Paramount Pictures: Difference between revisions
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→9th Logo (March 1, 2002-2012)
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'''Nicknames:''' "2000s Mountain", "Ultra Majestic Mountain", "CGI Mountain II", "Perumount IV", "Space Mountain", "Decade Mountain", "Paramount's 90th", "Happy 90th, Paramount!", "90 Years of Paramount", "Paramountain VII", "Paramount Mountain IX", "Happy Anniversary, Paramount! II", "Majestic Mountain VI", "Great Mountain IX", "Nonagintennial Mountain", "2002 Paramount", "Viacom Mountain II", "Ultra Majestic Perumount", "Anniversary Mountain II" | '''Nicknames:''' "2000s Mountain", "Ultra Majestic Mountain", "CGI Mountain II", "Perumount IV", "Space Mountain", "Decade Mountain", "Paramount's 90th", "Happy 90th, Paramount!", "90 Years of Paramount", "Paramountain VII", "Paramount Mountain IX", "Happy Anniversary, Paramount! II", "Majestic Mountain VI", "Great Mountain IX", "Nonagintennial Mountain", "2002 Paramount", "Viacom Mountain II", "Ultra Majestic Perumount", "Anniversary Mountain II" | ||
'''Logo:''' We pan down from a starry sky in space to a set of clouds. As we fly backwards slowly with the camera, some comet-like objects come flying down. They fly down far enough to reveal themselves as the trademark Paramount stars. The stars zoom past the camera, making us find out we had been watching a reflection all along. The familiar "<span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman';">'''''Paramount'''''</span>" script (but with a gold border behind it because it's CGI) zooms out as a total of 22 stars shoot past the script and encircle the mountain behind it. The script then continues to zoom out, taking its place at the peak of the mountain. The Viacom byline (with a line above) then fades in below the logo. | '''Logo:''' We pan down from a starry sky in space to a set of clouds. As we fly backwards slowly with the camera, some comet-like objects come flying down. They fly down far enough to reveal themselves as the trademark Paramount stars. The stars zoom past the camera, making us find out we had been watching a reflection all along. The familiar "<span style="font-family: 'Times New Roman';">'''''Paramount'''''</span>" script (but with a gold border behind it because it's CGI) zooms out as a total of 22 stars shoot past the script and encircle the mountain behind it. The script then continues to zoom out, taking its place at the peak of the mountain. The Viacom byline (once again, with a line above) then fades in below the logo. | ||
'''Bylines:''' | '''Bylines:''' | ||
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'''Availability:''' Very common. Seen on all Paramount films from 2002 to 2011, as well as Paramount video releases from 2002 to 2006. | '''Availability:''' Very common. Seen on all Paramount films from 2002 to 2011, as well as Paramount video releases from 2002 to 2006. | ||
*The 90th Anniversary variant was first seen on ''We Were Soldiers'' and last appeared on ''The Hours'' and sometimes plastered old logos on 2002 video releases as well as the Tri-Star Pictures logo on Encore airings of ''Rambo III''. | *The 90th Anniversary variant was first seen on ''We Were Soldiers'' and last appeared on ''The Hours'' and sometimes plastered old logos on 2002 video releases as well as the Tri-Star Pictures logo on Encore airings of ''Rambo III''. | ||
*The | *The version without the "{{Font color|#EDD602|'''{{font|Times New Roman|''90''}}<sup>{{small|''TH''}}</sup> ANNIVERSARY'''}}" text debuted on ''How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days''. | ||
* | *''She's Out of My League'' (for the full animation variant) and ''How to Train Your Dragon'' (for the closing and distribution variant) were the last films to use the "/\ \/|/\CO/\/\ CO/\/\PANY" byline in the 1990 Wigga-Wigga font, while the version with the "<small>A VI</small>a<small>COM COMPANY</small>" byline in its 2006 font debuted on ''Iron Man 2'' and last appeared on ''The Adventures of Tintin'' (the last film to use this logo). | ||
*This logo is also seen at the end of ''Elizabethtown'', ''Zodiac'', and ''Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull'', which all had the 5th logo at the beginning. | |||
*It also appears at the end of ''Grease Sing-a-Long'' (a re-release of 1978's ''Grease''), which has the 7th logo at the beginning. | *It also appears at the end of ''Grease Sing-a-Long'' (a re-release of 1978's ''Grease''), which has the 7th logo at the beginning. | ||
* | *It also plasters the Weintraub Entertainment Group logo on a recent Encore airing of ''My Stepmother is an Alien'', with the film's opening music; Weintraub previously had a deal with Worldvision Enterprises. | ||
*It also plasters the 1982 Orion Pictures logo on HBO, Comedy Central, and IFC airings of ''Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure'' (also plasters the closing version of the logo at the end, the following Nelson Entertainment logo is kept intact at the beginning), and the 1995 MGM logo on older HBO airings of ''House Arrest''. | *It also plasters the 1982 Orion Pictures logo on HBO, Comedy Central, and IFC airings of ''Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure'' (also plasters the closing version of the logo at the end, the following Nelson Entertainment logo is kept intact at the beginning), and the 1995 MGM logo on older HBO airings of ''House Arrest''. | ||
*Surprisingly, the full version appears at the beginning of a few early episodes of ''Hogan's Heroes'' on Me-TV, including the pilot episode, as well as the HD remasters on Universal HD. | *Surprisingly, the full version appears at the beginning of a few early episodes of ''Hogan's Heroes'' on Me-TV, including the pilot episode, as well as the HD remasters on Universal HD. | ||