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7 of the best opening credits in movie history
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Spotlight

7 of the best opening credits in movie history

  • Chris Hewitt, Star Tribune (TNS)
  • Sep 1, 2021
  • Sep 1, 2021
  • 0

Opening credit sequences can give us a sense of tone, subject and themes. Here are some of the best.

Opening credits

Movie theater
Photo by Felix Mooneeram on Unsplash

They’re the first thing in a movie and they’re packed with information, but we rarely know much about them.

Opening credit sequences can give us a sense of tone, subject and themes. They can essentially teach us how to watch a film, like the Polaroid photo that “undevelops” in the backward “Memento,” the spoken credits in the book-burning drama “Fahrenheit 451” or the stately “Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy” sequence that forces us to scan the shifting screen for minute details. They also can introduce a cast of characters, as in the opening of “Murder by Death.”

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‘Seven’ (1995)

_seven1995_CMYK.jpg

As a variation on Nine Inch Nails’ “Closer” plays, we’re shown the villain’s fingers as he reads a book about crime, thumbs through creepy photographs, cuts up a dollar bill and (I think) slices off the tips of his own fingers. There’s no blood, but Cooper’s jittery editing, ominous images and percussive music suit director David Fincher’s bleak vision.

‘Casino Royale’ (2006)

I’m limiting myself to one James Bond favorite. “Casino Royale” introduced us to a new 007, so it contains lots of Daniel Craig, as well as the signature gun-barrel bit, a sly hint at what’s going on with Eva Green’s character and playful animation that nods to the lethal card game at the movie’s climax — all to the tune of my controversial choice for best Bond theme, the late Chris Cornell’s ferocious “You Know My Name.”

‘The Pink Panther’ (1963)

_the pink panther 1963_CMYK.jpg

This series joins the Bond films as one where the audience knows they need to be there for the inventive credits. All of ’em are dandy, but the first is the best because it introduces Henry Mancini’s slinky theme and has so much fun with typography.

‘The Naked Gun’ (1988)

_the naked gun 1988_CMYK.jpg

No surprise that a movie this fast and funny makes sure even the credits don’t waste a second. A parody of 1970s-style police shows, the sequence is shot from right behind the flashing light atop a cop car. The car zooms down a city street but then veers onto a sidewalk, through a car wash, onto a roller coaster and toward terrified bystanders. Everything you need to know about the movie is set up: It’s deadpan, sharply observed, hilarious and relentless.

‘Do the Right Thing’ (1989)

_do the right thing 1989_CMYK.jpg

Rosie Perez doesn’t have an especially big part, but it’s hard to imagine a splashier debut than the one Spike Lee gives her. The credits are nothing but her dancing to Public Enemy’s “Fight the Power,” and her fierce, angry movement sets the tone for the bold movie, the combativeness of which is foreshadowed by her busting a move in a boxer’s outfit.

‘Deadpool’ (2016)

_deadpool_CMYK.jpg

The Marvel logo is bound to send audiences in one direction, so this parody of superhero movies immediately takes them in another direction by spoofing the idea of credits. Instead of “A Tim Miller Film,” we get “Some Douchebag’s Film.” It’s not “Starring Ryan Reynolds” but “Starring God’s Perfect Idiot,” accompanied by Reynolds’ “Sexiest Man Alive” magazine cover. It continues skewering tropes, through “British Villain” and “Moody Teen,” accompanied by a camera snaking through a violent scene and Juice Newton’s soaring “Angel of the Morning.”

‘Delicatessen’ (1991)

_delicatessen 1991_CMYK.jpg

Most of the words in this quirky comedy are in French, even in the credits, but it doesn’t matter because the various jobs are so cleverly visualized as a camera roams around objects in a dingy basement. The cinematographer’s name is written on a camera and the screenwriters’ on a page of a script.

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