Trimark Pictures

Background
Trimark Pictures was founded in 1987 by Mark Amin as a theatrical division of Amin's Vidmark, Inc.. Initially using the Vidmark name, Trimark was renamed to its more-well known moniker in 1988 and produced and distributed genre and lower-budget material. In 1997, Vidmark, Inc. was reincorporated as Trimark Holdings, Inc. In late 2000, it was acquired by Lions Gate Entertainment, and folded into Lionsgate Films. Currently, Amin is a member of Lionsgate's board of directors. Trimark Pictures did not use a logo until 1989, although they would not use an on-screen logo until 1991.

Logo (January 11, 1991-June 26, 2001)
Visuals: Over a black background, stripes rise up from the bottom of the screen and swerve to the left. As they swerve, they slide into a striped triangle shape, which slowly zooms out. On the triangle, a detailed engraving of a lion's head roaring emerges from the triangle. As it forms, "Copperplate Gothic" wipes in below in a, beveled variation of the Copperplate Gothic font, which is followed by "P I C T U R E S" in a much smaller font.

Variants:
 * Originally, this logo would fade out to make room for text reading "A DIVISION OF Impact INC." . "Impact" is in the same font as the Vidmark Entertainment logo. This variant was used from 1990 until 1994. One of the movies to use this was Leprechaun.
 * Closing : There is a print version of the Trimark Pictures logo with the letter "A" above and the stacked words, "TRIMARK PICTURES RELEASE" below the logo.
 * On the trailer for Warlock (its first appearance), it just has the words "TRIMARK PICTURES" on a black background. "PICTURES" is spaced out below "TRIMARK".
 * On trailers, the logo may either be still, or shortened to the lion emerging.
 * A full screen version exists.
 * On Thunder in Paradise, the second half is used as a television logo.

Technique: CGI, with the lion head done with cel animation.

Audio: A synthesized wind sound and a choir that mixes into a triumphant fanfare with the sound of a explosion ("boom") when it fades out. Beginning around 1994, the music was recomposed with slightly different instrumentation and the boom comes in earlier. This theme was composed by Robert J. Walsh. Sometimes, it is silent or the opening theme from any given film is heard.

Audio Variants:
 * There is also a variant of it, in which the end is longer, and instead of a "boom", there is a loud "whoosh".
 * Another variant has no ending "boom".
 * A high tone variant exists.
 * There is said to be one variant which has the 2006 Lionsgate music playing over this logo instead due to sloppy plastering.

Availability:


 * Seen intact on older VHS, Laserdisc, and DVD releases of films such as Warlock 1-3, Black Magic Woman, Leprechaun 1-5, Chairman of the Board, Meet Wally Sparks, Teresa's Tattoo, Return of the Living Dead 3, The Stoned Age, Love and a .45, The Favor, the Watch and the Very Big Fish, Sprung, Metamorphosis: The Alien Factor, and The Dentist 1 and 2, among others.
 * The last film with this logo was Blood Surf, which likewise (along with its end credit variant), was plastered with the current Lionsgate logo on current prints.
 * This is also seen after the 1990 Walt Disney Pictures logo on the 1995 film A Kid in King Arthur's Court (the original VHS release and full screen DVD prints only; current prints have the Tapestry Films logo at the beginning instead while Trimark is seen after the end credits).
 * It makes a surprise appearance at the beginning and end of the Echo Bridge Home Entertainment DVD of The Little Patriot (released as Sign of the Otter: The Little Patriot), as it used a VHS source, and on the Canadian C/FP Video release of Sweet Killing (The U.S. Paramount Home Video VHS uses the 3rd Skouras Pictures logo instead).
 * It may also be seen on foreign prints of Jailbait (AKA: Streetwise), All American Murder, Night Eyes 2, and Hail Caesar, among others, as Trimark held international distribution rights to those films.
 * It is unknown if this was seen on theatrical prints of Kickboxer 2: The Road Back and Scissors, among possible others. Trimark acquired the U.S. theatrical rights to those films, but did not release them on VHS through Vidmark Entertainment.