Setting the stage: Should there be an Oscar for title design?

Art of the Title’s Lola Landekic speaks to the graphic designers behind titles and posters for some of this year’s biggest films, exploring the process and changing landscape for these creatives setting the tone of films through typography.

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How do we get our first impressions of a film? Is it the trailer? The poster? Some blink-and-you’ll-miss-it social media effort? And how do these items pave the way to Oscarland? These days, a film’s identity is a multipronged and prolonged affair, its essence taking shape over a period of months, even years, before release.

“There is a Greek word which makes more sense to it,” says designer Vasilis Marmatakis on a video call from his studio in Athens. “Apospomeno,” he says. “It means detachable.” Much like their central heroine Bella Baxter (Emma Stone), the posters he designed for the Oscar-winning Poor Things have been travelling the world under their own steam. They’ve been listed in countless year-end best-ofs, and brought him more attention than he’s used to. “It's nominated for so many Oscars and so many times it's the poster that represents the film. People do see those graphics more.” But there is no Oscar for Outstanding Title Design – and there may never be.

The 2023 Yorgos Lanthimos film (based on Alasdair Gray’s book of the same name and, by all accounts, a rollicking modern telling of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein) was up for a whopping eleven Oscars and won four including three of the design categories: costume design, makeup and hairstyling, and production design. Featured prominently in the posters is Bella, dolled up in balloon-sleeved Victorian garb or smeared with paint. The images are striking. They focus on one person and they elicit a sense of mystery and the absurd. Their energy is enigmatic but also accessible and evocative. They invite you in.

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Vasilis Marmatakis: titles for Poor Things (Copyright © Searchlight Pictures, 2023)

“Graphic designers actually have a big impact on how people perceive a film. We have this responsibility to best communicate what people are meant to experience.”

Jessica Hische

The title font lettering was done by Vladimir Radibratovic and Danae Tzotzos with direction from Marmatakis. It’s handwrought and idiosyncratic, an organic touch in its elongated lines. It’s the same lettering seen in the film itself, introducing each chapter and adorning the edges of the opening like more maximalist set pieces.

It can be difficult to get Hollywood distributors on board with such a singular design style. “It's usually shot down for like two big heads and some basic typography!” says designer Marlene McCarty who, along with Teddy Blanks, created the titles for the recent Netflix hit May December. She should know. After all, she’s been in the business of designing posters and titles for films for several decades. She’s become the go-to designer for directors including Todd Haynes and Kelly Reichardt. “We have a very long relationship, Todd and I,” she says. “We've known each other for 30-some years. We kind of grew up together when the art world and the film world and the music world and the design world were more entwined. Everything's really siloed now.” What she means is that nowadays, it’s rare that a title designer will also work on the poster or other promotional materials for a film. On larger budget films, marketing teams at various levels often call the shots regarding trailers, posters, merch and other audience-scooping mechanisms. But some relationships poke through the mesh of that machine – McCarty’s connection with Haynes among them. “Now it’s at this point where Todd's like, ‘Here's the title.’ He's not even like, ‘Do you want to do these?’” she laughs.

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Vasilis Marmatakis: titles for Poor Things (Copyright © Searchlight Pictures, 2023)

For the opening to May December, a film about an actress (Natalie Portman) who spends time with and observes a couple with a scandalous past, McCarty collaborated with Blanks, another designer. They placed pale condensed typography atop soft, dim footage of a butterfly landing on a flower. A delicate creature being closely watched. The typography is imposing and cold like steel bars. “[The characters] are emotionally claustrophobic and so we wanted to make it more pictorially claustrophobic,” McCarty explains. “I was thinking a lot about how trapped Joe and Gracie are, how they are in that situation and the fact that she had been in jail. That he was now locked into a domestic jail of his own.”

The end credits for May December are also highly stylised with large typography in various shades of gray and little room to breathe. It’s somewhat reminiscent of her end title design for Reichardt’s Night Moves, which features similar typography on a background of shifting colour. Here, she says, “It was about it being this very severe typography and nothing colorful.” Her sensibility shines through, though. It still has that McCarty feeling to it. “A couple of people have emailed me and been like, ‘I couldn't find your title credit but did you do those?’” she laughs. “Yes. You know, I've only had one credit upfront all these years and that was, I think, for Safe. And that was a vicious negotiation. Because we, especially in those days, never really got paid much for anything. But title designers rarely get any credit.”

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Vasilis Marmatakis: titles for Poor Things (Copyright © Searchlight Pictures, 2023)

The last few years have seen a shift. Like Marmatakis, she has noticed a surge in attention for her work. “Titles usually fly under the radar for most people,” she says, but lately “people have really acknowledged the title design in a way they usually don't.” McCarty believes this is due to the increase and availability of content via streamers. “I've been doing this since 1989 and I do think people are much more aware of film titles now. There’s been some pretty fancy ones on TV that have gotten people’s attention. So a broader swath of people is exposed to more creative title solutions than 20 years ago.”

The poster and marketing materials for May December, though they use the style developed by McCarty and Blanks, were created in-house by Netflix. The elements were siloed, the titles created by one team and the posters by another, but both attempting to speak the same language.

Sometimes during this process, what McCarty describes as a “personality knot” of clashing agency demands, very different solutions arise. This is what happened with the 2023 film adaptation of the beloved novel Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret. The lettering for the poster and marketing materials was created by lettering artist and author Jessica Hische, while the main title that appears in the film was made by others. For Hische, working within specific typographic eras like the 70s or 80s allows her to let loose her nostalgic side. The title lettering that Hische created for Margaret has what she describes as an optimistic vibe. “It says, ‘You are going to come to this film and it’s going to be fun and nice and you’re going to be filled with warm fuzzies.’” The lettering was used on a plethora of materials leading up to and beyond the release of the film: the teaser and full trailer, the physical and digital ads, the cover artwork for streaming services, even personalized journals. But it wasn’t used in the film itself, a fact which shocked Hische when she learned it. “I didn't actually know that they weren't using it in the film until I went to a preview with my daughter,” she says. The reality is that title designers often have no control over their work after files are delivered.”

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Vasilis Marmatakis: titles for Poor Things (Copyright © Searchlight Pictures, 2023)

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Vasilis Marmatakis: titles for Poor Things (Copyright © Searchlight Pictures, 2023)

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Jessica Hische: typography for Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret (Copyright © Lionsgate, 2023)

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Jessica Hische: typography for Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret posters (Copyright © Lionsgate, 2023)

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Jessica Hische: typography for Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret posters (Copyright © Lionsgate, 2023)

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Jessica Hische: typography for Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret posters (Copyright © Lionsgate, 2023)

The main title that appears in the film was made by LA-based studio Filmograph in collaboration with designer Heather Brantman. “The one that’s in the film, it’s on screen very briefly, and it doesn’t have the same bouncy optimism to it. It’s much quieter.” It speaks to the heavier side of the story, she says, whereas her bespoke, 70s-inspired lettering brings audiences to the door. “I think they do kind of work together,” says Hische. Her lettering is the de facto brand for the film, however, and the logotype that viewers will most remember.

“Graphic designers actually have a big impact on how people perceive a film,” says Hische. “We have this responsibility to best communicate what people are meant to experience when they’re in the theater so that those expectations are aligned, which will make the whole experience more positive for them.” Things can get thorny when a viewer’s expectations are incongruous with the film experience, so marketing has to be handled adroitly. The promotional materials often become the lens through which a film is first experienced and then remembered.

“Titles usually fly under the radar for most people, but lately people have really acknowledged the title design in a way they usually don’t.”

Marlene McCarty

Marmatakis’s work for Yorgos Lanthimos has received a lot of acclaim. The designer has provided poster and title design for many of Lanthimos’ features including Dogtooth, The Lobster, The Killing of a Sacred Deer, The Favorite, and Poor Things, establishing a consistently fascinating visual language for the director. “I think the reaction for Poor Things from the public was the same one as I usually have with my posters. When [people] come out of the cinema, they’re like, ‘Ah, now I get it,’” he laughs. That’s the design sweet spot – achieving that feeling of audience understanding and connection, of having nailed the concept and execution for both client and public.

In Poor Things, the credits lettering has a mix of proportions, some tall and thin, some wide and squat, and arranged like a decorative border adorning the frame. It adds to the luxurious, maximalist feeling of the film. “With Poor Things, with all its lettering that’s going around, you kind of realise that, okay, this is not going to be a standard storytelling. It’s not going to be your average film. It demands more from you.”

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Jessica Hische: typography for Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret (Copyright © Lionsgate, 2023)

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Marlene McCarty and Teddy Blanks: titles for May December (Copyright © Netflix, 2023)

If there were an Oscar for Outstanding Title Design, Marmatakis’s work for Poor Things would surely have been nominated. But he doesn’t believe in awards. “Ideologically I’m against it,” he says. “It's a bit tricky for me. I mean, I’m really happy for Poor Things and of course I follow the Oscars but overall, I’m against any form of awards.” For him, the stance is philosophical and political. He quotes lines from Against, a poem by Dinos Christianopoulos, translating from the Greek: “I'm against awards because they undermine the dignity of human beings… Getting an award seems to say that I accept spiritual bosses. And one day, we should get rid of bosses from our lives.” He does, however, take joy when his work is named on best-of lists or otherwise praised, of course.

Another designer that surely would have been nominated if an Oscar for Outstanding Title Design existed is Katie Buckley with her work for Emerald Fennell’s psychodrama Saltburn. For the film, Buckley worked with design assistant India Paparestis-Stacey to painstakingly hand-paint the opening credits. Fennell took to Twitter to praise their work and shed light on the process, saying: “Each frame of the opening titles was hand drawn, gilded & painted by our incredible graphic designer Katie & her assistant India, then applied in stop motion. It took months to make as a single frame took half a day, but it encapsulates everything: a beauty that drives us mad.” As Fennell says, Buckley was actually the graphic designer on the film and was responsible for creating many of the items that appear on screen such as “the wonderful Catton ‘Dancing Pierrot Box’, the family crest, and every wine label, cigarette box, and book you see in the film, among many other beautiful things.” This is the first time she has designed a title sequence but it will likely not be the last.

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Vasilis Marmatakis: titles for Poor Things (Copyright © Searchlight Pictures, 2023)

“Obviously I haven't done titles before and the difference in attention with titles and just doing the graphics for a film is huge,” says Buckley. When creating graphics for a film, they should blend into the scenery, she says. The elements – whether storefront signage or handheld props – should feel like natural parts of their environments. The title sequence is so very visible, though, setting the stage for everything to come. She admits that she hadn’t really thought about the importance of a title sequence much before working on one. “It really does set the tone of a film – or can do so,” she says. “There should be a bit more recognition for some of the amazing title designs that are out there.”

Though an Oscar for Outstanding Title Design may not be on the horizon, those working in the field agree on one thing: recognising and highlighting how the work functions, what it means for the film industry, and acknowledging the blood, sweat and tears that go into its creation are paramount. How would we step into these tremendous imaginary worlds without them? How would we boldly go? Marmatakis relates a story about attending a screening of a David Cronenberg film with a friend to illustrate the point. “When my friend saw Crash, in the first five minutes the letters were approaching. She was like, ‘I want to leave. I don't want to see this.’ I was like, ‘What?!’” he laughs. “The titles are that powerful.”

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Katie Buckley: titles for Saltburn (Copyright © Amazon MGM Studios and Warner Bros. Pictures, 2023)

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About the Author

Lola Landekic

Lola Landekic is the editor-in-chief of Art of the Title, an online archive and publication dedicated to title sequences in film, TV, and beyond. She is also a graphic designer working in film, TV, and branding, as well as a writer. She’s based in Toronto, Canada.

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