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theuofc
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Stephen Pickard
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Guybrush Threepwood
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'Maurice Binder' seems to be like some collossus striding across the Cinema landscape..
As ever though, the truth is somewhat different. What's the quote? "If I have seen farther than other men it's because I have stood on the shoulders of giants"? The following picture and text is taken from The Guardian newspaper 2005 The highlighting is mine ![]() Snapshot: Goldfinger title sequence The blonde is Margaret Nolan, a forgotten 1960s starlet. The man in silhouette is Robert Brownjohn, one of the most innovative, expensive and downright difficult art directors of the 60s. Nolan is being filmed for the title sequence of Goldfinger (1964), the third James Bond film. She was painted gold from head to toe and images from the film were projected on to her body, creating a hallucinogenic effect that was ahead of its time. Brownjohn had succeeded in turning a title sequence - generally an afterthought - into high art. Had he not died in 1970 from a heart attack aged 44, he would have received greater credit for his innovation. Robert "Bj" Brownjohn had already made a name for himself as a designer in 1950s New York when he arrived in London in 1960. He claimed that he came over for the city's creative energy. His girlfriend, the super-chic fashion designer Kiki Byrne, remembers it differently. "You could get heroin on the National Health back then," says Byrne. "And Bj did have a problem. But he was also terribly gifted, so he quickly established himself as one of the key figures during a very special period in history." Brownjohn was at the heart of swinging London when he got the call from Albert "Cubby" Broccoli to design the title sequences for From Russia With Love and Goldfinger. Having been given £850 for the first film, he demanded £5,000 for the second, a huge amount at the time. "We quoted £5,000 and it cost £5,000," remembers his assistant Trevor Bond. "You never made a profit on Bj." Byrne designed the bikini for Nolan. Goldfinger was to prove a high point in Brownjohn's career. In 1968 he designed the sleeve for the Rolling Stones' album Let It Bleed, an unhappy experience that he illustrated by featuring a smashed wedding cake on the back cover. By this time, heavy drinking and drug use had taken over at the expense of output. He broke up with Byrne the following year, and soon he was living alone in a basement bedsit. But once, as his friend and fellow designer Alan Fletcher remembers, "Bj was the right man, in the right job, in the right place." So we have proof that Broccoli asked Brownjohn to design the titles..and we have proof that Brownjohn filmed them himself...and we know how he came by his hallucinogenic visions...we even know who designed the bikini...what was it Binder was supposed to have done again? Threep. p.s. Robert Brownjohn was given a retrospective exhibition at the Design Museum last year and a book of his work "Robert Brownjohn: Sex and Typography" by Emily King - published by Laurence King was published last October. p.p.s. funny, you know, but don't seem to have seen Binders name mentioned at all, not once..... |
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smudge
is back at work now, but it pays for the weekends!
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Interesting feature Threep.
Wonder who's forgotten Maggie N - I certainly haven't. But now this deserves a follow up piece on why Brownjohn never did any more 007s... I have to agree that BJ has certainly been overlooked with the passage of time. His work was distinctive, but it is surely inarguable that Binder set the house style for the subsequent James Bond pictures and was quite an artist in his own right. SMUDGE |
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Guybrush Threepwood
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Ah...Maggie Nolan.....The only reason I went and saw the only "Carry - On" movie I ever paid to see....those were days eh?
Brownjohn was probably either too "out of it" or too expensive to carry his visionary work forward, my own feeling is that Binder *how can I put this?* "borrowed" Brownjohns extaordinary style, visuals, and ideas.. I think Binders output was influenced GREATLY by Brownjohn....(let's put it that way) Interestingly, Brownjohn turned up a few years later, on the other side of the lens, in 'Otley' In later years when Binder was interviewed about, or introduced as "the man who made those famous opening credits for Goldfinger, Thunderball, etc...." he never said.."Ah well....actually Goldfinger wasn't me....." Now, if you'll excuse me, I have to look at that picture of Ms Nolan some more.... Threep |
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