User:Vmoney25/sandbox

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Revision as of 15:49, 17 February 2024 by Vmoney25 (talk | contribs)

Dream logos

This is my sandbox, aka where all of my Dream Logos go. As I said on my main page, I have been thinking up stuff to add to the gargantuan library of movies, shows, and music all owned by the multi-trillion dollar conglomerate and movie studio, Rocket Bunny Entertainment. Rocket Bunny Entertainment, just to give you a sneak peek, was founded in 1909 by allied filmmaker Clifford "Cliff" Chandler Robun, and his sons Austin Robun-Viltfeld and Sam Robun-Penton to form "Robun Brothers, Incorporated" after the former established an uncharted studio on Sidney Blvd. in Chicago, IL. on February 16, 1905. It would eventually thrive to become one of the largest movie studios in the United States (and internationally) and is one of the "Big Seven" studios, along with 20th Century Studios (formerly 20th Century Fox from 1935 to 2020, and would revert back to the original name after one of the companies' closures in 2023), Paramount Pictures, Sony Entertainment, Universal Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, and Walt Disney Pictures (before it was closed down by this company in late 2023).

Some things to know about my logos:

  • I am not an expert at drawing logos on software, so this page will be imageless (even if it looks really interesting from your perspective). I don't want to make messes on MS Paint, PowerPoint, or any form of drawing software so that they will not come out looking hideous.
  • This company and the proceeding ones are most definitely not real. It is entirely made up and stored in my brain for over 3 years, and I've been waiting a long time to express the logos' looks on this wiki (I got the idea from a ripoff CLG Wiki, entitled Your Dream Logos with different page parts). Think of Marvel's What If.. but with dream logos instead of superheroes (sorry about the plagiarization, AlmightyKingPrawn). I think of this as part of an alternate Earth in my brain.
  • Due to me being completely used to the term "Editor's Note", I will say that instead of "Legacy". I will keep the "FX/SFX" version "Technique", though.
  • I will put "Author's Notes" underneath "Editor's Note" at times to show my thinking behind the logo and how I thought up the idea of it.
  • I'm not the best at coming up with original phrases, so you might read some phrases explaining logos that sound kind of familiar (if you revert back to other pages).
  • One more time. This is all fake. Do not ever place it on the wiki or make a page dedicated to dream logos. I want to stick with AVID's rules as much as I can.

Rocket Bunny Entertainment

Background

Rocket Bunny Entertainment's origins trace way back to February 16, 1905, when an allied filmmaker Clifford "Cliff" Chandler Robun established an uncharted studio on Sidney Blvd. in Chicago, IL. He partnered with his sons Austin Robun-Viltfeld and Samuel Robun-Penton to form "Robun Brothers, Incorporated" on September 7, 1909, making it the oldest American movie company in continuous operation, before the founding of Paramount Pictures (founded on May 8, 1912, as Famous Players Film Corporation), Universal Pictures (founded on June 8, 1912), and Warner Bros. Pictures (founded in 1918 as Warner Bros' Pictures Incorporated). Despite being non-independent after June 17, 2005, the company is an addition to the "Big Seven" studios, alongside 20th Century Studios (formerly 20th Century Fox, with it reverting back to its original name after the shutdown of its owner in 2023), Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures, Universal Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, and Walt Disney Pictures (before they were closed by this company in late 2023).

After Xavier Robun, a newborn at the time of founding became 23, he joined the studio. When Cliff Chandler passed away in December 1951, the same year the company moved operations from Chicago to Hollywood, the sons took over the company independently overseeing the releases of films such as The Curse of the Devil's Roar, The Happiest Bunches, Wild Rose, Stars of a Thief, Art of the Trickster, and Ships of the Forgotten. Then, Austin died from a stroke in early 1979, shortly after the release of the critically-acclaimed Vinny Dreams, and the renaming to Rocket Bunny Entertainment. After Sam finally passed away from heart cancer in 1986, Xavier struggled to keep his films in good condition, as many box office failures from this era were making him lose control of the studio. Many executives from Universal, Paramount, Columbia, and 20th Century Fox left their respective jobs at the studios and offered to continue work on films with him.

During its time remaining independent for 96 years, Rocket Bunny Entertainment was subject to numerous distributions of films over time, such as films from 20th Century Fox, Warner Bros. Pictures, Paramount Pictures, Columbia Pictures, Walt Disney Pictures, Miramax Films, MGM, New Line Cinema, and Universal Pictures. After the overwhelming critical and commercial successes of Kernel & Rose x Harold: The Boy (20th Century Fox, 1999), 20th Century Fox eventually acquired 35% of the company on June 17, 2005, after the release of Kernel & Rose x Harold: The Boy: The Naked Mile (2005).

In 1983, within the underline of distribution deals of 20th Century Fox, Rocket Bunny's independent film division was rebranded "Rocket Bunny Pictures" for further independently made films. In 1985, the company signed a distribution deal with Warner Communications Group (now Warner Bros. Discovery; through Warner Bros. Pictures and Lorimar), which was originally each ten films long. But after a large amount of box office successes (such as United We Stand, Divided We Fall (Warner Bros. and Malpaso Company, 1987), The Madelyn Conspiracies (1989), The Draw Rider (Lorimar, 1990), Aeo and Run & Gun (both 1992; latter produced with Lorimar), and Between Universes (1994), the deal was extended. After New Line Cinema became a subsidiary of AOL Time Warner in In 1996, the company also signed a deal with Sony Pictures, most notably distributing films under the Columbia and TriStar labels.

Today, Rocket Bunny Entertainment is most well-known for the Kernel & Rose x Harold: The Boy films and the Harold: The Boy spin-off franchise. They are also well-known for films such as Stoner, Leftward, Run, River Run, The Shroudbreaker, The Cursed Rogue, Legendary Storyteller, Stars of a Thief, Wild Rose, Art of the Trickster, the two Morningstar films, Being The Hero, The Attack of the Bayside Towns, As We Merrily Roll Along, Off Into The Horizon, The Light That Came To Me, Vinny Dreams, among others that have excelled over $600 million in box office sales. After Xavier Robun finally passed away on January 29, 2001, Sam Robun-Penton's nephew Norbert Robun-Penton took over the company along with vice executives with an 84% stake.

One of the company's biggest controversies is forbidding all American Disney Junior/Disney Channel Mornings airings of the Australian series Bluey, as well as prohibiting the sale of all affiliated merchandise and propaganda and even blocking all YouTube uploads from the show's official channel, stating that the show's fundamental purposes and Australian culture does not translate well to an American audience and through a new rule that character designs have to be sent out to the company's agency to verify a gender (if a character has verifiable features of a female (with eyelashes, a high, excited voice and a bow on head) or a male, (with a low voice, bowtie, or no eyelashes), they will be accepted into the American media, which Bluey and other characters did not pass). While many millionaires (including Ludo Studio, The Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and BBC Studios, the companies behind the show) tried to take most of their currency due to the outrage based on the blockage, they were unsuccessful and Rocket Bunny's side of the war won. Eventually,Bluey would inevitably become one of the most widely hated shows in history after Grall, out of pure spite, hacked both the ABC Kids, Cbeebies, and Disney Junior/Disney Channel networks to display a highly controversial fan episode he made himself: School Day. This prompted The Walt Disney Company to try to put an end to the company once and for all by purchasing 21st Century Fox's assets along with Rocket Bunny Entertainment, but failed to do so, as shown below.

After The Walt Disney Company purchased 78% of 21st Century Fox's assets in 2019 including 15% of Rocket Bunny Entertainment, Disney spun them off into a new company called "Rocket Bunny International Investments & Properties, Ltd." (RBII&P) along with the company's subsidiaries after they failed to shut them down due to mass budget overtakes. In 2023, RBII&P acquired most of Disney's assets for $212 billion and shut down The Walt Disney Company soon after, stating that Disney is not staying true to their source materials and that it is failing to make back most of its economic state from theatrical releases and their streaming service, Disney+. Then, on March 23, 2024, the company revived the 20th Century Fox, Fox Searchlight Pictures, and Blue Sky Studios names for $285.4 million, stating that the three companies in past memory are what made fans' lives complete and how the companies were very pretentious at classic films. Today, Rocket Bunny Entertainment is now renowned as the #1 Most Acclaimed Movie Studio in the world, according to Universal Privilege, Global, Life, Total Film, HAF, Weekly Us, PHF Specials, and Rocket Bunny's website.

Robun Brothers, Incorporated

1st Logo (November 28, 1910-October 4, 1914)

Logo: On a black curtain background, a stylized Roman column is seen with a praetorian standing on top with a blanket wrapped around her waist, around two-thirds of the column, and onto the floor. The letters "R" and "B" in Bambi Gala are seen on both sides of the logo, held up by sticks. There is a black starry background on a wall behind the column. There are also clouds below the logo. Two "Made in USA" symbols (representing interstate shields) are seen on the bottom corners of the screen. Underneath the column, there is a dais plate reading "A FILM FROM Cliff Chandler (in Cliff Chandler's signature) AND THE ROBUN FAMILY AT ROBUN BROTHERS, INCORPORATED. After a couple of seconds, the logo fades out.

Variants:

Rocket Bunny Animation Studios

TBA.

Rocket Bunny Interactive

TBA.

Rocket Bunny Music Video

TBA.

Rocket Bunny Theatres

TBA.

C1A1 Entertainment

TBA.

Fine Arts Pictures

TBA.

Pleiades Motion Pictures

TBA.

Virage Films

TBA.

TKO Films

TBA.

Pencil Ventures

TBA.

Schulz Studio (1998-present)

NOTE: This is not affiliated with the Schulz Studio which makes the Apple TV Peanuts stuff, but rather my own version to commemorate with the release of a specific movie.

TBA.

EVE's Company

TBA.

Lunar Storm Productions

TBA.

Document 25 Films

TBA.

Raven Clawed Inc.

TBA.

Immaculate Conception

TBA.

Tuesday Productions

TBA.

Semmin Productions

Background

This is Alan Semmin's production company, founded in 2003 while enlisting in a production agency in Seminolia.

1st Logo (March 2004-May 2, 2008)

TBA.

2nd Logo (June 24, 2008-September 18, 2016)

TBA.

3rd Logo (September 20, 2016-)

Visuals: On a black background, a star flashes in the middle of the screen, and a static ring expands and fills the screen with dark static colors. As the background becomes darker, parts of the static begin to turn white in the formation of "SEMMIN" in a light Century Gothic font. The background fades out, leaving the text, in which "PRODUCTIONS" in a spaced out version of the same font flashes in below.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: A faint click immediately followed by a warping rising synth, similar to a trap music startup.

Availability: Seen on all of Semmin's programming since 2016, such as L, A Good Time, Ground, Regret, Pump Shot and Chula, among others.

The Stainton Company

TBA.

Ninny Films

TBA.

Ginger Lane Pictures

TBA.

Kainge Productions

TBA.

Dipothinium Pictures

TBA.

Chloris

TBA.

Florament Pictures

TBA.

Bruss/Chloris Home Media

TBA.

Cryptovision

TBA.

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