Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Waiting for the credits to end? Movies are naming more names

- By Mekado Murphy

The New York Times

It is now a standard feature of the typical Hollywood blockbuste­r. You watch scenes that have become more complex and dazzling than ever in their visual effects and technical mastery, then sit through end credits that feel almost novelistic in length: hundreds, or frequently thousands, of names in a blur of acknowledg­ment of the village it took to stage a superhero battle or bring robots to photoreali­stic life.

The names can occupy five to 10 minutes or more of a movie’s running time. And we’re often staying put so as not to miss a possible extra scene or a tease to other films in a franchise. In the meantime, we learn about film jobs we had no idea existed. (Hello, render wrangler!) And yet many names are still missing, and some in the industry don’t think the credits are long enough. How did we get here? It used to be much simpler. The earliest films, shown at nickelodeo­ns at the start of the 1900s, had no credits at all, just the title.

“But then eventually people started to recognize stars that they liked,” said Dave Kehr, a curator for the department of film at the Museum of Modern Art. He mentioned the emergence of the silent- era actress Florence Lawrence, who wasn’t credited in her earliest films but built a fan following to the point that her name eventually appeared on a movie poster, making her one of the very first movie stars.

Credits grew in the following two decades, but not by much. They would all appear at the beginning of films, usually, in three or four title cards acknowledg­ing the cast and principal technical players.

“In the ’60s, the unions get a little more power, and they are able to get more of their names on the screen,” Mr. Kehr said. (Having your name in the credits can help lead to more jobs.) Audiences began to see longer credits covering the full crew. One of the first lengthy sequences of this period was the Saul Bass-designed closing credits to “West Side Story” (1961), in which many names were scrawled in graffiti on walls and street signs.

As production­s grew more lavish and more complicate­d, more and more crew members were needed. But in the age of celluloid, studios had to be mindful of how long their credits would be. Film was more expensive to work with and process, so each added reel had an impact on the budget.

Now that films are primarily projected in digital, this cost is no longer an issue. And credits have ballooned to their greatest lengths in the past decade. At least 50 films in the movie database IMDB.com have cast and crew credits that surpass 2,000 names each. The credits for the 2013 film “Iron Man 3” include more than 3,700 names (along with 24 special-effects companies). You’ll see “uncredited” next to many names on IMDB, meaning they didn’t appear onscreen. But the credit sequence is still seven minutes long.

The visual-effects and computer graphics artist Aaron Estrada has been one of those uncredited names before. He has worked for Sony Pictures Imageworks, DreamWorks and the effects house Rhythm & Hues, and is now overseeing a visualeffe­cts infrastruc­ture startup called MetaPipe. And regardless of the lengths of these credits, he said too many names are left out.

“I have several films that I’m uncredited on even though I was working for the primary vendor of the visual effects,” he said. “And anytime I subcontrac­ted, we were almost never credited. I had a small studio for a while, and the studio itself was rarely even credited.”

The opening credits and how they appear are dictated by unions and contracts. The actor credits are negotiated in individual contracts. “The key words you use in a contract are usually size, style and duration,” said Ann B. Clark, a lawyer for independen­t producers and production companies.

But the closing credits are determined by the producers. “All of the credits for a visual-effects company are generally provided by the company, and then there sometimes will be a negotiatio­n,” Ms. Clark said. “For instance, if the production company received 100 names from a visual-effects company, they may say, no you’ll have to whittle that down to 20.”

Mr. Estrada, for example, worked on lighting, rendering and compositin­g effects for features, and on the animated adventure “Over the Hedge,” he did two distinct jobs. But he was told that he could have only one credit, his choice.

For now, lengthy credits are here to stay. Superhero movies have sweetened the experience with post-credit scenes that make sitting through the names a little less tedious. (Recently, when typing “Is there something” into a Google search, it autofilled with the question “Is there something at the end of ‘Logan?’” There isn’t.)

“Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” has fun with its scroll, occasional­ly inserting the words “I Am Groot,” then switching to the name of a crew member. There are also five credit scenes (or “buttons,” as the industry calls them), laying the groundwork for other “Guardians” tales.

It is a great sacrifice to take care of parents for a large part of your adulthood. No wonder you may be feeling as though you have missed out on a lot of the milestones many have experience­d around you. While I don’t think it is appropriat­e to set up a registry now that you are moving, there are a few things you can do to encourage neurotrans­mitters associated with positive emotions. Researcher­s studied the effects of attending a week-long retreat involving silent contemplat­ion and prayer based on the Jesuit teachings of Saint Ignatius of Loyola. They scanned the brains of 14 Christians who participat­ed in the study, ranging in ages from 24 to 76, before and after the retreat.

The study subjects showed marked improvemen­ts in their perceived physical health, tension and fatigue, as well as reporting feelings of self-transcende­nce. Though more research is needed, the coauthors highlighte­d the strong emotional responses that have long been associated with secular and religious retreats such as “reduced stress, spiritual transforma­tion experience­s, and the capacity to produce life-changing results.”

Not everyone is able to access or afford to attend a spiritual retreat, but a growing body of research has found that a daily practice of mindfulnes­s meditation at home can also help reduce anxiety and bolster good health.

Psychologi­st Anjhula

RED, BLUE AND CONFUSED ALL OVER

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