Overseas Chinese Films: Difference between revisions
From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum
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'''Nicknames:''' "Chinese Universal Globe", "The Eastern Universal Ripoff" |
'''Nicknames:''' "Chinese Universal Globe", "The Eastern Universal Ripoff" |
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Logo: On a space background, a model of Earth rotates as Chinese text (which translates to Overseas Chinese Films) zooms in. The earth continues to rotate until we fade out. |
'''Logo:''' On a space background, a model of Earth rotates as Chinese text (which translates to Overseas Chinese Films) zooms in. The earth continues to rotate until we fade out. |
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Variants: |
Variants: |
Revision as of 10:57, 22 September 2020
(1948?-1967)
Nicknames: "Chinese Universal Globe", "The Eastern Universal Ripoff"
Logo: On a space background, a model of Earth rotates as Chinese text (which translates to Overseas Chinese Films) zooms in. The earth continues to rotate until we fade out.
Variants:
- In later years, the text "電影製片公司" was renamed as "電影企業公司", which translates to "Film Enterprises Co.".
- On Driver No. 7, the text fades out faster than the earth.
FX/SFX: It's all live action, except the text.
Music/Sounds: Drumbeats that sound closely to the TCF fanfare, followed by a majestic fanfare.
Availability: Seen on their films, such as Liu Yi Sends His Letters.
Editor's Note: The Chinese text zooming and fading in, the earth, and the music may scare some, but the logo itself is just blatant. Most people would just laugh because they stole a concept from a famous logo.