1. Name of the studio that is distributing the film. for example 'Universal', '20th century fox', 'Paramount pictures' etc. this usually takes up 5-8 seconds of the titles sequence.
2. Name of the production company responsible for making the film. If an investor financed a substantial portion of the movie, they will usually be credited alongside the production company with “In Association with.” this usually takes up 3 - 5 seconds of the title sequence.
3. A (Producer’s Name) Production. this usually takes up 2 - 3 seconds.
4. A Film by (Director’s Name). this usually takes up 2 - 3 seconds.
5. Starring (this is optional or can be paired with the first cast member’s name), followed by the names of all principal actors. this usually takes up 2 - 3 seconds.
6. Film title. this usually takes up 5 - 8 seconds.
7. Featured cast members. A card that states “Featuring” used to be fairly commonplace but now appears to be falling out of fashion; in some cases, to speed up a title sequence, featured players are held off for the end crawl. this usually takes up 2 - 3 seconds for each cast member.
8. Casting by. this usually takes up 2 - 3 seconds.
9. Music, composer, or original score. this usually takes up 2 - 3 seconds.
10. Production designer. this usually takes up 2 - 3 seconds.
11. At this point it can vary; you might see makeup, costume, or visual effects credits here or skip to the next few credits. At this point it should vary based on what is most important to the movie. If the movie’s a high budget sci-fi bonanza, it’s appropriate to credit the VFX team or supervising visual effects artist here; if it’s an historical epic, costume and makeup should probably get some notice here.
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