Xilam

Background
Xilam is a French animation company that was founded in 1999 by Marc and Alix du Pontavice, after Marc left Gaumont Multimedia, whose cartoon library he bought from Gaumont the following year. The company mostly produces public-domain cartoons and animated movies in French and English. Most of their productions are co-produced with other French companies like Canal+ and Gulli.

1st Logo (1999-early 2000s)
Nickname: "Early Red X in Space"

Logo: We fade in to a space background, similar to the one seen in the intro of Oggy and the Cockroaches. An explosion quickly occurs, sending meteorites flying towards the screen. After that, the letter "X" in gets drawn in a handwritten font, with the lower-left end extending up to the upper-left end. Then the text "ilam" in the same font gets next to the letter, whereas its letters fly and settle one-by-one.

Trivia: The first half of the logo animation was later reused in Oggy and the Cockroaches on the Season 2 episode "Soldier for a Day".

FX/SFX: 3D animation.

Music/Sounds: A flute solo accompanied by the explosion, followed by a cheerful kazoo tune. Sometimes, it's the closing theme of the show.

Availability: It was so far seen on some international airings of Oggy and the Cockroaches during the early 2000s.

Editor's Note: None.

2nd Logo (December 15, 2000-)
Nicknames: "Red X", "Paint X", "The Painter", "The Painting"

Logo: A white stick figure-like person walks near a surface on the screen, brandishing a paintbrush and a paintcan with red paint. He grabs the brush and paints a red "X" on the surface. Once he is done, the camera zooms in on the "X" as the person backs away a little. The text "ilam" in a weird font fades to the right of the "X", which completes the company name "Xilam".

Variants:
 * On some films and shows from the company, the animation is filmed or videotaped in a 4:3 aspect ratio.
 * Widescreen versions of this logo have the camera zoom in slower.
 * A different version was used on Xilam's website. Here, the stick figure walks towards us, then stops and shifts to the right when the Xilam logo appears letter-by-letter, with "presents" below the logo.
 * On Stupid Invaders for Sega Dreamcast (based on the Space Goofs TV series) and Cartouche, prince des Faubourgs, the stick figure and the "X" are centered, and "xilam" is shown on the bottom. The "X" is similar to the one seen in the previous logo.
 * On Go West: A Lucky Luke Adventure, the stick figure (who now wears a cowboy hat) paints the logo as usual, but the "m" is missing. Suddenly, the "m" runs in from the right like a horse. It first misses its point, but then walks back and settles next to the "a", completing the logo.
 * On Oggy and the Cockroaches: The Movie, the logo starts as usual, then the cockroaches appear and spray graffiti text over it that says "XILAM" in a graffiti-like font.

FX/SFX: The man moving and painting the "X", the camera zooming and panning, and the "ilam" text fading in. All 3D animation.

Music/Sounds: A 12-note whistling theme, complete with two brush noises when the person paints the "X", and a piano rendition of the last five whistle notes when the camera zooms in and the "ilam" text fades in.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * The website version uses a different theme reminiscent of classic Looney Tunes cartoons.
 * On Kaena: The Prophecy, synth strings are heard in the background.
 * On Go West: A Lucky Luke Adventure, a jazzy piano rendition of the theme is heard, along with noises from the "m" horse.
 * On Oggy and the Cockroaches: The Movie, an orchestral composition of the aforementioned tune is heard, then the cockroaches sing the last five notes and laugh.

Availability: Common.
 * It was first seen on the Space Goofs tie-in game Stupid Invaders, released in December 2000 for the Sega Dreamcast.
 * Seen at the end of all animated shows made by Xilam, including Space Goofs, Oggy and the Cockroaches, The New Adventures of Lucky Luke, Shuriken School, Zig and Sharko, and The Daltons, among others.
 * It also appeared as an opening logo on their feature films (albeit using variants): Keana: The Prophecy, Go West: A Lucky Luke Adventure, and Oggy and the Cockroaches: The Movie. Don't expect this to appear on I Lost My Body though.
 * This logo plasters the Gaumont Multimedia logo on later prints of earlier Space Goofs and Oggy and the Cockroaches episodes, and possibly Gaumont Multimedia's other properties as well.
 * Despite Chip n' Dale: Park Life (a co-production with Disney Television Animation) using a new logo, this logo continues to be used, recently appearing on Oggy Oggy and The New Adventures of Oggy.

Editor's Note: This is a relaxing logo with decent animation and a catchy theme. This is a favorite among Oggy fans.

3rd Logo (July 28, 2021-)
Nicknames: "Red X II", "Paint X II", "The Painter II", "The Painting II"

Logo: On a white background, the same white stick figure from the previous logo jumps in from the right side of the screen with his red paintbrush, drawing the same red "X" from before, first from the bottom left, then from the bottom right, jumping to reach the top parts of the "X". Once he is done, he stands still, facing the viewer while holding his paintbrush, as the camera zooms out slightly to make room for the text "ilam", in the same font from before, appearing to the right of the "X", completing the company name.

FX/SFX: The man jumping and painting the "X", the slight zooming. Like before, it’s all 3D animation, albeit choppier, resembling stop-motion.

Music/Sounds: The last 5 piano notes from the last logo but slightly cleaner, complete with the stick figure’s footsteps and the paintbrush noises. A whoosh noise is heard when the camera zooms out.

Availability: Brand new and current. This first appeared on Chip n’ Dale: Park Life on Disney+ and it might appear soon on Xilam’s newer shows and films. It’s currently used in tandem with the previous logo.

Editor's Note: While it might catch some viewers expecting the previous logo off-guard, this is quite an improvement, and is a breath of fresh air, considering that the previous logo has been in use for over 20 years.