Passport International Productions, Inc.: Difference between revisions
Channeleven (talk | contribs) Getting a background started with this page, along with a connection to Amvest Video/Kid Pics. Tag: Visual edit |
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=== Background === |
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This was a company owned by Dante J. Pugliese, who previously ran the [[Amvest Video]], [[Kid Pics]] and AudioFidelity public domain labels. Passport mainly produced documentaries centered around movies and celebrities; to wit, using trailers or public domain movies in the form of compilations. The company would go under following a domestic assault case filed against Pugliese by his wife, along with prior financial issues. Passport's catalog currently lays with [[Multicom Entertainment Group]]. |
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===Logo (October 19, 2001)=== |
===Logo (October 19, 2001)=== |
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'''Audio:''' A droning synth note with a everlasting "THUD!" (which may be the stamper doing it). |
'''Audio:''' A droning synth note with a everlasting "THUD!" (which may be the stamper doing it). |
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'''Availability:''' Seen on some DVDs & VHS tapes of old films such as ''Hollywood Remembers: Hollywood Rivals''. |
'''Availability:''' Seen on some DVDs & VHS tapes of old films such as ''Hollywood Remembers: Hollywood Rivals''. Newer prints may plaster this with the Multicom Entertainment logo. |
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Revision as of 11:54, 21 March 2024
Background
This was a company owned by Dante J. Pugliese, who previously ran the Amvest Video, Kid Pics and AudioFidelity public domain labels. Passport mainly produced documentaries centered around movies and celebrities; to wit, using trailers or public domain movies in the form of compilations. The company would go under following a domestic assault case filed against Pugliese by his wife, along with prior financial issues. Passport's catalog currently lays with Multicom Entertainment Group.
Logo (October 19, 2001)
Visuals: The word, "PASSPORT" flies from the bottom of the screen to the top, and behind it, a silver ball falls onto a rotating blue rectangle, and while the "PASSPORT" word flies up, the ball then moves away from the now-unmoving rectangle, revealing a static globe, and "stands" up, and the words, "International Productions, Inc." appear.
Technique: CGI.
Audio: A droning synth note with a everlasting "THUD!" (which may be the stamper doing it).
Availability: Seen on some DVDs & VHS tapes of old films such as Hollywood Remembers: Hollywood Rivals. Newer prints may plaster this with the Multicom Entertainment logo.