Fox Hills Video: Difference between revisions

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

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Fox Hills Video - CLG Wiki
Fox Hills Video - CLG Wiki


'''Nicknames:''' "The Shapes", "Head of the Fox", "The CGI Fox Head", "The Logo That Has No Relationship With 20th Century Fox"
'''Nicknames:''' "The Shapes", "The Fox", "The Fox's Head", "The CGI Fox Head", "The Logo That Has No Relationship With 20th Century Fox"


'''Logo:''' On a gray background, we see CGI shapes that fly in from the bottom-right and form a stylized fox head, then the words "FOX HILLS VIDEO", stacked word-by-word, zoom out and settle to the right of the design. The fox head shines from the bottom-right to the top-left, and a Heron Communications byline fades in underneath.
'''Logo:''' On a gray background, we see CGI shapes that fly in from the bottom-right and form a stylized fox head, then the words "FOX HILLS VIDEO", stacked word-by-word, zoom out and settle to the right of the design. The fox head shines from the bottom-right to the top-left, and a Heron Communications byline fades in underneath.

Revision as of 15:22, 5 May 2021

Logo capture by Eric S. Video capture courtesy of DudeThatLogo

Background

Fox Hills Video was a video label founded by Heron Communications in 1986 to release special interest videos and obscure B-movies. It was named after Fox Hills, a neighborhood in Culver City, California which was located near Media Home Entertainment's headquarters. It lasted until 1992.

(1986-1992)

Fox Hills Video - CLG Wiki

Nicknames: "The Shapes", "The Fox", "The Fox's Head", "The CGI Fox Head", "The Logo That Has No Relationship With 20th Century Fox"

Logo: On a gray background, we see CGI shapes that fly in from the bottom-right and form a stylized fox head, then the words "FOX HILLS VIDEO", stacked word-by-word, zoom out and settle to the right of the design. The fox head shines from the bottom-right to the top-left, and a Heron Communications byline fades in underneath.

FX/SFX: Nice computer animation for 1986.

Music/Sounds: A mysterious, dreamy tune when we see the shapes, then followed by a five-note synth fanfare.

Availability: Seen on such releases like early Kathy Smith workout tapes, as well as tapes of old NFL moments and copies of Zombie Island Massacre, Unsane (Tenebre), and Thrillkill, among others. Starting in 1990, the Video Treasures logo would appear after that.

Editor's Note: TBA

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