ITC Film Distributors Ltd.

Background
ITC Film Distributors Ltd. was the film distribution division of ITC Entertainment. The studio only distributed films in their native United Kingdom and other parts of Europe. Most of the studio's films are currently owned by ITV. It was closed down in 1987.

1st Logo (March 27, 1978-1982)
Logo: On a black background, three pinwheels come up and move around randomly. The three then converge, and for each of them one of the opposite pairs of sails merge into one, leaving three stacked diamonds, or the ITC logo without the letters (the first set from the left is, the second , and the third light brown). The second and third slide left into the first set, and become a three-dimensional version of the design, with "Times New Roman" in the top diamond, "Times New Roman" in the middle and "Times New Roman" in the bottom diamond. The words "Times New Roman" appear to the right immediately after the flash.

Variants:
 * On the Vestron Video VHS release of The Norsemen (1978), the logo is blacked out but the theme can still be heard due to sloppy editing. This is seen before the 1973 American International Pictures logo.
 * A shortened version exists that has the ITC "diamond" and text already formed. This primarily appears on trailers of films.
 * There is also a version where the entire logo has a light blue tint. The ITC logo is also larger in this version.

Technique: The pinwheels spinning, moving, and morphing into the diamonds. Probably cel animation, which actually looks pretty neat for it's time.

Music/Sounds: An orchestral flute piece that switches to a bombastic orchestral horn/drum fanfare.

Music/Sounds Variant:. Sometimes it's silent or out of sync with the animation.

Music/Sounds Trivia: The music was sourced from two separate tracks from the Bruton Music library, "Destiny" (composed by Keith Mansfield) and "Endeavour" (composed by John A. Coleman). "Destiny" was also used for the MGM/UA Home Video coming attractions bumper, and "Endeavour" appears in the 1980 Gold Key Entertainment logo.

Availability: Extremely rare.
 * This logo was only seen on UK 35mm release prints of ITC productions and titles they only distributed. Used in conjunction with the next logo below until at least mid-1982. Films that originally had this include Porridge: The Film, The Big Sleep, The Muppet Movie, Saturn 3, Hawk the Slayer, and the Space: 1999 films Destination: Moonbase Alpha (where this logo debuted), later 35mm UK theatrical prints of Invasion UFO (1976 compilation movie), as well as early theatrical prints of Cosmic Princess and Journey Through the Black Sun.
 * This logo may have been seen on pre-certification VHS releases by ITC Home Video.
 * It remains intact on the current UK digital/HDTV airings, as well as the Second Sight UK BD, of Gregory's Girl (which had the next logo below on UK 35mm release prints and the original pre-cert Hokushin Audio Visual VHS release), and the theatrical trailer for The Evictors on the US Shout Factory Blu-Ray of said film. It is allegedly intact on the Network UK BDs of the Space: 1999 films Destination: Moonbase Alpha and the 1976 Invasion UFO compilation movie.
 * It was also intact on Film4 airings of Porridge: The Film from the 2010s, due to an older print being used while newer BBC airings used current prints that cut this out.
 * While CBS/Fox Video controlled the video rights to the ITC library, this was retained on American video prints of Escape to Athena, which used the longer international theatrical version as its source instead of the shorter, more action-oriented American theatrical version.

Legacy: A favourite among many thanks to the animation and music, though some may be dizzy due to the spinning pinwheels.

2nd Logo (1981-1987)
Logo: We start off on a black screen with a star engulfing the screen. The star zooms out and changes to yellow, then, then , light blue, and then. The star then reappears with a rapidly spinning pattern inside it. A light gray bar of light with rainbow coloured rays fades in and the star disappears. The light bar moves slowly like it's scanning before drawing, as more stars sparkle in the background. As the light bar moves to the bottom, a star flashes in the middle and a light gray box with a rainbow is wiped in from the top, replicating the light bar's pattern. The rays disappear one by one in a random fashion and the ITC logo and "Times New Roman." fade in below the box and the box has finished drawing, revealing it has different sized lines at the end of the rainbow.

Technique: The star zooming, the bar moving and the rainbow forming are all early CGI animation.

Music/Sounds: A beautiful orchestral fanfare composed by John Barry, which was originally used as the theme for Raise the Titanic.

Music/Sounds Variant: Sometimes, it is silent or out of sync with the animation.

Availability: Ultra rare.
 * Like the previous logo, this one was only seen on UK 35mm release prints of ITC productions and titles they only distributed from 1982-1987.
 * Films that had logo include The Great Muppet Caper, The Salamander, The Evil that Men Do, Green Ice, Where the Boys Are '84, etc.
 * It may have been seen on UK theatrical prints of the 1984 Little Nemo pilot film (which was billed as a short feature at some screenings of the Canadian movie Running Brave, also distributed by ITC).
 * Appeared on the 1983 pre-cert Guild Home Video VHS release of Cujo, the original pre-cert Hokushin Audio Visual VHS releases of Gregory's Girl, Q: The Winged Serpent, and the Videospace UK VHS of La Traviata (1982), respectively.
 * Like the previous logo, it may have been seen on other pre-certification VHS releases by ITC Home Video.
 * This logo has most recently surfaced on the UK Network Distributing Blu-ray release of Whoops Apocalypse (1986).
 * It is also reportedly present on the UK Network Distributing Blu-ray releases of the Space: 1999 movies Cosmic Princess and Journey Through the Black Sun, respectively (which had the previous logo on some early UK theatrical copies).

Legacy: Though it's not as well-known as the previous logo, the animation is still pretty good for its time, and the fanfare is quite powerful.