Career Highlights: The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes, Young Winston, Barbarella
First Major Screen Credit: Barbarella (1968)
Biography
Maurice Binder is best known for creating the dazzling, erotic title sequences of the James Bond movies. Among his other well-known designs are the titles for Polanski's Repulsion (1965) and for The Last Emperor (1989). Binder primarily works in Europe. ~ Sandra Brennan, All Movie Guide
Binder created the signature gun barrel sequence. He is also best known for creating the opening title credits, showing an artistic display of scantily clad and often discreetly naked females doing a variety of activities such as dancing, jumping on a trampoline, or shooting weapons. Both sequences are trademarks and staples of the James Bond films. Maurice Binder was succeeded by Daniel Kleinman as the title designer for 1995's GoldenEye.
Binder shot opening and closing sequences involving a mouse for The Mouse That Roared (1959), a sequence of monks filmed as a mosaic explaining the history of the Golden Bell in The Long Ships (1963), and a sequence of Spanish dancers explaining why the then topical reference of nuclear weapons vanishing in a B-52 mishap shifted from Spain to Greece in The Day the Fish Came Out (1967).
Binder also was a producer of The Passage (1979), and a visual consultant on Dracula (1979) and Oxford Blues (1984).