Al Fresco
September 10, 2014

Al Fresco

HOLLYWOOD, CA – The new HBO series “The Leftovers” asks many big questions about the meaning of life, the existence of God and the future of the human race. For the show’s main title sequence show creators Damon Lindelof (“Lost”) and writer Tom Perrotta turned to the award-winning creative studio yU+co and Creative Director Garson Yu to create a concept that matched the ambitions of the show.

According to Lindelof, he knew he wanted a Renaissance-inspired credit sequence, but wasn’t sure how to use it. Enter yU+co, which came in with the concept of using a traditional fresco painting style (most notably Michelangelo's Sistine Chapel) to visually depict the forever-changed world imagined in “The Leftovers.” The video can be found at  http://youtu.be/3PTNHQND6MA.

"That suddenly made the sequence feel less pretentious, more irreverent and most importantly, original," Lindelof says. 

“The Leftovers” takes place in the aftermath of a rapture-like event where 2 percent of the world's population suddenly vanished. The show centers not on the people who were taken, but on the ones left behind, specifically those living in the hamlet of Mapleton, New York.”


Hidden Meaning And Symbolism

“Frescos are like visual history lessons and for this title sequence I wanted to use the look of a classic fresco painting style, but create images that relate to the new dramatic event that is the basis for the show,” Yu says.

Set to Max Richter’s ominous, mournful orchestral score, the title sequence slowly reveals itself as a series of haunting images that juxtapose shots of people floating helplessly away toward the heavens with those left behind, depicted as grieving, angry and confused. One of the most affecting shots shows a newborn baby floating toward the heavens as his father reaches out for him with one hand while consoling his crying wife his other.

Adding to the pieces sense of mystery is yU+co’s elegant camera work that slowly pans the fresco in such a way that it is often unclear who is being taken away and who is left behind. The sequence ends on a heightened dramatic note as the camera pulls back to reveal the visuals are all part of an immense fresco on a domed church ceiling.

“The more you watch it, the more you discover the religious symbolisms and hidden meanings in it,” Yu notes. “The camera movement helps add to the tension because viewers are never quite sure who’s descending or ascending, and that's the magic to me. I hope viewers will discover new meanings each time they watch it.”

3D Animation Meets Classic Painting

To create the authentic fresco look of the title sequence Yu turned to Rhode Island-based painter Jon Foster to compose the basis for the vignettes. Yu worked closely with Foster to insure that all of the subtle facial expressions Yu envisioned for each painting were represented. For Yu, it was crucial that those expressions reveal something deeper behind the characters. 

From there, Foster’s images were digitally rendered in layers to give it a heightened sense of depth, and then composited onto a 3D animated dome that was designed by yU+co. in painstaking detail to look just like a classical Italian Renaissance cathedral dome.

“The combination of the images and the characters depicted, coupled with camera movement, helped create an immersive point-of-view that is also strikingly intimate,” Yu says. “Damon describes it as an ‘intimate epic’ and I think that is particularly apt.”