The 1969 movie Candy staring Richard Burton, Marlin Brando, John Astin, James Coburn, John Huston, Walter Matthau, Ringo Starr, and Sugar Ray Robinson among others had the title and all the credits at the end. The movie just starts, rambles on for about 2 hours, and end with the camera moving through all the actors in a field while the title and credits roll.
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Originally posted by Mitchell Dvoskin View PostThe only credits I am interested in are the actors, the director, the cinematographer(s), the score composer, the special effects company (don’t care about their employees), locations, and maybe the producer. The rest are vanity credits. As I can look this up online, I rarely stay of any end credits.
What also annoys me it multiple studio/production company logos. This trend is pushing me to watch movies at home where I can fast forward.
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Originally posted by Ed Gordon View Post
It's a sign of respect.
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Originally posted by Mitchell Dvoskin View PostThe 1969 movie Candy staring Richard Burton, Marlin Brando, John Astin, James Coburn, John Huston, Walter Matthau, Ringo Starr, and Sugar Ray Robinson among others had the title and all the credits at the end. The movie just starts, rambles on for about 2 hours, and end with the camera moving through all the actors in a field while the title and credits roll.
Think of how Bond films typically open with the theme and the shot at the camera then action with the opening credits coming about ten minutes in.
Vertigo has perhaps my favorite cold open.Last edited by William Kucharski; 04-16-2022, 12:42 AM.
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Originally posted by Allan Young View PostIt's a sign of OCD.
I'm not obsessive about it, I actually want to know.
I've mentioned before I've followed the careers of many crew members by noticing their credits in various films.
Producers and directors certainly, but also cinematographers, clearance agencies, title designers, caterers, consultants, stunt people, and on and on.
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Originally posted by William Kucharski View Post
Not at all.
I'm not obsessive about it, I actually want to know.
I've mentioned before I've followed the careers of many crew members by noticing their credits in various films.
Producers and directors certainly, but also cinematographers, clearance agencies, title designers, caterers, consultants, stunt people, and on and on.
Okay...So, it was his job but, even if it's not your job, I don't see it as being obsessive, at all.
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There is an IOS (and probably an Android) app called After Credits that will tell you if there are any during the credit scenes, after credits scenes, and let’s the app users thumbs up/down if they feel the scene(s) are worth sitting through the credits for. There is also a spoiler button if you want to find out the content of the scene(s).
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