‘It’s got to be really pretty’: secrets of a perfect TV title sequence

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‘It’s got to be really pretty’: secrets of a perfect TV title sequence

By Garry Maddox

The memorable title sequence that had a cigar-chewing Tony Soprano driving from New York to New Jersey while Woke Up This Morning played was a short but powerful part of one of the greatest drama series of all time.

The combination of choppy urban visuals and the perfect song eased viewers into the world of the characters, every episode. The same is true for many other acclaimed series, including Breaking Bad, Mad Men, Game of Thrones, True Detective and Succession.

Creative director Patrick Clair is nominated for three Emmys this year with the streaming series 3 Body Problem, Fallout and Silo.

Creative director Patrick Clair is nominated for three Emmys this year with the streaming series 3 Body Problem, Fallout and Silo.Credit: James Brickwood

Australian creative directors Patrick Clair and Raoul Marks are specialists in combining design and storytelling into a compelling title sequence, as their 15 Emmy nominations attest.

They are backing up wins for outstanding title design for the first seasons of True Detective and The Man In The High Castle with three of the six nominations in the category at the Emmys in September.

Their nominations include the streaming series’ 3 Body Problem (Netflix), Silo (Apple TV) and Fallout (Amazon). The competition is Shogun (FX) and Apple TV’s Lessons In Chemistry and Palm Royale.

An image from the title sequence for Netflix’s 3 Body Problem, created by Patrick Clair and Raoul Marks, which is up for an Emmy Award.

An image from the title sequence for Netflix’s 3 Body Problem, created by Patrick Clair and Raoul Marks, which is up for an Emmy Award.Credit: Antibody

Clair, who started in the ABC series Hungry Beasts, was creating video game trailers for Ubisoft when he broke into title design.

“I’d been doing that for a few years and had a folder of images and ideas building up that were maybe a little too soulful and too human to find expression in the video game world,” he says.

“When I got the opportunity to pitch on True Detective for HBO, that all came pouring out. We got to start moving in this new world where we’re combining design and storytelling in a whole new way.”

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Clair describes the title sequence as “an airlock” between regular life in a show’s world.

“It’s got to be really pretty to watch the first time to get you in the mood,” he says. “But the next time you see the sequence, it’s got to let you drift off and think a bit more deeply about the story.”

An image from the title sequence for Apple TV’s Silo, which is nominated for an Emmy Award this year.

An image from the title sequence for Apple TV’s Silo, which is nominated for an Emmy Award this year.Credit: Antibody

Clair thinks Mad Men is the benchmark for title design.

“Every time I work with a new showrunner, I say ‘we can make something that’s a nice wrapping for your show, but if we want to make something that makes it worth it for the viewer to watch it every episode, we need to have something in it that’s really fundamental to your character – that’s as relevant in the pilot as it is in the final episode of the final season’,” he says.

“It will really boil down to one compelling idea. For Mad Men, it’s the image of a man in freefall. And a man in freefall describes Don Draper in every episode of that show.”

An image from Patrick Clair and Raoul Marks’ Westworld title sequence, which has been nominated in previous years for an Emmy.

An image from Patrick Clair and Raoul Marks’ Westworld title sequence, which has been nominated in previous years for an Emmy.Credit: Antibody

For 3 Body Problem, the show’s makers showed Clair and Marks a short documentary that zoomed from an atomic level up through a picnic to show the whole universe.

“They said this was something they liked as a reference so we immediately thought that doing an exponential zoom would be interesting,” Clair says.

Out of that grew the idea of showing the transition from Earth to its nearest star.

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“We started thinking about all the different ways you can see the universe that’s not through human eyes – what if you could see electricity, what if you could see gravity, what if you could see how a proton looked?,” he says.

Title sequences are less relevant in film, except for franchises like the James Bond and Marvel series.

“I think title sequences work fundamentally when they’re part of a format, they’re part of something that you return to,” Clair says.

“It’s very hard to make something worthwhile for something very singular like a feature film. It’s really more the domain of series to have a compelling title sequence that serves the story.”

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