Pramod Films

Background
Pramod Films is an Indian Hindi-language film company founded in 1958 by Indian film producer Pramod Chakravorty, which is currently lead by his grandson Prateek Chakravorty. This company was known as India's most prestigious film production houses.

1st Logo (1966-1986)
Logo: We see a statue of a Hindu god Shiva holding a trident standing on top of a rocky landscape in a dark room. After a few seconds, smoke can be seen rising around the statue, and lights slowly illuminate the setting, revealing below the statue is a stone carving containing the company's name "Oswald" with an old movie pattern surrounding it. It soon fades to black.

Variants:
 * The lights may vary in colour on every movie.
 * Sometimes, the smoke is not visible.

Technique: The lights, which are live-action.

Music/Sounds: A tratitional Indian tune plays after a strums of lyre.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * Starting in 1969, the flute melody has been re-recorded.
 * The theme may also vary in pitch depending on the film.

Availability: Seen on Love in Tokyo, Tunse Achcha Kaun Hai, Naya Zamana, Jugnu, Azaad, Jagir and Shatru.

2nd Logo (1992-1998)


Logo: A silhouette of a statue of Shiva can be seen along with moving smoke below it on a sunset background. Lights from above slowly illuminate the setting, revealing a rocky landscape along with the company's name sitting below the statue. A gust of wind blows away the smoke, making the company's name more visible.

Technique: The smoke, and the lights, done in live-action.

Music/Sounds: A traditional melody which consists of strums of a sitar along with a flute melody, which is followed by an ascending choral tune ending with a few more lyre strums.

Music/Sounds Variant: On Barood, a different melody is used with similar instruments.

Availability: Seen on Deedar and Barood.

3rd Logo (2012-)


Logo: We first see an apocalyptic landscape with dead trees and torn pieces of ribbon in the middle. Bolts of lightning can also be seen flashing in the clouds. Shortly after, A silhouette of Shiva doing the Tandava emerges from the sun, which causes the torn ribbons to fly and rotate around Shiva, forming a pattern while at it along with a Monolith containing the text: Times New Roman Arial rising up from the ground. As the ribbons stop rotating and completely surround the silhouette, A flash engulfs the entire scene, which causes the background to be white, the ribbon pattern to become solid gold, "Times New Roman" turning into the color black and "Arial" to become grey.

Technique: Mostly done in CGI.

Music/Sounds: The sounds of rumbling can be heard with an announcer saying the dialogue first used in Time Films, followed by the sound of twinkling when the flash appears.

Availability: Current. Seen on From Sydney With Love and Jomer Raja Dilo Bor (see trailer).