Draft:Generic Theatre Bumpers: Difference between revisions

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

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===Background===
===Background===
This is a fan nickname given to probably the most well-known set of theater snipes ever made, created by the [[w:National Screen Service|National Screen Service]] in the late 1960s.
This is a bumper complication of generic theatre bumpers without the main major theatre name (AMC, Regal, Cinemark, etc.) They are well-known for the Astro Daters bumper which was a fan nickname given to probably the most well-known set of theater snipes ever made, created by the [[w:National Screen Service|National Screen Service]] in the late 1960s.


===Bumper (1960s-1970s)===
===Bumper (1960s-1970s)===

Revision as of 16:54, 17 March 2024



Background

This is a bumper complication of generic theatre bumpers without the main major theatre name (AMC, Regal, Cinemark, etc.) They are well-known for the Astro Daters bumper which was a fan nickname given to probably the most well-known set of theater snipes ever made, created by the National Screen Service in the late 1960s.

Bumper (1960s-1970s)


Visuals: On a multi-colored psychedelic screen, one of the following snipes appears from all sides and corners, merging at the center:

  • OUR FEATURE PRESENTATION
  • PREVUES OF COMING ATTRACTIONS
  • INTERMISSION
  • COMING SOON
  • OUR NEXT ATTRACTION
  • STARTS FRIDAY
  • STARTS SATURDAY
  • STARTS SUNDAY
  • STARTS MONDAY
  • STARTS TUESDAY
  • STARTS WEDNESDAY
  • STARTS THURSDAY
  • FRIDAY SATURDAY
  • FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY
  • SATURDAY-SUNDAY MATINEE
  • SUNDAY MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY
  • ALSO
  • AND
  • ALSO SELECTED SHORT SUBJECTS
  • LATE SHOW FRIDAY & SATURDAY
  • CHILDREN'S MATINEE
  • NO SMOKING IN THIS THEATRE

Variants:

  • Sometimes, the snipes would demerge and return the way they came.
  • The merge is faster on some snipes.

Technique: Camera-controlled animation.

Audio: An abridged version of a 1968 go-go-like tune called "Funky Fanfare" by Keith Mansfield. Sometimes it's silent.

Availability: Used at drive-in theaters by various companies in the 1960s and 1970s. Made a surprise reappearance on the following Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino films: Kill Bill: Volume 1 (2003; directed by Tarantino), Machete Kills (2013; directed by Rodriguez), and their 2007 double feature Grindhouse (Planet Terror/Death Proof).

Legacy: This is a cult classic among moviegoers.

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