Your Favorite Opening Credits Sequences

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Sorry if this has been posted before.

As time has gone by, a lot of movies like to skip over the opening credits. Some people don't even like to watch them, they get bored with them. But opening credits sequences can serve a film quite nicely: they can set the tone, they themselves can tell a story, they can introduce you to the world in which the movie is placed, etc.
So, tell us, what are some of your favorite opening credits sequences? Some of mine would have to be:
Ed Wood
Mars Attacks!
Stranger than Fiction
Expelled
Psycho
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Forbidden Zone
Se7en
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
The Incredible Hulk
Watchmen
 
I agree on "Mars Attacks", "Psycho", and "Watchmen".
My fave 2 of all time though are "Bullitt" & "Batman: The Movie" Both '60s flicks!
 
Se7en- Perfectly captures the tone of the movie, whilst also giving us a sense of John Doe without actually showing us him.

Halloween- One of the best opening sequences ever followed by one the best scores ever.

Spider-man 2- Uses red as the colour motif (what i wanted but didnt expect before i saw the movie) and retell's SM1 in Alex Ross Paintings, fusing movie and source material together beautifully. The theme also sounds better.

Catch Me If you can- Wonderfully evokes those old Saul Bass Hitchcock credits. The music is also great.



Serenity- PERFECTLY reaquainting us with the characters and reminding us what they're all about in one expertly pulled off tracking shot through the ship.

Casino Royale- Brought Bond back to life very nicely with this nice flash-style update of the old 'silhouette' intro's. I don't like Chris Cornell's theme except when it's playing over this. It just sounds better in the actual movie.

Once Upon A Time In The West- Three killers stand in an empty train station waiting for their man. The credits fade in and out around them as they fidget and anticipate the kill. At last,The train pulls up and a pissed off Charles Bronson gets off.
He knows who they are and they know he knows. Silence has never sounded so loud.
Three against one... They shoulda brought more men.
 
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Watchmen.
It perfectly sets up the alternative history to Bob Dylan's amazing "Times they a changing". Pure brilliance.
 
Watchmen - I don't need to explain

SM1 and SM2 - I just love the score and the web designs throughout. Never expected those. And the Ross paintings made it even better

Casino Royale - "You Know My Name" mixed with the awesome visuals is amazing

Se7en

Raiders of the Lost Ark - just them trekking through the jungle is cool enough



Batman (1989) - This is ****ing awesome. Elfman's beautiful score takes you away and we're going through something and we have no idea what the hell it is until it pulls out to be the bat symbol. Just brilliant.

Catch Me If You Can - love the jazzy score and the animation. You know you're in for somehting really cool and fun.
 
X2, - nightcrawler in the white house, wow.
 
Watchmen
Terminator 2: Judgment Day
Fight Club
 
Watchmen
Terminator 2: Judgment Day
Fight Club
 
Superman Returns
Indiana Jones Quad-rilogy
Watchmen
Serenity
 
Not exactly an opening credit but I love how the earth in the Universal logo turns blue at the beginning of Waterworld. Pretty much the only thing I like about this movie.
 
Vertigo
Once Upon a Time in The West
It's a Mad Mad Mad Mad World
 
That has a long ass credit sequence. I bit too long.
 
The old Peter Sellers Pink Panther movies had awesome cartoons as their opening credit sequences.
 
watchmen
batman
swampthing 2
terminator 2
spiderman 2
xmen 3
conan the barbarian
interview w/ the vampire
 
Favourite has to be Wing Commander, say what you will about the film itself but the intro is simply the amazing.

Serenity
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang
Batman '89
Watchmen
Terminator 2: Judgement Day
Event Horizon
The Spy Who Loved Me
Superman: Doomsday
Wonder Woman (Animated movie)
 
Definitely Watchmen, since its fresh in my mind. Several others already named here too
 
These three inmediately come to mind:

- A New Hope - Rebel Blockade vs Imperial Star Destroyer :woot:
- Raiders of the Lost Ark
- Saving Private Ryan
 
Made this a while back

Here are what I consider the greatest opening credits in cinema history. I put some thought into it and tried not to use the overall quality of the film dictate my options. The opening credits can be a more useful tool than many realize, setting up tone and introducing history of characters and plot.

10. Sahara (2005)
Sahara starring Matthew MacConaughey and Steve Zahn about the adventurer Dirk Pitt and his search for confederate gold in Africa. The opening sequence is a long shot circling the yacht they call home highlighting pictures and other items of Dirk and his buddy Al's time in the Navy, and their past adventures. Star Wars may have been the obvious choice especially to highlight the history explanation of the soon unfolding story, but there is something about a scrolling paragraph that lacks creativity.

9. Casino Royale (2006)
A Bond flick had to be represented. They have been by far had some of the more consistently memorable openings in cinema history. Most of the time, they are simply a chance to show the credits and spotlight a song. This is by far my favorite. I might be a little biased because its also my favorite Bond flick featuring my favorite Bond (Connery be damned), but Cornell's song is so nostalgically classic rock but oddly fitting. Plus it has some of the more inventive imagery, as opposed to the overused (but always welcome) dancing female silhouettes.

8. Se7en (1995)
I have seen many people credit Se7en with the reemergence of the high concept opening credits. It mixes the hard rock sounds of Nine Inch Nails, with a number of creepy journal entries and creepier hands sifting through them foreshadowing the events and eventual reveal of killer, John Doe.

7. To Kill A Mockingbird (1962)
One of the more classic opening sequences, it has been paid homage to a number of times most notably with Cameron Crowe's Almost Famous, Crowe being a famous fan of the novel, referencing it in some way. The credits are played against a close-up of Scout, the young girl of the heroic Atticus Finch. It depicts Scout as the vessel for which we experience the story, and defines the subtle veil of childlike innocence in the way the story is presented to us.

6. The Fall (2006)
Director Tarsem Singh described it as "..chaos without energy." A beautiful combination of images and music. Beethoven’s Symphony No 7 sets the stage for a surreal, slow-motion mini-movie, one who's connection to the movie becomes apparent as the movie plays on, and upon second viewing becomes even more beautiful. An ode to falling.

5. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
A brilliant operatic science fiction. Thematically heavy, but still thrilling as the straight ahead horror/sci-fis. The opening is probably one of the most memorable openings of all time. A fantastic score that establishes the sweeping epic proportions the movie depicts. One of the most identifiable theme that makes all the right hits.

4. Kiss Kiss Bang Bang (2005)
Kiss Kiss Bang Bang is one of the biggest surprises in recent cinema weaving a smart and witty neo-noir that revels in its faults as well as its strengths. The opening sequence is a tribute to classic noir, resembling the old opening credits and retro covers of the detective yarns that spawned this underrated gem. Its jazz theme inspired images of fedora wearing gumshoes and curvy seductive dames.

3. Romeo+Juliet (1996)
Baz Luhrman's take on Shakespeare's timeless tale of star cross'd lovers juxtaposes Shakes words over a modern era. In order to make the connection of Ye Olde English and 20th century America, Baz plays over the introduction of the play twice, once as a newscast on a lone television, and then again over a series of images of the movie and general 20th century iconography.

2. Watchmen (2009)
The highly acclaimed graphic novel adapted to celluloid has one of the greatest opening credits in recent time. It very well could be flash-in-the-pan opinion, but the unconventional choice of song in Bob Dylan's "These Times Are A-Changing" played against famous 20th Century iconography only this time with the added appearances of masked vigilantes to introduce us to a world with a vibrant history, a history the same as ours.....but not, leading up to the plot in question.

1. Lord of War (2005)
Lord of War was pretty cool movie. A little too much coolness in general though. It was a dark comic drama with morally ambiguous characters. Its opening sequence is one of the MOST inventive and creative sequence to ever grace the silver screen. The camera afixed to a bullet starting at the beginning of creation to its killing blow in a war torn foreign world set against Buffalo Springfield's "For What It's Worth."
 

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