Portal:Production Logos/Home Entertainment Logos/Selected article

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Selected Articles

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Sony Pictures Home Entertainment is the home entertainment distribution arm of Sony Pictures Entertainment, part of the Sony Pictures Entertainment Motion Picture Group, a subsidiary of Sony Corporation. It was first established in November 1979 by Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. as "Columbia Pictures Home Entertainment", to distribute films from Columbia Pictures on VHS, Beta, Laserdisc, and Super 8mm, with Warner Bros. titles being released by them in the latter format.

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Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment began its life in 1978 through MCA DiscoVision as "Walt Disney Home Entertainment". In 1980, Disney content was made available on videocassette under its own division known as "Walt Disney Home Video". Prior to 1981, their first releases were only live action films such as Pete's Dragon and The Love Bug. Starting in 1981 with Dumbo, they began releasing their animated films and cartoons on video.

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Warner Bros. Home Entertainment, the home entertainment division of Warner Bros. Entertainment, itself part of WarnerMedia (formerly "Time Warner"), first started off in 1980 as Warner Home Video (initially as "WCI Home Video"; "WCI" stood for "Warner Communications, Inc.") to distribute on video the film and television library of Warner Bros. Studios, and when Time Warner acquired them, programs from other Time Warner companies.

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Fox Entertainment Group acquired CBS's interest in CBS/Fox and renamed it to "20th Century Fox Home Entertainment" on March 16, 1995, alternating with the Fox Video name until 1998. The studio was the last major holdout to release its product on DVD, releasing its first seven discs in November of that year, one month after Paramount Home Entertainment released its first DVDs. After The Walt Disney Company's purchase of Fox in 2019, the name would be retired on-screen in 2020 with the rename to 20th Century Studios, and future home media releases would use a shortened version of the movie logo starting with the video release of The Call of the Wild, while the 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment name was still used for copyright holding purposes until December of that year.

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On December 9, 1996, MCA/Universal Home Video renamed itself as "Universal Studios Home Video" when MCA was reincorporated as Universal Studios. It began to distribute titles from third-party companies, like Lionsgate Films, October Films, DreamWorks Pictures and The Kushner-Locke Company.

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USA Home Entertainment (not to be confused with "U.S.A. Home Video", one of Artisan Entertainment's former labels) was the successor to PolyGram Video, as well as the home video division of USA Films and Studios USA Television LLC. It was owned by media mogul Barry Diller through HSN's USA Networks, Inc. (now NBCUniversal). On May 7, 2002, USA Home Entertainment was folded into Universal Studios Home Video (now known as Universal Pictures Home Entertainment).

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Paramount Home Entertainment (formerly "Paramount Home Media Distribution", "Paramount Home Video", and "Paramount Video") is Paramount Pictures' home media division and was formed in 1979 (some sources claim late 1975). The company owns the home media rights to films and shows owned by Paramount and shows from sister companies CBS Entertainment Group (under the label CBS Home Entertainment; the pre-2006 Paramount Television library is released under this label as well) and Paramount Media Networks (under individual labels such as MTV Home Video and other subsidiaries). The company also licenses the right to release material from several independent studios.

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DreamWorks Home Entertainment was the home media unit of DreamWorks Pictures, formed in 1998.

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In 1997, the UA name was dropped from MGM/UA Home Entertainment, renaming it to MGM Home Entertainment. The assets of the former Orion Home Video was transferred to MGM itself, as well as picking up the pre-1996 PolyGram film library.

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In May 1987, amid financial issues, Cannon Films sold the assets of Thorn EMI and dropped out of its joint venture with HBO not long after. From that point on, HBO operated the video label on their own, renaming the label HBO Video (it was also known as HBO Home Video from 1993 to 2005). The label was renamed again in 2009, this time to HBO Home Entertainment. In 2020, HBO Home Entertainment was absorbed into Warner Bros. Home Entertainment. Since then, newer home media releases of HBO material bear the WBHE name instead.

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The Walt Disney Gold Classic Collection (also known as the Walt Disney Collection in Australia) began in 2000 to release films, such as ones that never made it to the Masterpiece Collection like Make Mine Music, Saludos Amigos, The Rescuers Down Under, Toy Story and A Bug's Life. The label was short-lived, as it was discontinued in 2001.

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ABC Video Enterprises, Inc. was a home video and cable television unit of the ABC Television Network, formed in July 1979. In 1993, a year after ABC's new home video unit ABC Video was formed, it was re-purposed as "Capital Cities/ABC Cable and International Broadcasting, Inc.", which later became Disney-ABC International Television. In 1996, Buena Vista Home Video began distributing ABC tapes after Capital Cities/ABC merged with The Walt Disney Company. ABC Video shut down in 1999; the ABC name would return to home entertainment releases of ABC shows in 2008 when distribution of ABC shows on DVD and Blu-ray were transferred from Buena Vista to Lionsgate Home Entertainment.

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Image Entertainment Inc. was founded in 1981 as a LaserDisc distributor and became a major player in the format, distributing for many major studios' LaserDisc output (including Buena Vista and Universal). Once DVDs dominated the home media market and soon rivaled VHS in the late 1990s, Image re-focused its output distribution to DVDs (and later, Blu-rays alongside DVDs), although they did release a few VHS tapes as well. In 2012, Image was acquired by RLJ Acquisition, Inc. and was merged with another purchase, Acorn Media; the Image name stopped being used on-screen in 2015. After that, it was an in-name only subsidiary of RLJ Entertainment until 2018. The RLJE Films name has been used since 2017. AMC Networks purchased RLJ Acquisition on November 1, 2018.

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CBS, Inc. established its own home entertainment division, CBS Video Enterprises, Inc. in January 1980 to distribute CBS releases on video. In 2005, CBS and Viacom were split again, with the "old" Viacom, Inc. reincorporated as "CBS Corporation", and the other retaining the "Viacom" name. On September 26, 2006, CBS Corporation merged this label with King World Productions, CBS Paramount International Television (later CBS Studios International), and CBS Paramount Domestic Television to form CBS Television Distribution, relaunching this label under its current name as CBS Home Entertainment one year later. However, Paramount Home Entertainment continues to distribute CBS DVDs to this day. Paramount also distributes its pre-2006 television library under CBS Home Entertainment as well. From 2015-2020, Lionsgate Home Entertainment handled the distribution of CBS Films theatrical releases on DVD.

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MGM DVD was a brand owned by MGM Home Entertainment, created to release DVDs of MGM-owned material.

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Mill Creek Entertainment is an American home video company founded in 2002 by Ian Warfield, Robert Zakheim and Scott Moss in Minnetonka, Minnesota. They distribute budget DVD/Blu-rays from companies such as BabyFirstTV, The Carsey-Werner Company, DHX Media (now WildBrain), Genesis International, Mulberry Square Productions, Universal Pictures Home Entertainment, Halcyon Studios, and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, among others.

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