-
A Time Warner Company byline (2003-2010)
-
A Time Warner Company byline (2003-2010) [Widescreen cropped]
-
A TimeWarner Company byline (2004-2010)
-
Dungeons & Dragons promo variant.
No edit summary |
imported>MirahezeGDPR 071f2767e5ef4da437457776f3fde8c5 m Added TOC and a tab for one of the logos. |
||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
In mid-2008, it became a division of Warner Home Video after a short transitional period and folded 2 years later. |
In mid-2008, it became a division of Warner Home Video after a short transitional period and folded 2 years later. |
||
{{SeparateTOC |
|||
⚫ | |||
|New Line Home Entertainment| |
|||
{{ImageTOC |
|||
|New Line Home Video (1994) 20200819 021410.png|1st Logo (July 11, 1991-July 4, 1995) |
|||
|New Line Home Entertainment 2004.jpg|2nd Logo (July 25, 1995-February 9, 2010) |
|||
}} |
|||
|New Line High Definition| |
|||
{{ImageTOC |
|||
|New Line Home Entertainment HD (2007) A.png|(November 20, 2007-February 9, 2010) |
|||
}} |
|||
}} |
|||
⚫ | |||
===1st Logo (July 11, 1991-July 4, 1995)=== |
===1st Logo (July 11, 1991-July 4, 1995)=== |
||
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200"> |
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200"> |
||
Line 46: | Line 57: | ||
===2nd Logo (July 25, 1995-February 9, 2010)=== |
===2nd Logo (July 25, 1995-February 9, 2010)=== |
||
<tabber> |
|||
Images= |
|||
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200"> |
<gallery mode="packed" heights="200"> |
||
File:New Line Home Video 1995 Widescreen.png |
File:New Line Home Video 1995 Widescreen.png |
||
Line 61: | Line 74: | ||
File:New Line Home Entertainment (2001).jpeg|''Dungeons & Dragons'' promo variant. |
File:New Line Home Entertainment (2001).jpeg|''Dungeons & Dragons'' promo variant. |
||
</gallery> |
</gallery> |
||
|-| |
|||
Videos= |
|||
{{YouTube|id=ECpvCFAmc04|id2lX9YLTa5WBk|id3=iSv-MU5Y8oY|id4=j8CPA_tqr7s|id5=j0n0TKqEo8c|id6=UAu1A_Orj0E|id7=I4BV1F6uFus|id8=7AdJeSO33NU}} |
{{YouTube|id=ECpvCFAmc04|id2lX9YLTa5WBk|id3=iSv-MU5Y8oY|id4=j8CPA_tqr7s|id5=j0n0TKqEo8c|id6=UAu1A_Orj0E|id7=I4BV1F6uFus|id8=7AdJeSO33NU}} |
||
</tabber> |
|||
'''Logo:''' Same as the 1994 movie logo, but "NEW LINE HOME VIDEO" (later "NEW LINE HOME ENTERTAINMENT" starting in 2001 without the text rays) zooms out from below. The respective company byline fades in underneath. It's also videotaped/digital. |
'''Logo:''' Same as the 1994 movie logo, but "NEW LINE HOME VIDEO" (later "NEW LINE HOME ENTERTAINMENT" starting in 2001 without the text rays) zooms out from below. The respective company byline fades in underneath. It's also videotaped/digital. |
||
Line 74: | Line 90: | ||
'''Variants:''' |
'''Variants:''' |
||
* The first byline variants introduced, even the "Home Video" text versions plus the 2003 Time Warner byline had the original ITC Garamond Cond Book logo font. These versions were videotaped, running in fast 30fps for most of the time, and the text zooms in at 60fps; two byline variants, one being the second AOL byline variant, and the TimeWarner from 2004 onwards are filmed with a different font from the videotaped variants, with the text rapidly zooming in on the first filmed logo. 4:3 variants, except for the 2004 TimeWarner byline version, had a large field of vision, and the 16:9 variants were vertically cropped from their original formats. A widescreen version of the Turner variant was used on a few early 1997 DVDs in anamorphic widescreen such as ''The Long Kiss Goodnight'', ''Dumb and Dumber'' and ''Jackie Chan's First Strike''. DVDs in letterbox widescreen such as ''The Mask'' and ''Mortal Kombat'' use the regular full |
* The first byline variants introduced, even the "Home Video" text versions plus the 2003 Time Warner byline had the original ITC Garamond Cond Book logo font. These versions were videotaped, running in fast 30fps for most of the time, and the text zooms in at 60fps; two byline variants, one being the second AOL byline variant, and the TimeWarner from 2004 onwards are filmed with a different font from the videotaped variants, with the text rapidly zooming in on the first filmed logo. 4:3 variants, except for the 2004 TimeWarner byline version, had a large field of vision, and the 16:9 variants were vertically cropped from their original formats. A widescreen version of the Turner variant was used on a few early 1997 DVDs in anamorphic widescreen such as ''The Long Kiss Goodnight'', ''Dumb and Dumber'' and ''Jackie Chan's First Strike''. DVDs in letterbox widescreen such as ''The Mask'' and ''Mortal Kombat'' use the regular full-screen version. |
||
* On VHS tapes and demo DVDs, there is a still of this logo seen before the Warning screen. |
* On VHS tapes and demo DVDs, there is a still of this logo seen before the Warning screen. |
||
* On some VHS releases, about halfway through the animation, streaks of green appear through the blue glow. This can be found on the 1998 VHS of ''The Wedding Singer'' and the 1999 VHS releases of ''Pleasantville'' and ''A Nightmare on Elm Street''. However, the DVDs of all three (including a Warner Bros. Century Collection VHS reissue of ''Pleasantville'') use the standard variant. |
* On some VHS releases, about halfway through the animation, streaks of green appear through the blue glow. This can be found on the 1998 VHS of ''The Wedding Singer'' and the 1999 VHS releases of ''Pleasantville'' and ''A Nightmare on Elm Street''. However, the DVDs of all three (including a Warner Bros. Century Collection VHS reissue of ''Pleasantville'') use the standard variant. |
||
Line 80: | Line 96: | ||
* There is one 4:3 version of the AOL Time Warner byline variant that has similar camera field of vision angle degrees as the 60p version of the logo. Another notable difference is that the byline is not near the bottom of the screen. This was spotted on the 2001 VHS reprint of ''Mortal Kombat''. |
* There is one 4:3 version of the AOL Time Warner byline variant that has similar camera field of vision angle degrees as the 60p version of the logo. Another notable difference is that the byline is not near the bottom of the screen. This was spotted on the 2001 VHS reprint of ''Mortal Kombat''. |
||
* On the 2003 byline variant, but not the recent variation prior to the logo's end, uses the Palatino font. |
* On the 2003 byline variant, but not the recent variation prior to the logo's end, uses the Palatino font. |
||
* A 4:3 |
* A 4:3 anamorphic squished version of the widescreen variant of the New Line Home Entertainment logo (with the AOL Time Warner byline) appears on the full-screen side of a 2003 repackaged 1997 DVD of ''Dumb and Dumber''. |
||
* There are 4:3 cropped variants of the widescreen variants of the 2001 AOL Time Warner, 2003 Time Warner, and 2004 TimeWarner variants. The 2001 and 2003 variants can only be viewed in 4:3 mode on all DVD players, while the 2004 variant can be found on all 2004-2006 VHS releases. |
* There are 4:3 cropped variants of the widescreen variants of the 2001 AOL Time Warner, 2003 Time Warner, and 2004 TimeWarner variants. The 2001 and 2003 variants can only be viewed in 4:3 mode on all DVD players, while the 2004 variant can be found on all 2004-2006 VHS releases. |
||
* On a promo seen on the 2001 demo VHS of ''Dungeons & Dragons,'' the filmbox from the movie logo rapidly zooms in, crossfading to the print logo for New Line Home Entertainment, with the text in a different, narrower font in black on a white background. |
* On a promo seen on the 2001 demo VHS of ''Dungeons & Dragons,'' the filmbox from the movie logo rapidly zooms in, crossfading to the print logo for New Line Home Entertainment, with the text in a different, narrower font in black on a white background. |
||
Line 110: | Line 126: | ||
File:New Line Home Entertainment HD (2007) B.png |
File:New Line Home Entertainment HD (2007) B.png |
||
</gallery> |
</gallery> |
||
{{YouTube|id=j7S2Vz6b1sw}} |
|||
<center> |
|||
<youtube width="329" height="186">j7S2Vz6b1sw</youtube> |
|||
</center> |
|||
'''Logo:''' We see the New Line logo form as usual; the details are quite improved, and the background light consists of many rays. The words are in Bank Gothic MD BT font, more silver, and in 3D. When the logo is formed, a very bright light flash occurs, making the words change to "HIGH DEFINITION". |
'''Logo:''' We see the New Line logo form as usual; the details are quite improved, and the background light consists of many rays. The words are in Bank Gothic MD BT font, more silver, and in 3D. When the logo is formed, a very bright light flash occurs, making the words change to "HIGH DEFINITION". |
In 1990, New Line Cinema established its own video label as New Line Home Video (later renamed New Line Home Entertainment in 2001) and started releasing its videos the following year through RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video (which became Columbia TriStar Home Video) while Laserdisc releases were exclusively distributed by Image Entertainment.
Prior to this, RCA/Columbia had been releasing some New Line films on video including the first two Critters films, Alone in the Dark (1982 version), Quiet Cool, My Demon Lover and House Party. Other distributors had also been releasing New Line films on video such as Media Home Entertainment (Nightmare on Elm Street 1-5), HBO Video (Xtro and The Blood of Heroes) and LIVE Entertainment (Babar The Movie, Chicago Joe and the Showgirl and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles).
Even after forming its own video label, New Line still licensed some titles to LIVE such as Drop Dead Fred (a PolyGram/Working Title production which New Line released theatrically in the US), Glengarry Glen Ross, London Kills Me (a Fine Line Features release) and all Seven Arts films which New Line released (Seven Arts was a New Line/Carolco joint venture which resulted in video rights going to LIVE).
New Line's acquisition of Nelson Entertainment in 1991 enhanced its home video library; they distributed some Castle Rock Entertainment films and reissued several former Embassy Home Entertainment titles in addition to the main studio's selections.
On January 28, 1994, New Line's video distribution shifted to Turner Home Entertainment after Turner acquired New Line. After Time Warner (later "WarnerMedia" and "Warner Bros. Discovery") bought out Turner in 1996, New Line's video distribution shifted once again to Warner Home Video.
In mid-2008, it became a division of Warner Home Video after a short transitional period and folded 2 years later.
Logo: Same as the 1987 movie logo, but "NEW LINE HOME VIDEO" in a bold font replaces "NEW LINE CINEMA."
Variants:
Technique: Same as the 1987 movie logo.
Music/Sounds: Same as the 1987 movie logo.
Music/Sounds Variants:
Availability: Scarce. It's seen on New Line/Castle Rock releases by Columbia TriStar/Turner Home Entertainment on VHS and Image Entertainment on Laserdisc.
Logo: Same as the 1994 movie logo, but "NEW LINE HOME VIDEO" (later "NEW LINE HOME ENTERTAINMENT" starting in 2001 without the text rays) zooms out from below. The respective company byline fades in underneath. It's also videotaped/digital.
Bylines:
Variants:
Technique: Same as the 1994 movie logo.
Music/Sounds: The early version of the 1994 movie logo music, though sometimes it can be silent (such as on at least the DVDs of the Extended Editions of the Lord of the Rings trilogy).
Music/Sounds Variants:
Availability: Uncommon. Appeared on New Line video releases from the era. Some New Line DVDs are still in print.
Logo: We see the New Line logo form as usual; the details are quite improved, and the background light consists of many rays. The words are in Bank Gothic MD BT font, more silver, and in 3D. When the logo is formed, a very bright light flash occurs, making the words change to "HIGH DEFINITION".
Technique: Same as the theatrical and home entertainment logos and using all capacities of the Blu-ray discs.
Music/Sounds: An extended version of the New Line fanfare, accompanied by a light flash sound.
Availability: Common. Can be seen on all New Line Home Entertainment High Definition releases until 2010.