

You just immediately get who these two girls are. Ginger Snaps uses this title sequence to truly make us understand these characters in a way that very few title sequences are able to do. Obviously you want to establish the tone of your movie. It's so interesting what people try to do with their title sequences. What do you love about Ginger Snaps’s opening?ĬO: Oh, boy. Right, it’s often that you love the movie as a whole and the title sequence is merely a part of it.


But there are also a lot of movies where even if the title sequence is great, it's not what you think about so you have to go back and remind yourself. It's one of the things that really just sticks out immediately. Ginger Snaps (2000)ĬO: Like, Ginger Snaps is a movie I love. There are a few that really stick out in my mind. But I didn't want to put it on my list because I'm like, how many times have you probably talked to people about Se7en?ĬO: So we could just leave that one aside. Thank you for joining me! Did you struggle to choose your Top 5? I feel like people often struggle to pick.Ĭhloe Okuno: Yes, I really did! Honestly, Se7en is probably one of my favorites. I reached her by Zoom to chat about her top five title sequences. She has also directed several short films including Slut (2014). She has directed the feature film Watcher (2022), which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and the segment "Storm Drain" for the horror anthology V/H/S/94 (2021). Chloe Okuno is an American director and screenwriter from Los Angeles.
