United International Pictures

Background
United International Pictures (UIP) is a joint company of Paramount Pictures and Universal Pictures to distribute some of the two studio's films theatrically outside United States (including territories), Canada and the Caribbean Basin. It also had rights to distribute films theatrically by DreamWorks Pictures (formerly had international releases through Universal from 1997-2005, and later owned by Viacom from 2005-08) and independent films. The company was formed in 1981 after MGM purchased UA and merged its international distribution arm with what was then called "Cinema International Corporation", who once had a video division, CIC Video; with releases after November 1 that year falling under the UIP banner. However, UIP did not begin using a logo until the year after it formed in 1982. In Australia, CIC-Fox became UIP-Fox in 1982 and continued operations until 1986, when Rupert Murdoch reorganized and obtained the Fox Australian distribution arm from UIP. Walt Disney/Buena Vista International continued their distribution deals with UIP (Paramount) in Italy until 1991 (when they sent distribution through Columbia Tri-Star), and Australia through CIC-Fox (20th Century Fox) until 1986 (when they switched to Village Roadshow). UIP also co-financed and distributed Denzel Washington's 1989 film, For Queen and Country, with The Rank Organization. When DreamWorks Pictures was founded in 1994, due to their distribution arrangements with Universal and Paramount; they were added to UIP's release slate and when Orion Pictures was purchased by MGM in 1997, they were also added to UIP's distribution slate (most Orion titles were distributed by other companies such as Rank and Svensk Filmindustri at that time, because of this the only title UIP released from Orion was Storefront Hitchcock, released in 1998). In November 2000, MGM, one of the original founders, left UIP and its theatrical distribution rights were assumed by 20th Century Fox, with MGM's final release under the UIP banner being Return to Me a few months prior in June 2000. At the start of 2007, the company was split up between Paramount and Universal in certain territories. In France, Mexico, Brazil, and the UK, United International Pictures was renamed to "Paramount Pictures". In Germany, Italy, and other countries, United International Pictures was renamed to "Universal Pictures". Currently, this company still operates in smaller countries such as Argentina, Denmark, Turkey, South Africa, and Malaysia (thanks to a 2010 reorganization). UIP has also distributed a number of local productions in several countries.

1st Logo (1982-1997)


Nicknames: "UiP", "The Shining Logo"

Logo: On a black/blue gradient background, a small white light appears in the center, stretching into 8 points as it starts glow brighter. When it dies down, it reveals a golden monolith, which resembles the letters "UiP" conjoined into one condensed symbol, zooming in while facing the left. As it slows to a crawl, it turns its position to face the screen and "UNITED INTERNATIONAL PICTURES" fades in below in a ITC Garamond font. A small glare appears on the "P" part of the logo.

FX/SFX: The "UIP" zooming-in, the shine. Simple, but surprisingly clean model work and chroma-keying.

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: Possibly common outside of the U.S.
 * It was seen on theatrical releases of Paramount/Universal/MGM/UA films outside of North America. However, most home video prints of their films released in Europe by CIC Video, Warner Home Video, and MGM/UA Home Video do not keep this logo, as they likely use U.S. prints converted into PAL format.
 * Some films, however, would use a print that had mandatory content edits by the countries' rating council for distribution, and some VHS/DVD/TV releases would use these prints meaning this logo may be intact.
 * In Australia, under UIP-Fox (formerly CIC-Fox), this was seen on theatrical prints of 20th Century Fox titles until 1986 (when the UIP-Fox venture ended).
 * The easiest place to find this is on international trailers for these films on some VHS's, such as Carry On Columbus and Bébé's Kids.
 * This can be currently seen on the Blu-Ray releases of Thesis, Vacas, the German trailer for Havana, the UK trailer for The Living Daylights (which can be found on the UK VHS of Baby Boom along with the SE and UE DVDs of the former), all prints/home video releases of Biggles: Adventures in Time (including the U.S. DVD from Image Entertainment), and the Australian TV airing of Crocodile Dundee II (though the Australian DVD release doesn't have it).
 * This is also seen on the Celebrity/Just for Kids video release of Stowaways on the Ark, as well as the original 1989 UK VHS of License To Kill, and the Canadian Malofilm VHS and U.S. Platinum Disc Corporation DVD of Money.
 * In the UK and Ireland, if you go to see a 35mm screening of a Paramount/Universal/MGM/UA film from c.1985-1997, this logo will show up before it - it was seen before 35mm showings of Darkman and True Lies.

2nd Logo (1997-2001)
Nicknames: "UiP II", "CGI UiP"

Logo: On a black background, a translucent glass model version of the UiP logo zooms out and rotates to face the screen, featuring gold borders as a blue spotlight appears in the middle of the screen. The spotlight brightens as the shining on the model gets brighter as well, before turning into a solid gold. "UNITED INTERNATIONAL PICTURES" appears below in the same font as before as the logo shimmers.

Variants:
 * There is a special variant in which the URL "www.uip.com" fades in below the logo.
 * Another variant exists without the text.
 * An intermission variant exists.

FX/SFX: CGI.

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: Uncommon outside of the U.S.
 * This appeared on UIP distributed films outside of the U.S. like The Rugrats Movie, Antz, and The Green Mile, among others before either the Paramount, Universal, or DreamWorks logos appeared.
 * It was also seen on international releases of MGM and United Artists films until 2001, when 20th Century Fox took over distribution in those territories.
 * The easiest place to find this is on international trailers for these films. Most international home video and TV prints of these do not have this logo, as they likely use U.S. prints converted into PAL format.
 * In NTSC form, this can be seen on a few Japanese DVD, VHS, and LaserDisc releases, such as The Peacemaker, Mouse Hunt, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, and Event Horizon.
 * This has also been spotted on trailers for Selkie and Siam Sunset as well as European trailers of films released by Paramount, DreamWorks, Universal, MGM/UA and Orion.
 * This has most recently turned up on the Umbrella Entertainment Blu-ray of Cut, and the UK trailer for Pitch Black on the Arrow Films Blu-ray and 4K UHD releases.
 * In the UK and Ireland, if you go to see a 35mm screening of a Universal/Paramount/MGM/UA/Orion/DreamWorks movie from between 1997-2001, this logo will be shown before it - it was seen before a 35mm showing of The Apostle.

3rd Logo (2000-2004)
Nicknames: "UiP III", "CGI UiP II", "The Blue Rounded Square"

Logo: On a black/blue gradient background, white pieces of the UiP logo zoom out and tilt into position, with the rectangular "dot" of the "i" coming in last, as a teal square with 3 rounded corners appears behind it, with the logo positioned in the upper left corner. It zooms out to the left with the edges of it shining and tilts a bit to face the screen straight-on, along with the square darkening quite a bit as well. The text "united international pictures" appears on the right, in a white Praxis Light font in all lowercase letters, along with a URL below it all. The background then fades to black as the logo becomes a flat 2D image.

Variant:
 * A trailer variant has the logo begin with the last few seconds.
 * Like with the previous logo, there exists an intermission variant.

FX/SFX: Same as the previous logo.

Music/Sounds: None.

Availability: Rare.


 * Appeared on several UIP distributed films before either the Paramount, Universal, or DreamWorks logos on films released.
 * Most international home video and TV prints of these do not have this logo, as they likely use U.S. prints converted into PAL format.
 * This logo is extremely rare on U.S. releases, but the long version has been spotted on the First Look Home Entertainment DVD of Elling, and a iTunes Spain print of La Flaqueza del Bolchevique (2003).
 * Again, the easiest place to find this is on international trailers for these films.
 * In the UK and Ireland, if you go to see a 35mm screening of a Universal/Paramount/DreamWorks movie from between 2000-2004, this logo will show up before it (Shrek being one such release).
 * Also appeared on a Toggle.sg print of the Singaporean movie One Leg Kicking (which has since been removed).

4th Logo (2004-2007, 2010-late 2010s)
Nicknames: "UiP IV", "CGI UiP III", "The Blue Rounded Square II", "The Blocks"

Logo: On a white background, many different rounded blocks zoom in from the white mist, first sparsely before rapidly picking up the pace. As the camera pans around, these blocks are shown forming up the UIP logo from before, but the entire logo is in blue and the URL is in Helvetica, as well as under the logo. As the camera finishes turning around, the last few blocks come in to fill up the logo, leaving a end result that has several small cuts in it.

Variant: There is a short version of this logo.

FX/SFX: Same as the previous two logos.

Music/Sounds: A one-note synth drone that is held throughout the logo, accompanied by "whoosh" noises as the blocks fly past. Usually, however, it's silent.

Availability: Rare.
 * Was spotted on a bootleg DVD of Shark Tale and an Australian cable broadcast of The Truman Show.
 * In the UK and Ireland, if you go to see a 35mm screening of a Universal/Paramount/DreamWorks movie from 2004-2007, this logo will appear before it - it was seen before a 35mm showing of Serenity.
 * The long version can be seen on US iTunes and Amazon Prime print of the 2014 Argentinian movie Delirium.
 * Starting in 2010, the shortened version of this logo can be found on trailers of movies uploaded by the official UIP YouTube account in certain regions; though this may not be the case for post-2018 releases.
 * It makes an unexpected appearance at the start of a recent CBS Europa (Poland) airing of the 2005 TV movie 14 Hours.

Final Note: In mid-2007, the UIP branding was retired in most countries and films go through Paramount Pictures International or Universal Pictures International. However, the company was reorganized in 2010 and currently distributes films in some smaller nations (outside of the U.S.).