The Green Fog (2017) trailer Galen: We also banded together with a few other artists to make these fake movie posters for the Contact Photography Festival. It’s my hope that we’ll eventually be able to adapt them into movies. Or even better, that someone with more talent and money will adapt them into hit movies! Image set: by The Long Weekend collective You've been busy! So let’s talk about Madly. It’s an anthology film – six short stories from some very exciting filmmakers from all over the world.
Jun 8, 2018 - Radhika Apte At her Best Acting. Subscribe My Channel for More Interesting Videos.And don't forget to click on bell icon. Follow me on insta.
How did you first become involved in the project? Galen: I think the producers saw at Sundance and liked the opening title sequence so they tracked me down and asked if I’d be interested. I’d heard of most of the directors – one of them was Bat for Lashes Natasha Khan – so I said yes. What was your first meeting about this sequence like? Did the directors or producers have a vision for the opening?
Galen: From the beginning, they were adamant that I look at the titles as a standalone piece. So stylistically, at least, I wasn’t favouring any of the individual films. They'd seen and liked The Forbidden Room credits, their liveliness and instability, but we all agreed that we needed something more 'contemporary'. Madly (2016) trailer Galen: The two sequences they cited as references were The Forbidden Room and – of course –. So I took that to mean they wanted colour and energy.
Given the subject matter and tone of the films, I obviously had to avoid the retroness of The Forbidden Room and the ominous aggression of Enter the Void. Did you have any interaction with or feedback from the individual filmmakers? Directors tend to have opinions. They have to. But six wildly different directors would be a lot to deal with. Maybe there was feedback, but it never reached me. I hope they liked it!
The producers seemed to like it so I assume no one found it too egregious. So what was your process here? Obviously you’ve built a shorthand with collaborators like your brother and, but this project must have been a little different. Did you pitch them ideas? Did you create storyboards?
Tell us how you developed the concept for the title sequence and how you worked with the production. Galen: Initially I thought this job might be a bit of a headache. It had many producers, and I thought that would mean 17 different people giving input. But I was given a lot of freedom. I knew they wanted something crazy and energetic, something that grabbed your attention immediately. So I needed to come up with a concept that would allow for that.
I didn’t want it to just be untethered self-indulgence. Always tether your self-indulgence! So I used a really simple metaphor, based on the title ‘Madly’, a title which is more specifically referring to love: the idea of two relatively stable people coming together, and this sort of fusion reaction that occurs to make them behave in wild and irrational ways. The idea of two relatively stable people coming together, and this sort of fusion reaction that occurs to make them behave in wild and irrational ways. Madly still: 'I Do' segment, directed by Natasha Khan Madly still: 'Love of Love' segment, directed by Sion Sono Galen: So to translate that to a visual or typographic schema, I just had two typographic elements, say, the first and last name of a cast or crew member – come in from opposite ends of the screen and collide. Once that collision occurred – the relatively reserved would sort of explode into something way bigger, more colourful and unstable with cartoon explosions and sexy dancing, etc.
I sent them a rough proof-of-concept early on, and they liked the direction so we went with it. Where did the footage of the dancers and musicians come from? More trolling the murky depths of the internet for treasure like on Forbidden Room? Galen: Yeah – deep from the bowels of the internet! I have a collection of various public domain odds and ends that I mulch up and repurpose. I think I found most of them at. I liked the way the little black-and-white dancers looked when they were sped up and combined with the glitchy neon text and cartoon explosions.
(1956) promotional film sampled in the Madly title sequence Galen: I liked the way the little black-and-white dancers looked when they were sped up and combined with the glitchy neon text and cartoon explosions. I’d be hard-pressed to rationalize them anymore than that! It felt okay and I ran with it. You’ve gone to some pretty extreme and interesting lengths on your previous projects to achieve that glitchy, distorted, worn look, and you go for a similar aesthetic here. In terms of methods or tools and software, how did you put it all together? Galen: It’s mostly After Effects – no external plugins. There’s a bit of hand-drawn lettering but even that is altered in After Effects.
In the initial stages I just pile on the effects, hit render, and see what happens. Most of it is usually garbage, but there are always a few moments that work. I probably only use about 2-5% of the stuff I create. I just sort of edit together all the best accidents in Adobe Premiere. There are a series of frame interpolation effects and expressions I exploit to give it that woozy morphing quality. So rather than hard cuts, in some places the frames just sort of briskly melt in to one another.
PJ Harvey’s “This Is Love” is a fantastic title track and works very well with the sequence. Who’s idea was it to use that particular song and were other songs ever considered? Galen: I knew from early on that the producers wanted to use that track, but they hadn’t secured the rights so I wanted whatever I did to be transferable to another song if it became necessary. I’d never edited to a song with such a steady, persistent, dominating beat before. It was trickier than I thought it would be – if you make a cut on every beat, it seems sort of mechanical and predictable, but if you ignore the beats completely, it just seems out of sync with the sequence.
I tried to find a sweet spot – cut on the beat 67.8% of the time, ignore the beat the other 32.2%. One of the films is from India and another from Japan, so naturally you’ve got Japanese and Hindi typography in the mix too. Did that pose any challenges? Galen: Honestly, I just used Google and Wikipedia to translate and confirm how to typeset those names properly. No one ever told me I did it wrong, so I assume I did it right, but who knows! I just used Google and Wikipedia to translate and confirm how to typeset those names properly.
Image set: Japanese and Hindi title cards featured in the Madly title sequence Did anything take you by surprise when working on this sequence? Galen: I guess, since I’d been working in the Maddin bubble for so long, I expected a lot more back and forth between me and the producers. But it was really pretty painless. Either they liked it or they were too busy to push me in another direction. You never know with producers.
Is there a particular element or shot in this sequence that you’re most happy with? Galen: The way the title appears on that card at the end, if only because it was the only moment that I actually planned, that wasn’t a complete accident. I rely so much on chance and accidents that sometime if I have an actual idea that I want to execute, it’s tricky, because I’m so used to being reactive rather than proactive. And I use so many effects that I’m rarely able to preview a sequence properly before I render it.
It’s not like I have a big powerful rendering setup. It’s just me and my five year old iMac. Galen: I guess I'm just happy I've been able to bluff my way through another title sequence with a rudimentary knowledge of After Effects and good-but-not-great typography skills! Also I always liked those black-and-white videos of burlesque dancers and am happy I found a home for them. What’s caught your eye lately in terms of title design? Any new favourites or old title sequences that you’ve discovered recently?
Galen: It wasn’t all that recent but I found the opening sequence of Resident Evil: Retribution really enjoyable. It’s in reverse, slow motion, and 3D. Every trick in the bag! And Paul W.S. Anderson is a great action choreographer! So spatially coherent! There are shots in there that Antonioni would almost be proud of.
I can’t wait for the next in the series. The Dirt-Witch Cleans Up! (1971) main titles And more generally, what have you seen or watched or read or experienced lately that’s been exciting to you? Galen: There's lots but Horse Money and The Love Witch come to mind. Also we watched a lot of the 80s primetime TV soap Hotel when we were culling footage for The Green Fog. That's a DVD box set that's worth diving into. James Brolin plays the manager of the titular hotel and he lives in the penthouse.
It has automatic sliding doors, like the starship Enterprise, but they're made of wood! Or at least that's how I remember it. Title Designer: Galen Johnson Music: 'This Is Love' by PJ Harvey Related. interview. summary.
interview. summary. summary. interview Title sequence.
Title Designer. Category. Styles,.
Film Directors. Release Date.
Aspect Ratio 1.78:1. Studios MTV World, Cowboy Films, Diroriro, Django Film, Nikkatsu, Phantom Films, Rei Cine, Scarlett Pictures, Viacom International Media Networks (VIMN). Languages English, Spanish, Japanese, Hindi. Reviews. has full details.
Woman (segment 'Afterbirth'). Her (segment 'Love of My Life'). Maddy ( I do segment).
(segment 'Love of My Life'. (segment 'I Do'). Allwyn (segment 'Clean Shaven'). Sudhir (segment 'Clean Shaven'). Sayaka - Older Sister (segment 'Love of Love'). Rio (segment 'Dance Dance Dance'). Him (segment 'Love of My Life').
Masahito - Father (segment 'Love of Love'). Mio - Younger Sister (segment 'Love of Love').