I Fantastici Viaggi di Gulliver – Main Titles

Dal romanzo di Jonathan Swift è uscito da non molto nelle sale italiane I Fantastici Viaggi di Gulliver con Jack Black. Seppur il giudizio della critica non è stato entusiasmante, vogliamo puntare l’attenzione sui titoli di testa, interessanti per l’utilizzo dell’effetto Tilt Shift, il quale rende il contenuto di un certo tipo di immagine fotografica come se fosse un modellino in miniatura. I titoli e alcuni effetti speciali nel film sono stati realizzati dallo Studio Rok!t […]

Prologue for Robin Hood


Prologue’s treatment for Robin Hood is a study in patient analogue work. Ridley Scott called on the studio create Legends to open the film as well as End and Main Titles. Ridley’s vision for the film required Prologue to treat all the type in a handmade fashion, this meant taking the type out of the computer for most of the process and filming and treating them as handmade elements.

What stuck out to me were the gorgeous end titles that Prologue worked on in collaboration with Italian artist and animator, Gianluigi Toccafondo. I spoke with Prologue’s Creative Director on the project, Henry Hobson about their process for type development for the film and how they worked in collaboration with Toccafondo, here is what he had to say:

The type development was key to our work at Prologue, our idea was to echo Tocafondos effect with our typography. Initially we worked with existing fonts but found them too limiting. So we created a complete custom serif typeface to evoke the adventure, romance, promise, mystery qualities of the movie. We printed out each credit, then hand inked each name, working in 4k meant we could really go to town with really fine details. Manija Emran, one of our typographers, then added amazingly intricate custom flourishes to each letter, not just a full alphabet, but also every single character had its own custom flourish, to produce a truly unique type treatment. Even the locator cards had more love poured into them than most title sequences. During the end credits we printed our comped name cards onto non-porous paper then smudged and distorted by hand each name a dozen times, to produce a living hold and hand made transitions. Principally animated by Georgia Tribuiani, the smudged elements really integrated and transitioned the type into a constantly shifting and flowing sequence.

As a side note, when I was browsing through Prologue’s recent list of work one thing began to become apparent to me, their role in film production has evolved. Prologue was once called upon to vignette a film’s story with their personal treatment as a means to both draw the audience into the story as well as leave them with a final impression of the film. Now it seems that Prologue is called upon to envelope the film with a design system that ties the whole world together. Robin Hood, along with Iron Man 2, Sherlock Holmes and Ninja Assassin, are cases of Prologue’s further involvement with establishing a graphic style for a film.

Click here for the full interview as well as the clips


Director – Ridley Scott

Animated illustration -Gianluigi Toccafonda

Creative Director & Design – Henry Hobson

Producer – Unjoo Lee Byars

Typographic Design & Illustration – Manija Emran

Animators – Jorge Almeida, Cris Kong, Georgia Tribuiani, Stephen Villari

Executive Producer – Kyle Cooper

Posted on Motionographer

Silo-1 – Motion Title

Interessante esperimento di titles design quello realizzato da Silo1 Visual Solutions Co. per Kurye Video Festival.
Lo studio creativo Silo-1 è un collettivo multidisciplinare turco (Istanbul) specializzato in produzione audio-video. Il loro punto di forza è la sperimentazione che applicano a tutti i progetti, commerciali e personali.

yU+co: “Cirque du Freak” Main Title

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Fresh off the passing of Halloween comes the title sequence for Cirque du Freak: The Vampire’s AssistantyU+co’s latest main title opus.

While many cinematic title sequences suffer from a sense of auto-pilot, the main title for Cirque du Freak keeps you guessing. Taking on the thrust of a children’s nightmare, the resulting aesthetic is innocent but deftly tuned with motifs of fear—a surefire way to take the edge off the sweetness.

Borrowed from themes developed by the film’s director, Paul Weitz, the typography serves a dual purpose in providing information, while also being extensions of the puppets themselves. By redrawing original woodcut lettering, the typeface takes inspiration from lithographic circus banners, and as a narrative device, leads the children along an ominous journey. Cracked from the vault of graphic design, inspiration for the letterforms where drawn from the stylistic sentiments of Dada, shadow puppetry and German Expressionism.

The result is decorative but highly engaging, with an undercurrent of darkness and grit à la Tim Burton. Even so, similar themes are vested in the main-on-end titles for Lemony Snickets A Series of Unfortunate Events,  and in this piece, a renewed bond between Hollywood horror and the big, fat orchestral score. Through a string of slick transitions, the entire sequence strides forward with a sense of athletic perseverance resolving in moments of compositional clarity.

Read on for an in-depth Q&A with Motionographer’s Brandon Lori and yU+co’s Garson Yu…

Posted on Motionographer

2009 Emmys: Outstanding Main Title Design Nominees

Here are the nominees for a 2009 Emmy award in Outstanding Main Title Design.

True Blood (HBO)


Rama Allen, Designer; Shawn Fedorchuk, Editor; Matthew Mulder, Creative Director; Morgan Henry, Main Title Producer; Camm Rowland, Designer; Ryan Gagnier, Designer
Making of and case study on Digital Kitchen’s site

Taking Chance (HBO)


Michael Riley, Title Designer; Dru Nget, Title Designer; Dan Meehan, Animator; Bob Swensen, Main Title Producer

United States Of Tara (Showtime)


Jamie Caliri, Director/Director of Photography/Editor/Main Digital Compositor; Dave Finkel, Creator; Brett Baer, Creator
Q&A with Jamie Caliri on The Art of the Title Sequence

Storymakers (AMC)


James Spindler, Creative Director; Mike Wasilewski, Designer; Ahmet Ahmet, Art Director; Grant Lau, Art Director
Interview with the creators on AMC’s blog

Lie To Me (FOX) – Video not available

lie to me
Robert Bradley, Title Designer; Thomas Cobb, Title Designer
You can watch full episodes of Lie to Me on Hulu.com (in the United States).

See the official Emmy site for more details.

Posted on Motionographer

Latest from Lindsay Daniels

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With a clean and neatly organized body of sophisticated work, Lindsay Daniels launches her self-titled web presence. Her work speaks for itself along with the thoughtfully written treatments that accompany many of her boards and designs. The fact that she offers these treatments openly on her site not only helps the reader delve further into the storyline behind the visuals but also shows a welcome confidence behind the ideas.

As a former creative director at Favorite Color and one of those fortunate few to win an Emmy from her time at Digital Kitchen (for Dexter main titles), Lindsay is well positioned to take her next step into freelance.

From her contact section you can see that Lindsay is bi-coastal working in both Seattle and New York City.

Posted on Motionographer

Latest from Lindsay Daniels