLrAbsppcjw&safe=active
No credits!!! But has a good reason….-trilogy (actors/companies and previous films already known-way to sell a film which people see as ‘typical horror/slasher”
SCREAM 4 OPENING
Part 1 Part 2 Part 3-typical convention with slight modern twists (facebook/texting)-similar to first opening sequence
-audience sees that part 1 is a like a parody of scream 1 – -however the convention of ‘unpredictable killer’ is then a parody
-they discuss stereotypical conventions of horror films- The chase/kill sequence reinforces conventions but also challenges them!
TITLE ONLY BILLING
• Nevertheless, "title-only" billing became an established form for summer blockbusters in 1989:• Ghostbusters II• Lethal Weapon 2• The Abyss following the practice.
• Clint Eastwood has omitted opening credits (except for the title) in every film that he has directed since1980.
• Other films to only show title:
• 2001: The Mummy Returns• 2004: Teacher's Pet• 2005: Batman Begins• 2006: Hostel• 2007: Hostel: Part 2• 2008: The Dark Knight• 2009: Avatar• 2010: How to Train Your Dragon• 2010: Inception• 2012: The Dark Knight Rises
RULES/REGULATIONS/EXCEPTIONS
• http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Billing_(filmmaking)
• There are MANY complicated rules but they must be followed. Read through the above website for understanding of these rules. You must consider this when you make your opening sequence.
• There are considerations of fame, role, length of time in film etc.
• Basically the stars all want top billing!
• Sometimes actors have to fight/argue their way with studios (sometimes they want to be first and sometimes studios want the more sellable and famous stars first)
Example 1:• Miami vice = was supposed to be Colin Ferrell for top billing but after Jamie Foxx won academy award he
wanted to be top (first name). He got it even though his role is not as long as Colin’s! Colin received top bill in closing credits. (agreement made)
Example 2• Seven = Kevin Spacey’s name not in opening credits as it would give away his identity as the killer…..he is in
end credits of course
Example 3• Hannibal = Gary Oldman had extensive make-up done for his role and didn’t want his name in credits!!! (He
didn’t want the fame like most stars)
COURSEWORK
• A good portion of the task of making an opening sequence is how you apply titles/credits
• You MUST show titles and credits
• Weaker pieces of C/W tend to just have the title at the end on a black screen which is not even common in contemporary films!
GENRE
• Keep genre in mind when looking at film’s titles and credits!
• (Remember the PURPOSE of the film/opening)
TASKASSIGNMENT 10: FILM BILLING
• Create a PowerPoint that shows your understanding of film titles/credits
• Slide 1: title page• Slide 2: Model example from class: (take a picture of your full
list worksheet)• Slide 3: Chosen film (name of film, genre, film cover• Part 4: Picture of full list of titles• Part 5: Multiple slides of screen grabs of titles, annotate their
meaning and annotate why in this order• Part 6: Chosen film 2 (that is different from 1) and repeat part
3, 4, 5, • Part 7: Compare the differences between them and discuss
why they are different
FILM CHOICE
• Any opening sequence or title sequence from a film on artofthetitle.com
• MUST HAVE TITLES AND CREDITS!!!!! (no teasers like scream 4)
RED = complete a title only sequence (example = signs)YELLOW = complete a regular opening sequence with simple
background footage (example = crash)GREEN = complete a regular opening sequence with
narrative/story (example = juno)
• Can’t do…. (not repeated films from assignment 9)• Dawn of the dead• Gattaca• U Turn• To Kill a Mockingbird• Cabin in the woods• Red lights
JUNO
JUNO OPENING DETAILS
Style & purpose of
opening-opening sequence
-title sequence-teaser
Length of opening
Type of font
Colour of font
Animation of text
Placement of text
Style:-standard opening sequence&-animated title sequence
_______________Purpose:-establish indie style, character and setting
2:26
_______________Why? Short and sweet establishments.
Sans serif (like a amateur drawing)
_______________Why? Teen theme
Multiple – yellow, orange, pinks
_______________Why? Cheerful colours
Like an amateur drawing (wiggling)
_______________Why? Not serious, comedy appeal
All over the screen in various places (depending on the visuals
_______________Why? No significance
JUNO FULL LIST OF TITLES
START OF OPENING
The film starts as a standard opening sequence which is normal footage which establishes:
• the main character • and the setting
STYLE OF OPENING
• The film then transitions into animation which more is similar to a title sequence style.
CREDIT 1
• Time: .12
• Possessory
• Distributing company
Typical to have distribution company as first credit as they invested the money have ownership of film
CREDIT 2
• Time: .17
• Possessory
• Production company
Next it is the production company as they have a large role as they produced the film, they have control over where film was filmed sets, filming, editing etc.)
CREDIT 3
• Time: .21
• Crew
• Director
Director has 1st credit as their role is quite important in this film (above the actors as they come after)
TITLE 4
• Time: .28
• Title of the film
The title of film has the biggest size and the animation flashes in order it gets the most attention and is very noticeable.
The main actress Ellen Page is placed in the shot as she is quite important
CREDIT 4
• Time: .35
• Cast
• Main actor gets top billing (first credit)
CREDIT 5, 6, 7, 8
CREDIT 5 CREDIT 6 CREDIT 7 CREDIT 8
Time: .40
Cast
Main Actor 2
Time: .44
Cast
Supporting Actor 1
Time: .52
Cast
Supporting Actor 2
Time: .58
Cast
Actor
JANE SMITH
ASSIGNMENT 10: FILM BILLING
MODEL FROM CLASS
Take photo on iPad and put place here
(handwritten)
CHOSEN FILM (GENRE: ________)
FULL LIST OF TITLE & CREDITS
CREDITS
TITLE OF FILM
CREDITS
REPEAT WITH FILM 2
COMPARISONFILM 1 & FILM 2
Film 1 Film 2
ORDER OF CREDITS
COMPARISONFILM 1 & FILM 2
Film 1 Film 2
FILM TITLE
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