FilmNation Entertainment

Background
FilmNation Entertainment is an American film production, co-financing and international distribution company. It was founded in 2008 by Glen Basner and Steven B. Samuels, initially as a foreign sales company. FilmNation moved into film production full-time with the release of Mud in 2012. In 2014, Village Roadshow purchased a 31% stake in the company.

1st Logo (2012-2017)
Nicknames: "The Funburst", "StudioCanal's Somber American Cousin"

Logo: On a tan background, we see 19 lines of multiple colors (yellow, light blue, orange and red) emerge from below. They travel upwards, and as they do, the camera moves around, showing that the lines are moving in a circular path. The lines converge in a circular pattern and we move out to see the lines are part of a human eye, made out of orange lines. The red line beneath the eye moves into the eye, which proceeds to explode, as the background becomes orange with a sunburst (or starburst) in the center (which moves). Along with it, the current company logo (the company name in a rectangle that draws itself in which also connects to the "N" with "E N T E R T A I N M E N T" below, in spaced words) zooms forwards. It stays on screen for about three seconds before cutting to black.

Variants:
 * There is a version where only the starburst moves.
 * On Genius a black and white version of this logo is used.
 * A print version of this logo exists.

FX/SFX: The lines moving, the exploding, and the company logo zooming forward. Too much to cover. This logo was made by Imaginary Forces, who also made the original Xbox 360 logo and the 2017 HBO Feature Presentation ID.

Music/Sounds: An energetic pizzicato/cello theme, composed by Henrik Schwarz. There's also a deep chord and a synthesized "power up" sound during the eye sequence.

Availability: No longer current, but common.
 * It was seen on films produced or distributed from the company, such as House at the End of the Street, The Rover, and the international release of Looper (2012).
 * This logo was seen at the end of some movies such as Under the Skin, Dog and All is Lost, among others.
 * Notable international releases that contain this logo are Mud (2012) and The Imitation Game (2014).
 * The black and white variant of the logo only appeared on Genius (2016).
 * While the next logo debuted in 2016, it makes a surprise appearance on the international release of Logan Lucky (2017) (the Netflix prints of said movie retain this while other prints replaced with Fingerprint Releasing and Bleecker Street logos).

Editor's Note: This logo's theme is quite popular.

2nd Logo (September 1, 2016- )


Nickname: "The Funburst II"

Logo: On a black background, we see two orange boxes joined with a smaller orange box in the center, which have black lines moving inside them. We then zoom in on the smaller box to reveal the Brooklyn Bridge, which slices in half to reveal the New York skyline, as it duplicates in an X-shaped manner, and an orange star bursts in to form the previous logo's finished product, but darker. The logo cuts out to the music's last chord.

Variant:
 * On The Founder the logo fades in with the ending animation and later fades out.
 * A still version of this logo exists on I Know This Much Is True which is the company's first television project.

FX/SFX: The kaleidoscope-esque animation. This was made by Devastudios.

Music/Sounds: A plinking tune employing pizzicato strings. Like the previous logo, this was composed by Henrik Schwarz. The version uploaded by Devastudios originally had a different tune involving a piano.

Availability: Current and common.
 * Was first seen on Arrival and has since appeared on Promising Young Woman, The Personal History of David Copperfield (2019), The 355, Dog, Umma, and other films by the company.
 * It also appeared on its first television show I Know This Much Is True.
 * It is set to appear on future films such as Three Thousand Years of Longing.
 * Don't expect this to appear on Operation Mincemeat, as well as 47 Meters Down: Uncaged (2019), despite FilmNation being involved in the film's production.

Editor's Note: None.