Patrick Clair competed against himself in the Emmysâ title-design category with âWestworld,â âAmerican Godsâ and âThe Crownâ
Patrick Clairâs name may not be the first on your list of high-profile Emmy contenders, but youâve already been introduced. In fact, introductions are something of his specialty.
Eligible for a third win for main title design during last weekendâs Creative Arts
Clair previously scored Emmys for Elasticâs opening-credits sequences in Amazonâs âMan in the High Castleâ and HBOâs âTrue Detective.â Below, he talks about a process thatâs led to opening titles that say more than simply who and what youâre watching.
It seems like a tightly knit community among people who do what you do. Did the other nominees stand out for you too?
I think Kyle [Cooper] and his team from Prologue, who were nominated for âFeud,â have created so many incredible pieces over the years, stretching back to the title credits for âSeven,â which were a big inspiration for me in joining the industry. And Michelle [Dougherty, who ultimately won for âStranger Thingsâ] has an incredible catalog of work. Sheâs been nominated many times as well. Itâs nice company to be in.
It has to be such a challenge to try to introduce a show in a short window of time. How do you approach it?
For me, itâs really about understanding the story and the world. Certainly, a large part of what a title sequence can do is set up the tone of the show and, functionally, provide a bit of an air lock between real life and going into the world of the show. I think thatâs becoming increasingly important when people are watching things not on a network but online or bingeing or whatever, so youâre not coming to it with those extra kinds of wrappers you get on TV with logos and branding.
But I think there can be a deeper purpose to it if we can manage to create a sequence that really says something more fundamental about the characters. If you can do something that looks like the show from the first time [viewers] see it, itâs great, but as people come to see it more and more and they gain a deeper understanding of the story, if they can feel thereâs something that resonates with that lead characterâs journey thatâs sort of embedded in the title sequence, then I think thatâs a title sequence that can really stand the test of time.
Before you start work on titles, are you given full episodes, or is it just concepts?
Itâs a complete mix, but I will say the titles that turn out the best are always the ones where weâve had a chance to dig as deep as possible.
Itâs a pretty challenging thing. We kind of come along at a critical moment in production, usually. Ideally, we get to watch a rough cut of the first episode â something like thatâs often available. But sometimes itâs just words on the page; itâs references, photography books, things the set designer or the costume designerâs working on. The more visual material we can get, the better.
The music particularly stands out in something like âWestworld,â where itâs folded into what youâre seeing with the player piano. Did you have the music in advance for that one?
It was very much a case of it evolved along the way. We worked to just a temp track initially. We sent them over to Ramin [Djawadi, composer for âWestworldâ] and his team, and they started to put the score together and send it back to us. It really got to this point where, in the final days, the composition team were recording themselves on their iPhones playing the melody on the piano and then sending it back to us so we could copy it perfectly, so that every finger-stroke is playing the exact riff you get in the song.
It was a real thrill because we rarely get that much of a relationship between the visuals and the music, but I think the more they can support each other, the more powerful the results.
The âWestworldâ titles seem to have their own narrative. Is that a goal when youâre making these?
Absolutely. I think what was really exciting for me working on âWestworld.â First of all, Iâm a huge [Michael] Crichton fan, Iâm a huge fan of the original film, and we started to get materials for the show, and it became obvious that the processes in the show for creating hosts seemed very beautiful and very poetic and just full of grace. That was wonderful, but it also meant it was a real challenge for us because we couldnât just lean on doing an abstract and pretty version of that for the titles, because it was abstract and pretty in the show itself.
So we had to figure out something to go to the next step, and thatâs why it was great working with [âWestworldâ executive producer] Jonah [Nolan] and the team to try and figure out a story that could be within the titles themselves that got to the heart of the themes on the show. This idea of someone creating something, only to be replaced, then facing the end, the closing of their loop, so to speak. This kind of ashes to ashes, dust to dust, milky liquid to milky liquid journey of that central host protagonist.
The way you overlaid the desert landscape over parts of that sequence, it recalled what you did with the âTrue Detectiveâ credits. How did that idea come about?
For me, the thing I have the most fun doing is getting two things and smashing them together. I think that tends to be at the heart of most of our work. Certainly if you look at âThe Night Manager,â it was about weapons and luxury. âMan in the High Castleâ was about Nazi symbols and American symbols. Even âAmerican Godsâ was about taking stuff from the modern world and smashing that together with ancient religious icons.
And it was very much in âWestworldâ as well. It was icons of the Wild West mashed together with the icons of science fiction. Itâs like industrial robotics meets âHigh Noon.â Being a fan of westerns and a huge sci-fi nerd, it was great being able to get those symbols and icons and put them together.
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UPDATES:
1:43 p.m.: This post was updated with information about the results of the Creative Arts Emmys awarded this past weekend.
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