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

5′th Annual Typophile Film Festival: Opening Title

TypophileFilmFestival_OpeningTitle
If you love typography, look no further. Handmade by students and faculty at Brigham Young University (BYU), the opening-title for the 5′th annual Typophile Film Festival, is a bona fide type de force. Uniquely inspired by the 5 Senses, the designers stir up a theme that describes how sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch inform human creativity. Like a game of dress-up, each of the senses is visually fitted in it’s own swathe of tactility – thumbing their nose at squeaky-clean CG, and relying entirely on raw materials. Its means are thrifty, but in scope, ambitious. The result is authentic.

Naturally, the common denominator is typography, and like a buffet of sorts, there is something here for everybody. From sans serifs to scripts, the contrast of typefaces are strung together so cannily that the graphical mishmash makes you feel like you’re staring into a bowl of alphabet soup. Devoid of superficial extravagance, the whole piece has a sense of frugality about it; an economy of form, that with such wide eyed (student) endeavors , makes you feel warm and fuzzy, or genuinely, proud to be a designer. Easily, that’s as good as it gets.

True, that for all its inherent qualities, a piece of such prudent and exceptional means is sure to inspire. False, that for all its inherent, accessible qualities, a work like this is a piece of cake. Frankly, in the nature of great work, the many designers who created this opening title made it look easy. In honesty, this piece is a labor of love, and born from the passion, grunt work, and elbow grease of Brent Barson (Creative Director, Faculty member), and over a dozen young designers. The team made a conscious decision to avoid CG, and in turn, conceive a work on the flip side of high-end. When the dust settles, the effect, with all the Astroturf, Play-Doh, and Jell-O bouncing typography, is unabashedly innocent, and playfully inviting; coming home to what Motion Graphics used to be all about; pure, unadulterated fun.


Creative Director & Faculty Mentor:
Brent Barson

Writers:
Brent Barson
Jessica Blackham
Analisa Estrada
Meg Gallagher
John Jensen
Regan Fred Johnson
Colin “The Pin” Pinegar

“Our dreams drench us in senses, and senses steep us again in dreams.” — Amos Bronson Alcott
“If eyes were made for seeing, then beauty is its own excuse for being.” —Ralph Waldo Emerson
“Sound conducts the symphony of life.” — Anonymous
“Everyone eats and drinks, but few appreciate taste.” — Confucius
“Nothing conjures a more vivid memory than a familiar scent.” — Anonymous
“The sense of touch adds dimension to our existence.” — Anonymous

Storyboards:
Brent Barson
Jessica Blackham
Analisa Estrada
John Jensen
Regan Fred Johnson
Colin “The Pin” Pinegar

Construction, Paint & Glue:
Brent Barson
Wynn Burton
Analisa Estrada
Meg Gallagher
Olivia Juarez Knudsen
Casey Lewis
Reeding Roberts
Deven Stephens

Brain Sculpture:
Brian Christensen

Animators:
Brent Barson
Wynn Burton
Analisa Estrada
Meg Gallagher
Olivia Juarez Knudsen
Reeding Roberts
Deven Stephens

Cinematographer:
Wynn Burton

Editing:
Brent Barson
Wynn Burton
Analisa Estrada
Meg Gallagher
Reeding Roberts

Hand Models:
Analisa Estrada
Meg Gallagher
Olivia Juarez Knudsen
Deven Stephens
Michelle Stephens

Original Music:
micah dahl anderson
www.micahdahl.com

Shot with a RED One, a Canon EOS 5D Mark II, a Canon EOS 40D, and a Nikon D80.
Stop motion created with Dragon Stop Motion.

Special thanks to Kevin “Laser” Cole and the BYU waterjet cutting crew.
Effusive thanks go to Eddie King and Rubberball Productions for the RED shoot.
Thanks to Font Bureau for the usage of their handsome typefaces.
Much obliged to Verite, Bethanne Anderson and Paul “P-Dudey” Adams for the lighting & equipment, and Adrian Pulfer for the Mark II.
Thanks to the Amanda Knight Hall for the ghosts, and lingering nagchampa smell.

Posted on Motionographer

Onesize: OFFF 2009 Sponsor Titles

As festival season makes its way around the globe, we are hit with an annual slew of exceptional, experimental (no pun intended) work from some of our most talented shops and individuals.

This time around we’ve got Onesize coming strong with the Sponsor Titles for OFFF Lisbon, 2009. This ambitious, 8 minute piece walks us through a countless number of classic and unexpected 3D type experiments. I encourage you to stick around until the end!

An Eastern-Block archival video vibe sets the mood, while an impressive cameo from Onesize’s own Head of 3D (Harm van Zon) brings narrative and humor to what could have become another piece of derivative shape/type-porn.

Be sure to check out some of behind-the-scenes extras as well.

Posted on Motionographer