Walt Disney Classics

Background
"Walt Disney Classics" (nicknamed by Disney video collectors as the “Black Diamond Classics”) was a brand name of Walt Disney Home Video, created in 1984 to release the features from the Disney Animated Features canon. The first release from the line was Robin Hood, and more soon followed, including Pinocchio, Dumbo, The Sword in the Stone, Alice in Wonderland and others, to great success. In 1990, due to the wild success of The Little Mermaid, the Classics line released that film to video and began releasing the more contemporary animated releases of the time from Disney. In 1994, after the video release of The Fox and the Hound, the Classics series was discontinued and replaced with a newer series, labeled as the Walt Disney Masterpiece Collection.

1st Logo (December 6, 1984-October 6, 1987, 1988, 1993)
Nicknames: "Cheesy Diamond", "Early Black Diamond", "Navy Blue Diamond", "Finest American Cheddar", "The Neon Sign"

Logo: On a blue background, the text "WALT DiSNEY HOME VIDEO" (with "WALT DiSNEY" in its famous “signature” font), in red, swirls in from the upper-left corner of the screen, rotating clockwise as it does so, passes by quite close to the screen, then flips and begins cycling to the lower-left corner. A few seconds after the "WALT DiSNEY HOME VIDEO" the white text, “THE CLASSICS”, in a neon-style Binner D font, also comes from the upper-left side of the screen and begins slowly spinning, too, nearly following the same path as the WDHV text does. As this happens, the background begins to slowly “morph” into a large, blurry diamond shape on a black background. A large Prussian blue diamond then zooms in from the center of the screen at a slightly fast pace, before stopping at a huge size. As the diamond zooms up, “THE CLASSICS” flips over to the top of the diamond and settles there, while "WALT DiSNEY HOME VIDEO" lands on the bottom of the diamond. A white, neon-style diamond outline zooms out and plasters itself onto the edges of the diamond, in which the logo resembles a neon sign.

Variants:
 * On some tapes, the logo stays onscreen for an extra ten seconds before finally fading out. This was most commonly seen around 1986, including Pinocchio, Dumbo and Alice in Wonderland, as well as later prints of the black clamshell release of The Sword in the Stone. It also appeared on the 1987 laserdisc releases of Sleeping Beauty and Pinocchio (both releases also have this variant paired up with the 1986 cut-short "presents" variant of the Walt Disney Home Video logo.
 * Various Brazilian Portuguese tapes have a still variant with the "THE CLASSICS" text replaced by "OS CLÁSSICOS". This was used at the beginning of a VHS promo for Bambi at the time.
 * On a rare promo sales tape for the 1984 VHS release of Robin Hood, the start of the tape features a golden vault door zooming in from the middle, taking up the entire screen as it does. The vault door's handle then rotates around and the door opens, revealing a blue background. The rest of the logo plays as usual, albeit reused animation of Tinkerbell from the 50th Anniversary Walt Disney Pictures logo comes in to transition to a different, shinier diamond frame with clips of various Disney animated films in them.
 * One scene of the aforementioned tape also has the last few seconds of the logo where the diamond zooms in, but the background is black instead of blue. The glowing blue outline of the diamond from the background fades in after the logo is fully formed. This appears to be of a prototype version.
 * On a 1985 demo VHS of Pinocchio, the text "PROPERTY OF W.D.T.N.T." (which stands for "Walt Disney Telecommunications and Non-Theatrical Company", the division that Walt Disney Home Video originally ran under until 1987) is seen near the bottom of the screen, as with the rest of the tape.

FX/SFX: The swirling text, the background change, the zooming diamonds. It appears to be computer-generated graphics with chroma-keyed photos for "THE CLASSICS" and the white diamond at the end.

Music/Sounds: A bouncy, medieval-style synth-horn fanfare with a held-out synth-flute at the end.

Music/Sounds Variant:
 * At the beginning of the aforementioned Robin Hood promo sales tape, the music is in a slightly higher pitch. A "whoosh" sound effect is heard, growing louder as the door zooms in, accompanied by the sound of metal locks moving. When the logo reappears midway through the same sales tape, "National Trust" by Keith Mansfield (notable for its usage on the CBS/Fox Video logo) is heard in the background.
 * On a rare Disney promo sales tape from 1985 promoting the VHS release of Pinocchio, an announcer says, "The Disney Classics: Landmark animation made available for the first time from Walt Disney Home Video!"

Availability: Rare, as it was only used for a short period of time. Seen on 1984-1987 VHS and LaserDisc prints of Disney animated features including the original video releases of Pinocchio and Robin Hood. Usually, it is in clamshell packaging (originally in big, black, heavy clamshells with the artwork printed directly onto the case, but switching over to the lightweight, white clamshells with removable inserts we are familiar with today in 1986), with the cover featuring a black flap on the lower right corner reading "The Original Animated Classic!", and often has the diamond print logo on the spine (without WDHV text) and on the videotape label (with WDHV text). The last video to officially use this logo was Lady and the Tramp. This logo has also been spotted on some post-1987 prints, including a 1993 reprint of The Sword in the Stone, and the mid-1988 demo tape of Cinderella. On black clamshell tapes of Dumbo, as well as very early prints of the black clamshell release of The Sword in the Stone and earlier prints of the mid-1986 slipcover release of Alice in Wonderland, the 1981 WDHV Neon Mickey logo is seen (the latter had the 1984 Classics logo replace the Neon Mickey logo on prints from circa late April 1986). Although the logo is seen on the cover, Australian releases do not use this logo; they use the 1986 "Sorcerer Mickey" logo or the 6th logo.

Editor's Note: A very primitive logo with cheesy computer effects, but still memorable amongst Disney fans and VHS collectors, and considered endearing because of its cheesiness. "THE CLASSICS" and the outline around the diamond are photographed and chroma-keyed from real neon signs, and the print logo was even turned into a real sign to display in stores.

2nd Logo (October 4, 1988-September 21, 1994, February 28, 1996, 2003)
Nicknames: "The Black Diamond", "Sorcerer Mickey 2.0", "Hi again, Mickey!", "Remake Diamond"

Logo: We start with the opening animation of the 1986 Walt Disney Home Video logo, with Mickey Mouse dressed in his Sorcerer’s Apprentice outfit from Fantasia, standing on a blue spotlight on a black background. The camera slowly begins zooming up to his hand as the stars and crescent moon on his hat flash one-by-one, and then a white starburst flashes and a magic spark flies out from it, appearing above Mickey’s hand. We zoom past Mickey as the spark begins swirling around and begins to write "WALT DiSNEY" in the corporate Disney font, except it is metallic white. As we zoom out, the background begins to change to dark blue, and a black diamond with metallic edges fades in from a far point and begins to slowly zoom in, as “CLASSICS”, also in metallic white in the Binner D font with two letters at both ends in a bigger size, begins zooming out from the bottom of the screen, before that and “WALT DiSNEY” settle on the diamond, which has zoomed up to a comfortable distance. The edges begin to glow white as the shadow of the "WALT DiSNEY CLASSICS" text drops on the diamond, and then a magic comet swishes into view from the bottom left of the screen, circles behind the diamond, then flies out from the top right and passes in front of the diamond before flying offscreen, leaving a trail of pixie dust that changes the "WALT DiSNEY CLASSICS" text to gold, and adds a purple tint to the diamond’s edges. The logo "shines".

Variants:
 * In 1992, starting with 101 Dalmatians, the logo gained brighter colors with the diamond in bright blueish-violet (possibly due to deterioration of the master), and the logo fades out earlier than before. The logo would cut in at different times (up to a second later than usual) on all 1992 releases.
 * The original 1988 prototype version, first seen on Cinderella (retail copies only, demo tapes had the previous logo), had the background as a dark to light blue gradient, a more shiny, silver, metallic diamond, and rougher animation; this variant was also filmed, compared to the standard logo being videotaped. The logo made sporadic reappearances after the revised logo was introduced, primarily on tapes from the Classics line that don’t contain previews; thee include the 1992 Laserdisc and demo/French Canadian VHS prints of The Rescuers, the later Canadian print of The Rescuers Down Under, a 1992 Descriptive Video Service VHS of Dumbo, the later Canadian/USA print of Robin Hood, the French Canadian VHS releases of Bambi, 101 Dalmatians and The Great Mouse Detective and the demo/French Canadian VHS copies of Beauty and the Beast. It also appears at the beginning of the VHS Fantasia: The Making of a Masterpiece (which was included as part of a "Deluxe Collectors' Edition" box set of the movie). In most cases, the logo is off-center, with the diamond positioned further to the right, while Cinderella had the diamond centered properly. One of the last, if not the last, videos to feature this version of the logo was the 1993 French-Canadian VHS release of Pinocchio.
 * On the 1991 video releases of Robin Hood and The Brave Little Toaster, the Mickey scene is cut, and the logo starts off with the spark writing the words. On both tapes, this version is shown before a preview for The Jungle Book and is accompanied by Brian Cummings saying, "Look for these animated Disney classics on videocassette." On the Robin Hood VHS, the same variant appears again before the film begins, but without the voiceover.
 * On the 1991 VHS release of The Rescuers Down Under, just the end of the logo (with the pixie dust trail leaving) is shown without music before the The Jungle Book trailer. Brian Cummings is heard over it, announcing "Don't miss this timeless Disney classic from Walt Disney Home Video."
 * The shortened version seen on Robin Hood was also seen at the beginning of a UK promo for The Great Mouse Detective (ironically, this promo was found on the 1992 UK VHS release of Robin Hood), except in this version, the 1992 variant is used. At the end of the logo, an announcer says "From Walt Disney Home Video" before cutting to the promo. On the US version of the promo, as seen on the 1992 prints of So Dear to My Heart and The Rescuers, the end of the 1992 variant is shown (with the opening credits music from The Great Mouse Detective playing in the background) and Mark Elliot provides the voiceover.
 * The tail end of the 1989 variant (with the logo "shining") surprisingly appears at the beginning of a video promo for Bambi, as seen on several international Disney VHS releases (with the exception of the UK and Brazil).
 * A series of Japanese tapes released by Bandai on July 10, 1988 (under the then-new "Dreams and Magic" banner) use a still variant for a closing promo featuring the diamond reading "THE CLASSICS" on an animated starry sky with a thicker, more glass-like frame. This can be found on the 1988 Japanese VHS releases of Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day, Pinocchio, Mary Poppins, and three cartoon compilations dedicated to Mickey ("Good Luck Mickey"), Donald, and various characters ("Disney Friends") respectively. An animated variant featuring the logo flying onto the screen and shining was featured at the beginning of the Pinocchio VHS.

FX/SFX: All the animation in the logo. Very similar to the animation of the 1986 Walt Disney Home Video logo.

Music/Sounds: A majestic, gradually rising synthesizer fanfare with a "sizzling" noise as the comet circles behind the diamond.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * Starting with the 1992 VHS release of The Rescuers, the music became distorted and heavier on bass due to deterioration of the master recording. If you listen closely to this distorted version, kettledrums can be heard in background when the words "WALT DiSNEY" and "CLASSICS" settle on the diamond. This variant would later be heard under the Walt Disney Company Intro on several VHS releases from 1999-2000, as Beau Weaver says, "You can always count on something new and exciting from Disney".
 * On the 1992 DVS VHS of Dumbo, a woman is heard saying "Now in animation, a figure appears. Mickey Mouse, wearing his red sorcerer's robe and tall blue pointed hat, stands with his left arm extended. A star shoots up from his palm, writing a signature and the logo 'Walt Disney Classics'."

Availability: Uncommon. Seen on 1988-1994 Disney video releases of their feature films with the text "A Walt Disney CLASSIC" or "Walt Disney's CLASSIC" on top and the diamond print logo on the clamshell spine.
 * The first two releases with this logo, Cinderella and Bambi, feature the diamond print logo (with WDHV text) on a Betamax-sized sticker label like the previous logo, though some later releases use an alternate sticker label instead of a white ink label (like some copies of The Little Mermaid, The Jungle Book and The Rescuers Down Under).
 * The 1989 version was used on 1990 European VHS releases of Lady and the Tramp (including French, German, Italian, Swedish and Finnish). Oddly enough, this was not used on the French-Canadian release of Robin Hood.
 * The last VHS to officially use this logo was The Fox and the Hound, while the last release overall to use the logo was the 1994 laserdisc of Aladdin (which was actually produced in 1993, but held over to September 1994 for piracy reasons), which used the 1989 version.
 * The most common tapes featuring this logo are the VHS releases of Beauty and the Beast and Aladdin (both with the muffled, bass-heavy music).
 * The 1992 version with the original (clean) music only appeared on 101 Dalmatians and The Great Mouse Detective.
 * The 1992 version also appeared on a Bulgarian VHS release of Pinocchio from Alexandra Video.
 * Surprisingly, the 1989 version appears on early printings (from before December 18, 1995) of the 1996 Masterpiece Collection release of Pocahontas.
 * This was not included on UK or Australian VHS releases from the early to mid-90's released under the label "Walt Disney Classics"; they just used the 1986 "Sorcerer Mickey" WDHV logo (and later, the "Disney Videos" logo, starting in 1995), which would also be used on Spanish-language tapes. However, the 1992 distorted variant made two surprise appearances (with the music at a higher pitch) before and after the opening previews on the 2003 UK VHS release of Pinocchio. The Classics laserdisc releases of Pinocchio, The Jungle Book, The Great Mouse Detective and Beauty and the Beast also don't use this logo, instead using the aforementioned WDHV logo instead.

Editor's Note: A very well-made and professional logo that's a nostalgic favorite among many Disney fans and VHS collectors.

3rd (International) Logo (1991-1996)
Nicknames: "The Wiping Light on Text"

Logo: On a shady blue background, the words "WALT DiSNEY" are seen in yellow with a shadow effect. Below it is "CLASSICS" in a metallic orange serif font, also with the shadow effect. A light wipes over the logo from left to right.

FX/SFX: The wiping light.

Music/Sounds: Opening of the promo following it.

Availability: Extremely rare. Exclusive to the United Kingdom. Was seen on some WDC promos of the time, particularly Bambi.

Editor's Note: None.

4th (International) Logo (2000)
Nicknames: "Disney Glitter", "Walt Dust Classics", "Disney Magic Dust"

Logo: Same as the 1991 Walt Disney Home Video logo, except this time, the logo is placed over a purple background with swirly pixie dust. Instead of "HOME VIDEO", a golden banner with "CLASSICS" is seen. A thin orange light moves over various parts of the logo.

FX/SFX: The orange light.

Music/Sounds: See above.

Availability: Same as the previous logo. Again, it was exclusive to UK. This was seen twice on a 2000 WDC promo seen on the 2000 VHS of Tarzan.

Editor's Note: None.