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Hi, John Hess from FilmmakerIQ.com and today well explore the history of the credit sequence. When Auguste and Louis Lumire first turned on their motion picture machine in Grand Cafe in Paris 1895, there were no credits or titles - the film just began. The same was true with for the early films of Georges Melies - here, the 1897 film After the Ball just begins - no title card, no credits - and why would we need them to get in the way of seeing Jeanne damp;#39;Alcy undress. It wasnt until 1900 did we get a peep of what might actually be the first title card of all time in a cleverly titled comedy: How It Feels To Be Run Over - which is really just a film of one of those new fangled horseless carriages driving recklessly and running into the camera. Then we get some quick frames reading Oh, mother will be pleased! - I guess you had to be there. A year later in 1901, we start seeing intertitles - these are title cards in the film itself to provide dialogue or to set the scene. Per