Animated Credits Opening: Difference between revisions

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* The [[Vincent Price]] comedy ''Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine'' had part of its opening credits animated by [[Gumby|Art Clokey]].
* The [[Vincent Price]] comedy ''Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine'' had part of its opening credits animated by [[Gumby|Art Clokey]].
* ''[[Elf]]''
* ''[[Elf]]''
* ''[[Four Rooms]]'' -- interesting for containing references to the cut fifth story.
* ''[[Four Rooms]]''—interesting for containing references to the cut fifth story.
* All three [[Dollars Trilogy]] movies have some form of animation for their opening credits. ''[[A Fistful of Dollars]]''' is totally animated, ''[[For a Few Dollars More]]'' has animated words on a live-action background, and ''[[The Good, the Bad and the Ugly|The Good the Bad And The Ugly]]'' has a mix of animation and still photos with various filters applied to make them look somewhat hand-drawn.
* All three [[Dollars Trilogy]] movies have some form of animation for their opening credits. ''[[A Fistful of Dollars]]''' is totally animated, ''[[For a Few Dollars More]]'' has animated words on a live-action background, and ''[[The Good, the Bad and the Ugly|The Good the Bad And The Ugly]]'' has a mix of animation and still photos with various filters applied to make them look somewhat hand-drawn.
* ''[[Freaked]]''
* ''[[Freaked]]''

Revision as of 05:00, 23 February 2015

"He'll spend a 30 million dollar budget, trying as hard as he can to make it look like he only spent a few hundred thousand. The first step is to spend millions on a hand-drawn title sequence that looks like it was made by some Junior High kid during Pre-Algebra."
Strong Bad, Strong Bad e-mail 203, "independent"

A live-action movie or TV show that has an animated Artistic Title sequence with all sorts of wacky hijinx. It may foreshadow the plot, set up the backstory, or just be emblematic of the story's theme.

Very popular in the films and television series of The Sixties, with a nostalgic, Retro revival in The Eighties. Since The Nineties, filmmakers' desire to get to the action as quickly as possible has resulted in this trope largely being discarded in favor of Creative Closing Credits.

A subtrope of Medium Blending. Compare Bait and Switch Credits.

Examples of Animated Credits Opening include:


Films -- Animation


Films -- Live-Action


Live-Action TV