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Closing credits, end credits and end titles are a list of the cast and crew of a particular motion picture, television show, and video game. While opening credits appear at the beginning of a work, closing credits appear close to, and at the very end of a work. A full set of credits can include the cast and crew, but also production sponsors ...
The end credits show the couple visiting Japan on their belated honeymoon. Passchendaele: During the end credits, Black and White footage of the real battle of Passchendaele are shown in After the War sining. High School Musical 3: Senior Year: A collection of Outtakes. Saroja
Opening credits, in a television program, motion picture, or video game, are shown at the beginning of a show or movie after the production logos and list the most important members of the production. They are usually shown as text. Some opening credits are built around animation or production numbers of some sort (such as the James Bond films).
After the credits draw to a close, we're taken to a snowy spot with snowman Olaf center-stage. In a callback to one of the funniest scenes of "Frozen 2," he dramatically re-enacts some of the ...
Help! (film) Help! Help! is a 1965 British musical comedy - adventure film directed by Richard Lester, starring The Beatles and featuring Leo McKern, Eleanor Bron, Victor Spinetti, John Bluthal, Roy Kinnear and Patrick Cargill. The second film starring the Beatles following Lester's A Hard Day's Night, Help! sees the group struggle to protect ...
A post-credits scene (also known as a stinger, end tag, or credit cookie) is a short teaser clip that appears after the closing credits have rolled and sometimes after a production logo of a film, TV series, or video game has run. It is usually included to reward the audience for having the patience to watch through the credits sequence; it may ...
The first "credits scene"—it runs simultaneous to the film's closing credits—is a montage of behind-the-scenes footage of past Marvel films set to Green Day's timeless ballad "Good Riddance ...
When opening credits are built into a separate sequence of their own, the correct term is a title sequence (such as the familiar James Bond and Pink Panther title sequences). Opening credits since the early 1980s, if present at all, identify the major actors and crew, while the closing credits list an extensive cast and production crew ...