Hanna-Barbera Poland

Background
Hanna-Barbera Poland was a Polish branch of Hanna-Barbera Productions that dealt with the promotion and distribution of animated films from the studio in the country. The company is most well known for releasing VHS tapes with Polish music distributor P.P. Polskie Nagrania (later self-distributing them) which mostly consisted of numbered compilation releases featuring various Hanna-Barbera shows on one tape.

Hanna Barbera Poland also owned a studio that outsourced animation for several of the company's cartoons as part of the partnership. The studio animated the "Joseph and his Brothers" episode of the Direct-to-Video series The Great Adventure Stories from the Bible, as well as the final season of The Smurfs, and the second season of The Flintstone Kids.

In 1993, the company was separated and was re-incorporated as Curtis Art Productions, but continued to release Hanna-Barbera VHS releases under license from Turner Entertainment Co.

1st Logo (June 13, 1987-1993)
Visuals: On a blue background, a 3D cube slowly zooms in into the center of the screen, rotating as it does this. The background of the cube is black with a half yellow, half black lemon-like shape. On the yellow side is a black "H" and on the black side is a "B" with the straight part yellow and the rounded parts red. One side of the cube has a yellow background with the colored sides of the lemon shape switched and the "B" is yellow. After a bit, the cube freezes and it cuts to a copyright screen on the same blue background with the following white text: © HANNA BARBERA PRODUCTIONS INC. Hollywood USA

After a bit, once again on the same blue background, two squares with white borders flip towards the screen from the top-left and top-right sides, respectively. The left square has the "HB" in the half black lemon-half yellow background with "POLAND" in white in the bottom left near the "H" with a white border. The right square has a black background with a white circle with a red musical note inside the circle. When the two logos meet, the following white words fade in below: HANNA-BARBERA POLAND P.P. POLSKIE NAGRANIA

Then it cuts to another screen with the H-B Poland square and below is the following text:

HANNA-BARBERA POLAND

WORLDVISION ENTERPRISES, USA

Then after a moment, it cuts to a square in the background (similar to an album sleeve). The square is lime green with a colored music scale (color order from top to bottom: white, yellow, red and blue) with a record in the middle and three music notes (in order: red, yellow and blue). The red note is at the bottom-left of the scale, the yellow is in the middle of the record and the blue is on the top-right of the record. Below that is:

P.P. POLSKIE NAGRANIA

Variants: There are several variants used of this logo.


 * On Early-Mid 1989 releases, an extra screen for a promotion company called Unifilm was added: On a light blue background, there is a yellow strip going diagonally with black borders with "UNIFILM" in black in the middle of it. Two red circles are on the left and right respectively. A red circle is above with "uF". Below the line is white Polish language. This screen appears between the "Distributed by HANNA-BARBERA POLAND" screen and the "P.P. POLSKIE NAGRANIA" screen.
 * On late-1989-Mid-1990 releases, another Unifilm logo replaced the one above. It features a yellow background and with the strip in a lighter tone of yellow which used the normal music and the first music variant described below.
 * On late-1990 releases, the Unifilm and Worldvision parts are removed, so the main screen with the flipping logos cuts rights to the "P.P. POLSKIE NAGRANIA" screen after they flip.
 * On Early-Mid 1991 releases, the copyright and flipping animation sequences are removed entirely and just goes straight to the "Distributed by" screen sans the Worldvision info. This variant also lacks the UNIFILM and Polskie Nagrania logos at the end.
 * On Late-1991-Early 1992 tapes, the same variant is used although the copyright sequence is re-added.
 * Another variant seen on Late-1991 tapes has the copyright screen after the "Distributed by" screen, and following the screen, a poster for "OSKAREK '91" opens up and appears. This screen has a pair of twinkling sounds, one for the opening and the other after it opens.
 * On Late-1992-Early-1993 tapes, this variant is used sans the Oskarek screen.
 * The last VHS tapes with this logo from 1993 features the rotating cube animation, it cuts to a completely different logo. On a green background, there is a black swirl in a white circle, with a parrot head on the end. Below it is "Hanna-Barbera Poland" in the signature H-B font. Unlike the other variant, this stays on screen through out the music's length.
 * Two versions exist which just have one screen: One with the H-B Poland and Polskie Nagrania logos with no flipping animation, and one with just the Polskie Nagrania logo. These versions use the first music variant.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: At the first part where the cube revolves, a gong is heard. Then at the copyright screen, a repeated six-note synth tune plays. Interestingly, this was heard in the Charter Entertainment logo (including a synth strum at the end). This is actually a piece of stock music called "Music - Billboard #2" from the Sound Ideas Series 1000 sound library.

Audio Variants:
 * Some versions have a soft xylophone theme that plays through out all of the animation.
 * Sometimes the gong sound is missing and the synth tune plays immediately.


 * Some other occasions, have the logo silent for a few seconds and the synthesized music plays before cutting from the cube.
 * During each program, a narrator can be heard.

Availability: Seen on Hanna-Barbera home video releases in Poland at the time and presumably also on Polish television. These include Polish VHSes of Yogi Bear, Magilla Gorilla, and the ABC Afterschool Special "Cyrano".

2nd Logo (1988-1992)
Visuals: On a black background, we see the "P.P. POLSKIE NAGRANIA" screen from before only this time it's all white, the square is missing, and we see 3 lines behind the P.P. POLSKIE NAGRANIA Logo, above it reads P.P. POLSKIE NAGRANIA

Technique: None.

Audio: Same as the 1st Logo.

Availability: Unknown.

3rd Logo (1989?-1993)
Visuals: On a light-blue/blue background we see the words AGENCJA ARTYSTYCZNA and below it is a square with a orange circle representing an orange. On it has the word Orange in a custom font. Below it shows PRZEDSTAWIA FILM LICENCJONOWANY PRZEZ, with the bottom showing the words Hanna-Barbera Poland in the font as the cursive "script" font first introduced in 1987 in green in a dark blue rectangle.

Technique: None.

Audio: None.

Availability: Unknown.

Logo (1993-1998?)
Visuals: We start with seeing the outside view of Curtis Market, as we zoom in to where the windows are, it frame-freezes. It then fades to an gray-white gradient as an weird abstract-like Square zooms in from the bottom right of the screen to the center of the screen, with the block consisting two white triangles at the upper right, a red triangle in between the upper right and left, a white circle in the bottom left, a white square in the bottom right with a small green square inside of it. Then some word zoom in to the bottom of the square. CURTIS ART PRODUCTIONS

After a bit, it fades to a gray background with Hanna-Barbera below in the same font as the cursive "script" font first introduced in 1987, above it reads: przedstawia filmy wytworni

Then it fades to a sign reading the following:

ZAPRASZAMY de salonu sprzedazy

CURTIS MARKET

02-672 Warszawa

ul. Domaniewska 39a

tel./fax 48-72-71

fax 47-30-08

tel. 48-71-00 wew. 29-51

Then after a few seconds, it then fades to the Warning Screen only that this time it's in Italic and is green, and the background is gray.

Variant: On Later Releases would change the 3rd Screen and change the sign to an baby blue background with the Text in Italic.

Technique: CGI. Live-action and cel animation for the footage of the Curtis Market.

Audio: Same as 1st Hanna-Barbera Poland Logo.

Availability: Seen on Hanna-Barbera home video releases in Poland.