Mandate Pictures

Background
Mandate Pictures was founded in 2005 when Senator International completed a management buyout from Senator Entertainment AG. On September 10, 2007, Mandate Pictures was acquired by Lionsgate. In 2012, Mandate's founders, Joseph Drake and Nathan Kahane, went on to form the company Good Universe, and Mandate was dismantled the next year.

(November 10, 2006-October 18, 2013)
Nicknames: "Little Girl Beating a Drum", "Little Drummer Girl", "Georgia Rock"

Logo: We move out from a bush to see a family walking down a street with giraffes walking near them and fish and squids "swimming" in the air. The picture zooms out in an iris-out-like effect, as a drumstick taps on the circle and makes it flash. The picture zooms out and disappears as it's revealed to be in the inside of a snare drum, being beaten by a little girl (Georgia Rock) with a neutral look on her face. The girl continues to bang the drum as "MANDATE PICTURES" in Mrs Eaves slides underneath her, and the picture freezes to the last note of the music.

Trivia: The drummer girl used in the logo is Georgia Rock (born 1998). This was recorded in 2005, and she was 7 years old at that time.

Variants:
 * There is a closing print version, used on Whip It.
 * On A Very Harold & Kumar 3D Christmas (2011), the logo has a snowfall overlay, the scene of the family has a blue tint and the girl is dressed as a toy soldier.
 * On Hope Springs (2012), the logo starts as we zoom out from the drum, cutting out the first part with the walking family.
 * An open-matte version of this logo exists.

Technique: Mostly live-action, designed by Prologue.

Music/Sounds: A steady drumbeat playing over a mellow synth/string tune, with birds chirping during the first part of the logo.

Availability: Common. It appears on films from the company, debuting on Stranger Than Fiction, and last appearing on Paradise. Other than these, it also appears on movies from the company such as Whip It, Mr. Magorium's Wonder Emporium, and one of the Harold and Kumar films.