A.D. Vision Holdings, Inc. (known simply as ADV and also referred to as ADV Films) was an American multimedia entertainment distributor headquartered in Houston, Texas, and founded in 1992 by video game fan John Ledford and anime fans Matt Greenfield and David Williams. The company specialized in home video production and distribution, theatrical film distribution, merchandising, original productions, magazine and comic book publishing. They also ran Anime Network, a television channel devoted to airing the company's titles.
ADV stands for "Animation Dubbing Vision".
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Visuals: On a black background, with stars and a rainbow-gradient grid at the bottom of the screen, a CGI rendition of the A.D. Vision print logo of the time zooms out and rotates back into place just above the grid. It consists of the geometric letters "AD" positioned to the left (although the print logo used normal letters), and "Vision" in a script font below. 2 large green dots outlined in yellow are also seen, serving as the dots in "A.D." and the dots for the "i"'s. The borders of the logo shine 3 times, of which after each shine, a star flashes: 1 on the right for the 1st, 2 on the left for the 2nd, and all 3 for the 3rd time.
Technique: Computer animation made on an Amiga 1000.
Audio: None.
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Visuals: On a scrolling, murky-looking gold/dark green/black background, a stone tablet can be seen taking up the bottom of the screen with 3 small bumps in it. The bumps emerge out with a ripple as olive-colored spheres, as 3 more swirl in and the plate begins to rotate around. As the plate tilts and zooms out into place, the 6 spheres revolve around each other before the 3 larger ones stop and rotate to reveal themselves as the geometric letters "ADV", and the plate zooms out to reveal itself as a smaller, beveled place. The 3 smaller spheres then slam into the letters to form dots, turning it into "A.D.V.". Then, a murky red wall zooms out on the right side of the screen and quickly scrolls across the screen, revealing the text "A.D. VISION" taking up the whole screen, and the insides changing multiple colors, before it zooms out to underneath the logo and turns silver. The logo then wildly shines with lens flares and the logo slowly zooms in as it does so.
Technique: CGI.
Audio: A synthesizer fanfare with a few drumbeats and a "whoosh" as "A.D. VISION" wipes across the screen.
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Visuals: On a black background, the camera revolves around various light blue orbs tracing out silver bars. As the camera revolves around the top, it reveals they trace out the futuristic text "ADV" as an outline. When the text is completely formed, it fills with indigo as it darkens significantly, and a comet sweeps in from below it. The logo then brightens up, revealing the text "FILMS" under "ADV".
Technique: CGI.
Audio: Same as the 2nd A.D. Vision logo, but shorter and with additional laser sound effects.
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Visuals: A stylized sun flashes into a bright orange-red burst of light in the middle of the screen. This creates a blue background with various astrological symbols in an arrangement from left to right, with a violet oval zooming out in the background, and 2 interconnected rings symbols zooming in. The symbols start to flash to arrange it to look like this: "☉☿♀⊕♂♃♄♅♆♇", while on the last flash of the fourth symbol (Earth), the symbols glow and swirl around, forming the stylized letters "ADV" from before. Several blurry ovals swirl in around the letters to form one solid oval as the inside fills with black, and sketchy lines appear below and form the word "FILMS".
Technique: CGI.
Audio: Futuristic sound effects throughout; no music apart from a slight synth drone at the very end.
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Visuals: On a black background, a silver textured oval quickly passes through the camera, as the background rotates to reveal several stars and nebulas in the distance. The ring then spins and revolves the background twice in a row, before passing through it and flying around the area. The camera then goes up close to the ADV Films logo, but with black letters and clips playing inside those letters, scrolling along it as the background fades back again. The logo then falls into the background, where it and the ring play around, quickly zooming in with distorted copies 3 times. The logo and ring then go to their normal positions and zoom back in as the stars fade back in. The ring slowly moves to the upper left, shining as it does, before suddenly spinning to be lower, and quickly zooms to the side, wiping away the stars.
Variants:
Technique: CGI.
Audio: Like the previous logo, just some sound effects, consisting of "wobble"-type sounds, an ethereal choir, screeching static noises, followed by these sounds, depending on these variants:
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Visuals: On a black background, a drawing of the ADV letters rotates upwards, with the sketchy lines jumping around before the drawing clears itself. A outlined oval then rotates around with the spinning letters as the middle of the background becomes illuminated by a purple spotlight. The letters and oval fill with color and they transform from 2D to 3D as they flip, zoom, and rotate around more until the letters fly off-screen. The oval flips another time and shines as it gets filled in with black, and then the ADV Films logo then zooms out onto the oval. The letters of "FILMS" shine as the purple light shimmers. Then, the purple disappears and the logo fades away before turning into an outline and jitters out of existence.
Variant: In the logo's first year of usage, the logo is set higher to make room for the text "15TH ANNIVERSARY" to spread in letter-by-letter. The logo also doesn't turn into an outline when it fades out.
Technique: 2D and 3D animation.
Audio: A couple of scratches, whooshes and shining sounds throughout with a little ditty near the end (15th Anniversary Variant only and no sounds at the end). The latter has a short laser sound.
Availability: This was used in tandem with the 3rd logo, and appeared on some releases such as the 2009 re-release of Grave of the Fireflies. The 15th anniversary variant can be seen on UFO Ultramaiden Valkyrie 4: Banquet Time Dreams.
With declining fortunes in the mid-2000s due to low sales, ADV collapsed and eventually liquidated their assets in 2009. Sentai Holdings, owner of Section23 Films, Sentai Filmworks, AEsir Holdings, Valkyrie Media Partners, and Seraphim Digital, took over the ADV brand name and still uses it on some of their releases. Most of ADV's former titles have been re-released by other companies. Sentai was subsequently acquired by AMC Networks in 2022. As of 2022, ADV exists as a domiciled shell corporation.
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