Award-winning design and digital production company Thornberg & Forester (T&F) has created a brilliant opening title sequence entitled “FRANCO” for The Comedy Central Roast of James Franco. The Roast had its broadcast premiere on Labor Day and it will be rebroadcast many times on the network over the weeks ahead, including this Thursday, Saturday and Sunday. Along with conceiving and creating the :70 main titles in its NYC studio, T&F’s LA team delivered a comprehensive show package, consisting of transitions, logo loops, talent cards and navigation graphics for the program. nnWorking directly with Comedy Central VP of design Chris Scarlata and Tenth Planet producer, Rick Austin, T&F principals Scott Matz and Justin Meredith were both heavily involved in the project, along with senior art director and designer Kyle Miller and lead animator Ken Krueger. “Comedy Central was keen on the idea of creating a graphic open that felt similar to the main title sequence of a film,” began Meredith. “Based on the creative direction from the Comedy Central show execs, it needed to be upscale and embrace the notion of being a contemporized version of the Rat Pack, infused with sophistication and wit.”nnAccording to Austin, from the very first phone call, the team at T&F immediately understood what the network wanted. “We were looking for a concept that had the irreverent energy of the roast but also took it in a cleaner, classier direction,” he said. “We didn’t just want to mock some retro 60’s look, we wanted it to be modern, and T&F gave us this idea that in a way ‘roasted’ Franco and announced our vibe at the same time.”nn”Needless to say, everyone at Comedy Central is ecstatic and loves how the open turned out,” said Scarlata. “From the initial storyboards, I knew that this direction had tremendous potential. The team at T&F went above and beyond and delivered the perfect open and packaging for the event. Concept, design, writing, editing, animation, finishing, project management – on every front, it was everything we’d hoped it would be.”nn”One of the best aspects of this project from beginning to end was the freedom to ‘find’ the story as we built out our storyboards,” said Miller. “Our style frames left a lot of open spaces which had to be filled, so we wrote out a script expanding our original kernel of Franco’s multi-level involvement in the making of this film.”nn”As our name imbues, we have a lot of fun with what we do,” added Matz. “The biggest challenges were really based on comedic timing and flow. Momentum, meaning and desired effect can be easily lost if the slightest thing is off.”nnMatz, Meredith and Miller provided more details on the project’s workflow, which began with a board-o-matic cut to multiple soundtracks. “It became clear that Hoodie Allen’s ‘James Franco’ track was the strongest for our film,” Meredith confirmed. “Acquiring this track was a huge score in the success of this piece and a testament to Rick Austin’s passion to make things work.”nn
nFRANCO from Thornberg and Forester on Vimeo.
Once the song was chosen and scene lengths determined, Miller and Krueger worked closely with Matz to choreograph the perfect story arc and to stitch each scene together. Led by Miller in T&F’s NYC studio, an animation team including Keith Endow and Dominika Nicman used the full Adobe Creative Suite, including Illustrator, Photoshop and After Effects to deliver the title sequence right on time.nn”Technically speaking,” said Matz, “each scene was animated as a united RGB pass that was run through a master After Effects stack to automatically generate the appropriate colors from our chosen palette. Filmic textures and an animated ‘def