GFM Animation

Background
HandMade Films is a production company founded by former Beatle George Harrison and business partner Denis O'Brien. It was formed primarily to back Monty Python's Life of Brian after the original financiers dropped it. It also purchased the rights to The Long Good Friday from producer British Lion. HandMade later became one of the most dominant companies in the British film industry, making such important films as Time Bandits (1981), Mona Lisa (1986), and Withnail & I (1987). Harrison and O'Brien later sold HandMade to Paragon Entertainment Corporation in 1994. Changing hands over the years, it was eventually acquired by Patrick Meehan, former manager of the band Black Sabbath. The company saw a lot of financial struggles during that time, and in March 2011, it was reorganized and relaunched as GFM Films (now known as GFM Animation) by former HandMade Films principals Guy Collins, Fred Hedman and Michael Ryan. After the on-going financial struggles of the former name, it was finally dissolved in 2020.

(August 17, 1979-December 4, 2009)
Logo: On a black background, an emblem zooms into the frame. It consists of a hand pointing to the left with film camera parts (a tripod at the bottom, reel holders at the top and the lens on the pointing finger), and below it, the words "HAND MADE FILMS ", in a fancy font and looking rather curved. Usually, the word "present" or "PRESENTS" fades in below.

Trivia: The logo was designed by Terry Gilliam, Monty Python collaborator, and director of Time Bandits.

Variants:
 * On The Long Good Friday, the logo is in blue on a cloud background.
 * Seen in either white or yellow.
 * Often seen static, sans-zooming.
 * Planet 51 had the word "INTERNATIONAL" below the logo.

FX/SFX: The zoom-in, the fade in of "PRESENTS".

Music/Sounds: The opening and/or closing themes of the movie, or none.

Availability: Very common. Seen on The Long Good Friday, Time Bandits, Water (1985), Shanghai Surprise, Checking Out, Nuns on the Run, and Planet 51. It was also seen on original prints as well as an old VHS of Monty Python's Life of Brian. It made its last appearance on Cracks.

Editor's Note: None.

(2010s)
TBA.

(2022- )
TBA.