Paramount Classics

Background
Paramount Classics was launched in May 1998 to distribute films with a more "arthouse" and/or foreign feel than its parent company, as well as occasionally distributing content from Paramount's other labels. In 2006, Paramount launched Paramount Vantage, another label which served Classics' purpose; Classics was then retooled to focus more on foreign properties and documentary films before being folded into Vantage in 2008.

1st Logo (March 12-November 12, 1999)


Logo: On a black background, we see the Paramount Classics print logo, which has the Paramount gate entrance with opened gates leading to the mountain. The words "PARAMOUNT CLASSICS" are seen below.

Trivia: This isn't the first time Paramount used their gate entrance as a logo design; they previously used it as a design for their budget video division Gateway in the 1980s and early 1990s.

Variants:
 * On the trailer for Trekkies, the logo appears in an iris-in shot.
 * On the trailer for Cabaret Balkan, the logo is tinted in sepia.

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: Seen on the trailers for Where's Marlowe?, Trekkies, Get Real and The Adventures of Sebastian Cole. Due to the general obscurity of the films in question, it's unknown if this logo appears on them (though Trekkies uses the standard Paramount logo of the time).

Editor's Note: None.

2nd Logo (March 10, 2000-August 7, 2007)


Nicknames: "Perumount Classics", "Mountain in the Gate"

Logo: As the camera spins around in a /pinkish cloudy sky, we see a white light illuminate a -tinted Paramountain from the 1986 Paramount logo without the stars, text, and byline. After working its way to the front, the camera then zooms out to reveal the Paramount gate entrance. The gates then open to reveal the mountain and the words "PARAMOUNT CLASSICS" fade in below.

Trivia: The Paramountain's rotating animation is based on a 1998 CGI version of the 1986 Paramount logo (animated by Pittard Sullivan) that was used on a few movie trailers in 2000-2001. It also briefly served as a home video indicator from 1998-1999.

Variants:


 * Girl on the Bridge has the logo in black and white.
 * It exists in 1.85:1, 2.35:1, and windowboxed versions.
 * On 4:3 full screen prints of films, the logo is in 1.33:1 academy ratio, (sometimes 1.37:1).
 * On 4:3 full screen prints of many films since November 21, 2001, the logo zooms out to a much farther distance than usual, revealing more of the Paramount cloud background at the top above the Paramount gate entrance and more of the green field at the bottom below the "PARAMOUNT CLASSICS" text.
 * A rare version exists. After the camera then zooms out to reveal the Paramount gate entrance, the gates are already open.
 * At the end of movies, the logo is shortened to the point before the text fades in.

FX/SFX: The camera turning, the zooming, the gates opening. The CGI is slightly less intricate than its parent company's logos, but it's still a well-done logo overall.

Music/Sounds: A majestic piano/string theme with wind blowing at the end of the logo, the opening theme of the movie or none.

Availability: Seen on films made by the company, including Mad Hot Ballroom, Northfork, Sunshine, Mean Creek, The Triumph of Love, The Virgin Suicides, and An Inconvenient Truth, among others. It debuted theatrically on Deterrence and last appeared on Beneath.

Editor's Note: The CGI effects used in this logo is incredible. The animation of the Paramountain and the inclusion of the famous Bronson Gate from Paramount Studios is the cherry on top.

3rd Logo (July 25, 2007-April 4, 2008)


Nicknames: "Drawing Mountain", "Mountain in the Gate II"

Logo: On a black background, we see black ink lines drawing on a white paper sheet. They form a brush-drawn version of the Paramount gate, taken into a box, with the company name below. The logo zooms out with a white background.

Variant: On The Kite Runner, the logo is still and takes place on a black background.

FX/SFX: The logo taking form.

Music/Sounds: None or the opening sounds of the movie.

Availability: Rare. This was seen on only three films: Arctic Tale, Shine a Light, and The Kite Runner.

Editor's Note: None.