One of France’s most well-known title designers
Jean Fouchet created a highly innovative animated title sequence using strips of colored paper offset with dynamic typography for L’Homme de Rio
(That Man From Rio).
The film’s credits were directed by Jean Fouchet, one of France’s most well-known title sequence directors. He created a highly innovative animated sequence using strips of colored paper. These refer to a scene which appears towards the end of the film, in which Jean-Paul Belmondo finds himself in a bar run by Lola, a singer, and where the doors and windows are draped with multi-colored curtains. In this gleefully-shot scene, our hero finds himself amid a jubilant brawl. By referring to this, one of the story’s final scenes, Jean Fouchet brings the film full circle.
The font is reminiscent of the work of Roger Excoffon, a major figure of French typography who worked for the Olive Foundry. After the war he completely revolutionized French typography, creating the Banco and Mistral typefaces, which became classics in French print. The writing is characterized by a coarse, dynamic style that was popularized at the time. The letters appear as free characters and seem to dance across the screen, offsetting the composition and rigorous animation of the horizontal strips, which gain lightness in these irregularities.
The whole sequence is paced against a batacuda piece by Georges Delerue, De Broca‘s favorite composer. Originating in Rio de Janeiro, batucada is a sub-genre of samba which utilizes traditional percussion instruments. The intense beat suggests a fast-paced film in which neither protagonist nor viewer will get bored…