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{{TITLE:Promise Frontier's fake logos vault}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:Promise Frontier's THE BEST Fake Logos Vault and more...}}

This is my sandbox userpage about fake logos and more. Please do not delete or vandalize my userpage!
This is my sandbox userpage about fake logos and more. Please do not delete or vandalize my userpage!
{{PageCredits|description=Pick-up Voice+Alive&Kicking Believers}}
{{PageCredits|description=Pick-up Voice+Alive&Kicking Believers}}

Revision as of 08:38, 24 February 2022

This is my sandbox userpage about fake logos and more. Please do not delete or vandalize my userpage!


The Aoi Iro Team (United Kingdom)

Background

The Aoi Iro Team was a small British film production (formerly distribution) company that was best known for making the Yuthana and Siripon movies. It was founded by Arthur Cole in September 7, 1968 after his previous company, "Arthur International Productions", was closed because it ran out of money, but he was come back to the film industry. In 1988, the company stopped distributing independent movies and started producing its own films for both Channel Four Television and the BBC. In March 7, 1996, after a half-year which Yuthana and Siripon: Eternal Forever, the studio was folded into the Japanese recording company King Records for its investigation. Finally in late 1998, after the success of Kohmi Hirose's album THE BEST "Love Winters" in the United Kingdom, she took over the studio, and it was reincorporated as a United Kingdom branch of Kohmi Hirose Entertainment, and because of that, King Records left the studio shortly after.

1st Logo (1972)

Logo: Just a blue sky background with the yellow words "THE AOI IRO TEAM DEVELOPMENT DIVISION UNITED KINGDOM Presents".

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: The opening theme of the film.

Availability: Only seen on History of the Industry.

Editor's Note: None.

2nd Logo (1975 - 1983, 1986)

Logo: On a dark blue background, the words "A" and "I" arae merging each other, and when they zoomed out into bottom left, the texts "AN THE AOI IRO TEAM (LONDON) RELEASE" appear from moving right-to-left.

Variants:

  • A early version appears on The Strangers. Instead of "AN THE AOI IRO TEAM (LONDON) RELEASE", the texts "Released by THE AOI IRO TEAM (LONDON) Limited" wipe in left-to-right.
  • Sometimes the background is black.
  • A black and white version exists.

FX/SFX: Simple animation.

Music/Sounds: The same music as Yuan Lian Motion Picture Enterprises.

Availability: Seen on many The Aoi Iro Team films from that period. It was last seen on Yuthana and Siripon: Cannonball Running (1983). It made a surprise appearance on the film Princess of Korea (1986), produced by Elepeart Film Enterprises.

Editor's Note: None.

3rd Logo (1983? - 1996?)

Logo: TBA

Variant: Starting on 1988, the words "AN" and "RELEASE" were omitted.

FX/SFX: The ray shines and the wiping.

Music/Sounds: Same as the previous logo.

Availability: TBA

Editor's Note: TBA

Crystal Letter Films (India)

Background

Crystal Letter Films Private Limited was an Indian Bengali-language film production company located at Kolkata, West Bengal. It was founded on early 1973 by Lata Bengeshkari, a pioneer of the Bangladeshi television, to continue her movie career. The company was acquired by Newlink India in 1998. It was closed in December 2001 after the death of its founder in November of that year.

1st Logo (1979 - 1983)

TBA!

2nd Logo (1983 - 1993)

TBA!

3rd Logo (April 13, 1986)

TBA!

4th Logo (1986 - 1995)

TBA!

5th Logo (February 9, 1992 - 2000?)

Nicknames: "The C.L.F. of Doom", "The Spacey C.L.F.", "Middya Films' Uncle", "It's ETERNAL LOVE in SPACE!"

Logo: TBA

Variants:

  • Sometimes the logo is cropped or squashed into a 2.35:1 or 2.40:1 CinemaScope.
  • The early 1990's reprint of Drop Trion (1988) had the logo tinted green and detoriorated.

FX/SFX: Nice animation.

Music/Sounds: TBA

Music/Sounds Variants:

  • A high-toned version exists.
  • Sometimes it's silent.

Availability: Seen on some Crystal Letter Films movies from that period, like Taj Jokes, The Night Escape, Emousama, and Ruja Parbatta. Also appears on the Indian prints (Bengali or Hindi dub) of Perfect Blue.

Editor's Note: Regarded as one of the scariest logos from Crystal Letter Films, due to the loud noises, darkness, and bit creepy animation. The Night Escape version has even worse, thanks to the louder noise than others.

6th Logo (2001)

TBA!

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