Mad men opening credits download




















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Mad Men by Adam Ben Ezra. Teddy Blanco. Kat Peruyera. Immediate and FREE! Purchasable with gift card. Log In. Sign Up. Follow Unfollow. Follow Following. After Effects. Follow Following Unfollow. Jeremy Cox. Mad Men. We thought the show would probably be good, but had no idea how culturally significant the titles would become. It's meant to mirror the show's themes, but it also stands alone as a wonderful thirty-second piece of animation.

It also contains a slew of details - some of which may have been missed by the audience. One of the first and most interesting things to notice is that the shadowed man presumed to be Don Draper himself doesn't really react to his crumbling office.

As everything falls around him, the man stands his ground and seemingly accepts his fate. This could speak to Don's life, as it often crumbles around him while he metaphorically stands around, seemingly indifferent to his fate.

It also touches on the intro's cyclical nature, as it ends with Don lounged out on a couch. He has likely encountered this disaster before and is nonplussed when it occurs again - another mirror of Don's life. Women play an enormous role both in Mad Men and Don Draper's life. It's fitting, then, that one of the first images that audiences get is a large, and quite obvious, glimpse at a female.

As Don begins his descent down the building, he passes a woman wearing a red bikini. The framing makes the meaning quite obvious - at no point is the woman's face shown. It's only her body, which makes sense given how Don views and treats women. The same goes for a later part where Don proceeds to fall down a very long pair of female legs. It once again speaks to Don's womanizing ways and the enormous importance that female sexuality has in his life. There's also a later shot of an advertisement of a woman sporting lipstick, again alluding to how Don views females and his advertising career.

While Don falls down the legs, Eagle-eyed viewers will notice a glass of beer off to the left. The beer is actively being poured from a bottle, and the glass has a very lovely, almost fancy shape to it.

It's obviously meant to reference Don's job in advertising, as the image of the pouring beer looks like something found in a magazine or a TV commercial.



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