Asociación Mexicana de Video: Difference between revisions
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'''Asociación Mexicana de Video''' was a company that released most of the [[Universal Pictures|Universal]], [[Paramount Pictures|Paramount]] and [[DreamWorks Pictures|DreamWorks]] VHS and DVD releases, including [[Nickelodeon]] material. It was established in 1999 from moving distribution away from [[CIC Video]]. AMV also released children's material from [[Nelvana Enterprises|Nelvana]], [[HIT Entertainment]], among others. The company closed in 2005 for legal reasons. |
'''Asociación Mexicana de Video''' was a company that released most of the [[Universal Pictures|Universal]], [[Paramount Pictures|Paramount]] and [[DreamWorks Pictures|DreamWorks]] VHS and DVD releases, including [[Nickelodeon]] material. It was established in 1999 from moving distribution away from [[CIC Video]]. AMV also released children's material from [[Nelvana Enterprises|Nelvana]], [[HIT Entertainment]], among others. The company closed in 2005 for legal reasons. |
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===(1999-2005 [1999-2014 for Tycoon releases])=== |
===Logo (1999-2005 [1999-2014 for Tycoon releases])=== |
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{{YouTube|id=vbMnh8-gfFA}} |
{{YouTube|id=vbMnh8-gfFA}} |
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Revision as of 17:57, 9 October 2023
One or more descriptions on this page are missing or incomplete. If you have any further information on these logos, please consider editing this page to make our descriptions more complete. |
Henrynguye5
Video captures courtesy of
Christian Chong
Background
Asociación Mexicana de Video was a company that released most of the Universal, Paramount and DreamWorks VHS and DVD releases, including Nickelodeon material. It was established in 1999 from moving distribution away from CIC Video. AMV also released children's material from Nelvana, HIT Entertainment, among others. The company closed in 2005 for legal reasons.
Logo (1999-2005 [1999-2014 for Tycoon releases])
Visuals: Unknown
Technique: Unknown
Audio: Three hammering sounds and a whoosh as the light passes through. There is a synth drone, with another whoosh as we "flip" to the other screen. A metal scrape-like sound is heard as the light passes through the "AMV". When the logo "closes up", a shutting sound is heard.
Availability: Seen on Mexican VHS tapes. Was also spotted on a few DVDs. [Examples?]