Royal Nepal Film Corporation

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

Revision as of 02:44, 5 November 2022 by SuperMax124 (talk | contribs) (Text replacement - "Nepali logos" to "Nepal")


Background

The Department of Information and Broadcasting is an office of the Government of Nepal's Ministry of Information and Communications. Its purpose is to manage broadcasting, press, and information across the country. In the 1960's, former King Mahendra of Nepal requested the director Hira Singh Khatri to direct the movie Aama, in an attempt to develop the Nepalese cinema and promote Nepalese art and culture through it. Produced under the banner of the then-called Royal Nepal Film Corporation. Aama was released in 1964 containing a clear message of patriotism that "service to the motherland is equally virtuous as service to a mother", becoming the first movie produced in Nepal and one of the most important for the history of the Nepalese cinema.

(October 7, 1964)

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Nicknames: "Manakamana Temple", "Temple From Hell", "Ghost Chants", "Oldest Nepalese Logo"

Logo: On footage of cloudy smoke, we see a circle image of the Manakamana Temple, with rings coming out of the outside of the image. The office's name does not appear.

FX/SFX: Live action for the background, and 2D animation for the rings.

Music/Sounds: A form of ominous Buddhist chanting with bell chimes.

Availability: Only seen on the aforementioned Aama.

Legacy: Perhaps the oldest Nepalese logo on this wiki, and it truly shows, thanks to the film quality, along with the distorted sounding chanting, which sounds rather ghostly. The monochrome color scheme doesn't help either because all it does is make the logo more ominous.

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