Kaboom! Entertainment

Background
'''Kaboom! Entertainment''' was the children's division of Phase 4 Films. It was originally formed in 1996 by Berry Meyerowitz as Telegenic Entertainment, before being renamed to its later name in 2000. In 2006, the company was bought by Peace Arch Entertainment, before being bought back by Meyerowitz in 2009. In 2014, they were acquired by Entertainment One and then shut down in 2016. Kaboom offered select titles from Nelvana Limited, being released on home video in the USA, especially in Canada as well as releasing compilations and titles from any Corus-owned channels and Teletoon (co-owned with Astral at the time). Entertainment One is the current home entertainment distributor of materials from Nelvana and all Corus-owned channels.

1st Logo (2000-2004)
Nicknames: "kaBoOM!", "O-Bomb"

Logo: The screen fades to a shady red background. Suddenly, the word "kaBoOM!" in yellow (the second "O" is a black cartoon cherry bomb with a hole in the middle), zooms in. Below the logo appears the text "entertainment inc." in white. The logo stays the same for a few seconds, before it "burns off" in orange, grey, and black.

Variant: TBA.

FX/SFX: The kaBoOM! logo and text appearing, the logo "burning off".

Music/Sounds: Beeping is heard during a high note. An explosion is heard when the logo appears. The note then turns slightly higher. A "burning" sound is heard at the end.

Availability: Rare. Seen on VHS and DVD releases from the company during the period.

Editor's Note: The sounds can be somewhat jarring for younger viewers. The burning effect also looks incredibly cheap, as if it were a transition in Windows Movie Maker.

2nd Logo (2004-2013)
Nicknames: "kaBoOM! II", "O-Bomb II"

Logo: On a black screen, a spotlight looks around and we see parts of the KaBoom logo (same as last time). The "O" cherry bomb is about to blow up. The spotlight expands to the point of seeing the logo entirely. "entertainment inc." in black is underneath. The cherry bomb then explodes, making everything disappear. The screen turns solid red, and the logo falls piece-by-piece back where it was. "entertainment inc." fades in below, this time in black. The bomb is then lit, and after a while explodes again, leaving only a black screen.

Later Variant: On later DVDs, "entertainment inc." is white on the red screen rather than black, and it zooms in as it fades in, ending up larger than before. Plus, the "pssshh" noise is heard again when the bomb is lit on the red screen.

FX/SFX: The spotlight, the explosions, and the letters bouncing. Plus the zooming text in the variant.

Music/Sounds: A "pssshh" of the fuse (probably the classic Warner Bros. sound), then an explosion, followed by boing sounds as the letters fall back­. At the end, another explosion is heard.

Availability: Common, seen on many DVDs released by the company from the mid 2000s to the early 2010s.

Editor's Note: The explosions look even cheaper than the previous burning effect.

3rd Logo (2013-2016)


Nicknames: "The kaboom! and Pop (UK) Collision", "Exclamation Point-Shaped Balloon"

Logo: In a white background with confetti everywhere, we see the words "kaboom!" inflate in two colors, green and blue, and then the word "entertainment" zooms out. The exclamation point appears sploshed and swishes next to the company's name, then it inflates really hard and explodes, bursting it out with confetti and knocking the letters to the left and the company name then moves back to their previous position.

Variant: On any trailers, the logo was shortened, only ended with exclamation point explodes.

FX/SFX: CGI animation. It's an improvement over the previous logos.

Music/Sounds: A peaceful guitar-like tune and inflating and exploding balloon sound effects.

Music/Sounds Variants:


 * On Pac-Man and the Ghostly Adventures DVDs, a techno version of the tune is playing, with a kid says "Kaboom!" at the end.
 * On trailers, only the inflating and exploding at the end is heard.

Availability: No longer current, seen on many DVDs released by the company until their closure in 2016.

Editor's Note: None.