Minerva Film: Difference between revisions

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{{PageCredits|capture=Tabit and Henrynguye5|video=Cassavetesfortoday, hindi film collection and IFH LOGO}}


=== Background ===
=== Background ===
'''Minerva Film''' was an Italian movie production and distribution company prominently active from 1912 up to 1956, and one of the major companies during the later fascist period, along with [[Lux Film (Italy)|Lux Film]], [[Titanus]] and [[Scalera Film]]. It was founded during the Silent Era initially as a distribution company named after Minerva, the Roman Goddess of war, handling major foreign productions for release in Italy during the time. In 1946, the company was involved in a legal dispute with American producer and screenwriter David Selznick over the contract of Alida Valli. Eventually, in 1956, the company ceased its operations due to liquidation.
'''Minerva Film''' was an Italian movie producer.


{{ImageTOC
=== 1st Logo (1940s)===
|Minerva Film (1941, Source - Scampolo).png|1st Logo (2 October 1941)
[[File:Minerva Film.jpg|center|300px]]
|Minerva Film.jpg|2nd Logo (16 September 1942-29 September 1950)
{{YouTube|id=https://youtu.be/vN9dH3QQqdE}}
|Minerva Film (1954, Source - La Romana).png|3rd Logo (27 November 1947-23 December 1954)
'''Logo:''' On a zooming starfield backdrop, a white, 5-pointed star zooms toward us and dissolves into a bust of a woman wearing a crown (Minerva, a Roman goddess). Then, a white sunburst shape fades in behind the bust, and the words "MINERVA FILM", in a white, art-decó-esque font, appear zooming in, letter-by-letter, above the bust. After a few seconds, the smaller word "PRESENTA", also in white wipes in below the bust's head. Lastly, after a few seconds, we fade out.
}}


=== 1st Logo (2 October 1941) ===
'''Technique:''' The starfield zooming in, the star appearing and dissolving, the bust appearing, the sunburst shape fading in, the text appearing.
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Minerva Film (1941, Source - Scampolo).png
</gallery>
'''Logo:''' On a cloudy sky background, we see a silhouette of a sculpted head of the Roman goddess Minerva sitting on top of a pedestal. A light eventually illuminates from above to reveal more of Minerva and the pedestal, which appears to be in a Roman-like style with "MINERVA FILM" carved within it. It stays static for a few seconds until it crossfades to a black background with "<abbr title="PRESENTS">PRESENTA</abbr>" flipping to the center of the screen.

'''Technique:''' Live action.


'''Music/Sounds:''' A snare drum roll followed by a trumpet fanfare.
'''Music/Sounds:''' A snare drum roll followed by a trumpet fanfare.


'''Availability:''' Appeared in ''Avamto a Lui'' and ''Roma città aperta''.
'''Availability:''' Only seen on ''Scampolo''.

=== 2nd Logo (16 September 1942-29 September 1950) ===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Minerva Film.jpg
</gallery>
{{YouTube|id=vN9dH3QQqdE}}
'''Logo:''' On a zooming starfield backdrop, a white, 5-pointed star zooms toward us and dissolves into the same head of Minerva. Then, a white sunburst shape fades in behind the bust, and the words "'''MINERVA FILM'''", in a white, art-decó-esque font, appear zooming in, letter-by-letter, above the bust. After a few seconds, the smaller word "<abbr title="PRESENTS">PRESENTA</abbr>", also in white wipes in below Minerva's head. Lastly, after a few seconds, we fade out.

'''Technique:''' Traditional animation.

'''Music/Sounds:''' See the previous logo.

'''Music/Sounds Variant:''' <u>''I cadetti di Guascogna''</u> uses the opening theme of the film.

'''Availability:''' Rare, some earlier films they have distributed either have been lost or don't use a logo at all. Its notable appearances were in ''La Bisbetica Domata'', ''La vita ricomincia'', ''Avanti a lui tremava tutta Roma'', ''Roma città aperta'', ''Natale al campo 119'' and ''I cadetti di Guascogna''.

=== 3rd Logo (27 November 1947-23 December 1954) ===
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200">
Minerva Film (1947, Source - I due orfanelli).png|Early variant
Minerva Film (1951, Source - Parigi è sempre Parigi).png|1951 variant
Minerva Film (1954, Source - La Romana).png|1954 variant
Minerva Film (1954, Source - Giorni d'amore).png|Colorized v1
Minerva Film (1954, Source - Amori di mezzo secolo).png|Colorized v2
</gallery>
{{YouTube|id=f6LsOffWfx8|id2=nPtiZuxhIGw|id3=7Vy1geiG6p0|id4=sviwf4v9wSM}}
'''Logo:''' Over a {{color|#9cb4ff|blue}} cloudy setting, we see a different statue of Minerva's head facing towards the right side with "MINERVA" at the bottom. The head then rotates 45 degrees clockwise to face the viewer. When it stops, said "MINERVA" rises to the center of the screen which also reveals "FILM" in the same format and "''<abbr title="presents">presenta</abbr>''" in a handwritten style. A light then shines on the text at the moment it stops, blocking Minerva's head.

'''Variants:'''
* In its <u>earliest appearance</u>, the setting is less cloudy and the text is not fully illuminated.
** A colorized variant exists on <u>''Giorni d'amore''</u>.
* Starting with <u>''Parigi è sempre Parigi'' up until ''Gelosia''</u>, the setting is more dark and cloudy and the camera angle is below the Minerva statue. The text is fully white when the light illuminates it.
* A colorized variant exists on <u>''Amori di mezzo secolo''</u>.


'''Technique:''' Live action and chroma-key animation.
=== 2nd Logo (1950s-1955) ===
{{YouTube|id=https://youtu.be/f6LsOffWfx8|id2=https://youtu.be/nPtiZuxhIGw|id3=https://youtu.be/7Vy1geiG6p0}}
'''Logo:''' In black and white we see a bust of Minerva wearing a Roman military helmet with 3 sphinx figures on it against a cloudy sky background. The word " MINERVA "is written below in a bold black font.


'''Music/Sounds:''' A bombastic orchestral suite with harp glissandos at the start, possibly based on the previous logo.
'''Technique:''' TBA.


'''Music/Sounds:''' TBA.
'''Music/Sounds Variant:''' <u>''Anema e core''</u> uses the opening theme of the film.


'''Availability:''' Appeared in several Italian films.
'''Availability:''' Rare; it mainly appeared in several Italian films.
* The standard variant was seen on ''I due orfanelli'' and ''Giorni d'amore''.
* The 1951 variant is uncommon, yet the most of all variants, and made its appearance on ''Parigi è sempre Parigi'', ''Amor non ho! Però, però..'', ''Domani è un altro giorno'' and ''Gelosia''.
* The 1954 variant was seen on ''La Romana'', ''Cronache di Poveri Amanti'', ''Un giorno in pretura'', ''Amori di mezzo secolo'' and ''Il cardinale Lambertini''.


[[Category:Italian film logos]]
[[Category:Italian film logos]]

Revision as of 10:01, 19 May 2023


Background

Minerva Film was an Italian movie production and distribution company prominently active from 1912 up to 1956, and one of the major companies during the later fascist period, along with Lux Film, Titanus and Scalera Film. It was founded during the Silent Era initially as a distribution company named after Minerva, the Roman Goddess of war, handling major foreign productions for release in Italy during the time. In 1946, the company was involved in a legal dispute with American producer and screenwriter David Selznick over the contract of Alida Valli. Eventually, in 1956, the company ceased its operations due to liquidation.



1st Logo (2 October 1941)

Logo: On a cloudy sky background, we see a silhouette of a sculpted head of the Roman goddess Minerva sitting on top of a pedestal. A light eventually illuminates from above to reveal more of Minerva and the pedestal, which appears to be in a Roman-like style with "MINERVA FILM" carved within it. It stays static for a few seconds until it crossfades to a black background with "PRESENTA" flipping to the center of the screen.

Technique: Live action.

Music/Sounds: A snare drum roll followed by a trumpet fanfare.

Availability: Only seen on Scampolo.

2nd Logo (16 September 1942-29 September 1950)

Logo: On a zooming starfield backdrop, a white, 5-pointed star zooms toward us and dissolves into the same head of Minerva. Then, a white sunburst shape fades in behind the bust, and the words "MINERVA FILM", in a white, art-decó-esque font, appear zooming in, letter-by-letter, above the bust. After a few seconds, the smaller word "PRESENTA", also in white wipes in below Minerva's head. Lastly, after a few seconds, we fade out.

Technique: Traditional animation.

Music/Sounds: See the previous logo.

Music/Sounds Variant: I cadetti di Guascogna uses the opening theme of the film.

Availability: Rare, some earlier films they have distributed either have been lost or don't use a logo at all. Its notable appearances were in La Bisbetica Domata, La vita ricomincia, Avanti a lui tremava tutta Roma, Roma città aperta, Natale al campo 119 and I cadetti di Guascogna.

3rd Logo (27 November 1947-23 December 1954)

Logo: Over a blue cloudy setting, we see a different statue of Minerva's head facing towards the right side with "MINERVA" at the bottom. The head then rotates 45 degrees clockwise to face the viewer. When it stops, said "MINERVA" rises to the center of the screen which also reveals "FILM" in the same format and "presenta" in a handwritten style. A light then shines on the text at the moment it stops, blocking Minerva's head.

Variants:

  • In its earliest appearance, the setting is less cloudy and the text is not fully illuminated.
    • A colorized variant exists on Giorni d'amore.
  • Starting with Parigi è sempre Parigi up until Gelosia, the setting is more dark and cloudy and the camera angle is below the Minerva statue. The text is fully white when the light illuminates it.
  • A colorized variant exists on Amori di mezzo secolo.

Technique: Live action and chroma-key animation.

Music/Sounds: A bombastic orchestral suite with harp glissandos at the start, possibly based on the previous logo.

Music/Sounds Variant: Anema e core uses the opening theme of the film.

Availability: Rare; it mainly appeared in several Italian films.

  • The standard variant was seen on I due orfanelli and Giorni d'amore.
  • The 1951 variant is uncommon, yet the most of all variants, and made its appearance on Parigi è sempre Parigi, Amor non ho! Però, però.., Domani è un altro giorno and Gelosia.
  • The 1954 variant was seen on La Romana, Cronache di Poveri Amanti, Un giorno in pretura, Amori di mezzo secolo and Il cardinale Lambertini.
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