The Art of the Title Sequence

Fetishistic Advocacy for Speed in Titles

Seven sequences of stirring mobility.

Between driver and destination burrows transmutation. The road spreads and the governing need is not to arrive, but to go. What better odyssey of thought then a speeding sojourn into darkness? You may burn (may you burn), you may soar (may you soar).


FALLEN ANGEL

Road sign credits overlay the dark winding artery. The tremulous camera adds an unease heightened when the bus driver turns and stares. His was our initiatory point of view…and now his eyes are not on the road.


THE GIRL ON A MOTORCYCLE

Jack Cardiff’s “The Girl on a Motorcycle” has us zipping along the Interstate in half-steady, half-cocked woozy acceleration.

Extras

Video Extra iconThe Life and Death of Colonel Blimp

The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp contact sheet Click to Watch SD | iPod/iPhone

Another (Post-Credit) Sequence with Actual Motorcycles That Thrill!

REPO MAN

The opening sequence to Alex Cox’s “Repo Man” is perfect punk pixelation; distillation of a bitmapped nation. With Iggy Pop’s ripping fucksweat beat and the stringent static map motion, everything about the credit sequence moves, not unlike classic punk poster art. We throb into the blipping bulls eye: a space that is nothing less than the beginning.

NATURAL BORN KILLERS

The title sequence for Oliver Stone’s “Natural Born Killers” feature, among others, the madness of Patti Smith’s track “Roll N Roll Nigger” and a back seat POV that seemingly takes its cue from brash noir “Gun Crazy.”

Extras
Commentary excerpt with director Oliver Stone.

Video Extra iconA Backseat POV from "Gun Crazy"

Gun Crazy contact sheet Click to Watch SD | iPod/iPhone

LOST HIGHWAY

Plunging the dark horizontal depths of possible collision/possible arrival, David Lynch and title sequence designer Jay Johnson perhaps borrow from Jack Cardiff’s “The Girl on a Motorcycle,” and Monte Hellman’s “Two-Lane Blacktop” for the speed dream start to “Lost Highway.” The variable velocity puts you ill at ease while the atmospheric thrust of David Bowie and Brian Eno’s track, “I’m Deranged,” imbues the cryptic mix.


U TURN

Art of the Title is willing to bet Oliver Stone had one hell of a shot list for the opening credit sequence that features nicely delineated aesthetic for every episodic bend of this very long drive (the gradual matting of Sean Penn’s hair tells the story). A scratch type “crossroads crucifix” is added to the director credit. Drugs and vultures follow. Exacting inserts detail the small truths of time and place.

MULHOLLAND DR.

The crooked black melodrama, the kind that David Lynch traffics in exclusively and without peer, is set within the weird, sinking delirium of Angelo Badalamenti’s score. The distance between our hovering eye and the shadowy, almost woozy conveyance coddles the curiosity.

Extras
Angelo Badalamenti on working with David Lynch (excerpt)

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