Thursday, 8 January 2015

Titles

Opening Titles


The "Game of Thrones" opening titles are fully animated. Something like this would work for our film as it doesn't give away any of the plot but keeps the audience intrested by showing parts of the setting.  As well as this the building come up mechanically from the ground which could make the audience wonder what will come up next.
The title sequence relates to the series as it shows the development of an empire over a country.  The titles show a map of the country and the way the building turn up like clockwork show how the empire is rising.


The "Sherlock" opening titles use several time lapse's which keep the audience interested and this is something that could easily be done. Also the several objects create enigma, posing the audience to continually have questions about what relevance they could have to the story line. As well as this the music timing fits to the images.
The opening titles are relavent as it shows that the programme is about a detective solving mysteries, and the elements he could use to solve them.


The "Murdoch Mysteries" opening titles use several bodies and murder scenes. This would work for ours as we also want to include mystery. The use of focal blur and focus pull also keep the audience enthralled so would be good to include. The last the we could include is the sepia tone that makes it seem old would show that the murder was in the past and bring out the red and black tones that we use, supporting the horror genre conventions.
This is relavent to the series as it shows the consepts consided in murder which is what the series is about and how the detective solves them.


The opening titles from "Gone with the Wind" are simple yet effective, something we could easily achieve. a simple setting is shown that is relavent to the story line and the information is posted as text on top. This is effective because it gets the audience in the mood for the story through scenery and music.  Having character names at the beginning also gets f=your audience familiar with the name they will be hearing in the film.

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