Seven Arts Associated was founded in 1960 by Eliot Hyman and Bob Rich for global television distribution of post-1948 motion pictures and animated features from the studios of Warner Bros., 20th Century Fox, Universal, Monogram Pictures, and Allied Artists. The company entered original television production under the Seven Arts Television label in 1965.
Nicknames: "7A", "SAA", "The Seven Arts Wreath"
Logo: Over a cloudy sky backdrop, we see a segmented rectangle with the text "SEVEN ARTS ASSOCIATED CORP." inside the right half and the initials "SAA" inside a circle formed by items that represent the seven art forms (clockwise: the drama/comedy masks, ballet slippers, a bust sculpture, a triangle ruler, a paintbrush and easel, a harp and a book) in the left side. A header above the logo reads "DISTRIBUTED FOR TV BY".
Variants:
FX/SFX: The still appearance of the logo.
Music/Sounds: On some films, the opening/closing music from that film appear over this logo. The Looney Tunes variant uses the 1936-1937 "Porky Signature" ending theme. On Fox films on which this appeared, the second half of the Fox fanfare is used.
Availability: Extremely rare, bordering on near extinction.
Editor's Note: None
Nicknames: "7A", "7A Sun", "Spinning Sun"
Logo: Superimposed over the opening theme, we see a stylized "7A" inside a sun-shaped circle spinning towards the screen. The "7A" spins counterclockwise and quicker than the sun, which spins clockwise. As the initials and sun approach the camera, they gradually stop spinning to form the logo. After that, a colorful explosion occurs in the center of the screen, revealing the words "SEVEN ARTS TELEVISION Presents" over the screen.
FX/SFX: The sun spinning and zooming.
Music/Sounds: The opening theme of the movie.
Availability: Ultra rare. It's seen on some post-'48 feature films in syndication, and also on the cartoon Johnny Cypher in Dimension Zero.
Nicknames: "7A II", "7A Sun II", "Still Sun"
Logo: Over the series' credits, we see the text "A SEVEN ARTS TELEVISION PRESENTATION" with the Seven Arts emblem from the previous logo on the upper-right hand corner.
FX/SFX: None.
Music/Sounds: The end-title theme.
Availability: Rare. It's seen on Marine Boy, the U.S. English-dubbed version of the anime Kaitei Shônen Marine. It may have also appeared on the 1965 short-lived talk show Gypsy.
| |||||
| |||||
| |||||
| |||||
| |||||
| |||||
|