Sisters and Brother Mitevski Production

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum


Background

Sisters and Brother Mitevski Production is a North Macedonian film production company established by Labina, Teona, and Vuk Mitevski in 2001.

Logo (February 14, 2017-)

Visuals: On a tan paper-like background, two pencil-drawn vertical bars are drawn on both sides of the screen, followed by three horizontal paths, two of which are at the bottom and with the top turning sharply down. A mallet swings towards the screen and leaves multiple, smudged copies of it, followed by a lined windy pattern that fades out. The same object swings back to its original position, unveiling tall and slender cartoons of an adolescent boy holding the hands of his two little sisters. The left, with a weird, surprised look on her face, is holding a teddy bear, whereas the right is holding a film camera, directing it to the right, and attempting to walk towards the gap. The littlest sister also tries to dash to the left and briefly cries. They are both held by the boy's hands, who looks and yells at them to calm down, and stops his feet a few times. When the mallet swings towards the screen, the boy, shocked and scared, brings the sisters towards him and holds them against his hip as the hammer's face approaches. This results in the older sister tossing the film camera to the right, making it across the gap. When the mallet swings back, a darker version of the windy pattern is shown. Then, the brother, while still holding onto his siblings, attempts to leap over the gap before being knocked towards the screen by the approaching mallet. The object stops and has the logo displayed, consisting of a vertical rectangular box containing a rigid "d" shaped object with the upper and right end containing a closed fist and a foot. "SiSTERS AND BROTHER MiTEVSKi PRODUCTiON", in a stacked format and within a lightly shaded box, is below the logo.

Technique: 2D computer animation in the style of a pencil sketch.

Audio: Two whooshes from the mallet, followed by high-pitched gibberish talking from the children, a film projector rolling for the operating film camera, and a squeal from the boy as the mallet approaches. A thud is heard from the hammer afterward. Then, there is laughter from the smallest sibling, followed by another thud, a squish sound effect, and a whoosh.

Availability: The logo is seen on When The Day Had No Name, God Exists, Her Name Is Petrunija, and The Happiest Man in the World.

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