Promise Pictures
MizukiAccent48 (Promise Frontier)
Captures by
MizukiAccent48 (Promise Frontier)
Video captures courtesy of
MatthewTheScienceGuy, ThatOneLebaneseGuy
Background
Promise Pictures was a Indian film company that produced Hindi films from the early 1990's until its closure sometime on early 2000's.
1st Logo (1990)
Logo: On a sunset background, after a few seconds, the sun turns into the statue footage from Sham Ralhan Productions logo. Then it zooms in, and then the statue shoots the blue-sky words "Promise Pictures". Finally it freezes (except for the words) for about 12 seconds and the logo fades out.
FX/SFX: The smoky background and the texts.
Music/Sounds: The second part of the song "Vich Parvat De Maa" by Minoo Chadha and Mahendra Kapoor.
Availability: Only seen on Jaan Lada Denge.
Editor's Note: None.
2nd Logo (1999)
Logo: On a fiery blue background, we see a silhouette of a statue. It then reveals to be a religious statue as the camera slightly zooms in. The camera holds on it until it cuts to 3 kids (2 boys and 1 girl) praying to the statue. It then cuts back to the statue before it cut backs to the kids where they are throwing petals towards the statue.
FX/SFX: Live-action.
Music/Sounds: A strange melody with a tampura accompanying an ominous male chorus singing Om, again and again.
Music/Sounds Trivia: In Hinduism, the word Om is meant to be the sound of the universe, encompassing all other sounds.
Availability: Seen only on Khooni No. 1.
Editor's Notes: None.
3rd Logo (September 1, 2000)
This logo and/or capture may be too loud for comfortable viewing.
Please ensure your volume is turned down before watching videos of this logo. |
Nicknames: "Neither a Winter Land or Winter Nights", "This Is Not Kohmi Hirose's Company", "Kohmi Hirose, Get That Company Down!", "That Woman with a Book and Gun"
Logo: Just a superimposed background with the words "PROMISE PICTURES 1997 PRESENTS" in a NM7LE19-like font moving down.
FX/SFX: None, unless the text animation.
Music/Sounds: The gun sounds, and then the Sham Ralhan Productions' dramatic fanfare.
Availability: Only seen on Geeta Mera Naam: The Revenge.
Editor's Note: In addition to the overuse of the Sham Ralhan dramatic fanfare, this logo is infamous for stealing the name of the 1997 song "promise" by Kohmi Hirose.