Paramount Animation

Background
Paramount Animation is the feature animation division of American film studio Paramount Pictures. It was founded in 2011 after the success of Nickelodeon Movies' CGI film Rango and in the wake of the studio's split with DreamWorks Animation in 2012. Its first film The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water was released in 2015, with its latest release being The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run. Upcoming films from the division include Rumble, The Tiger's Apprentice, and Under the Boardwalk.

Note: Until 2019, only the 2011 Paramount Pictures logo was played before all of its films. However, in 2019, Paramount Animation unveiled an onscreen logo of its own, which will appear on all of its films starting with the aforementioned SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run.

1st Logo (September 19, 2019-)
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Nicknames: "Star Skipper", "Animated Mountain", "Perumount Animation", "2020s Toon Mountain"

Logo: In a valley with a forest and mountain in the distance, we see a young girl wearing a yellow shirt and purple pants, named Star Skipper (who surprisingly bears a striking resemblance to June from Wonder Park), standing on some rocks next to the valley's lake. She skips a rock across the lake. As the camera follows the rock, it transforms into a golden star. It continues to fly through the forest and up the hills, until we reach a colorful version of the famous Paramountain in an orange morning environment surrounded by clouds. The other 21 stars, also in gold, encircle the mountain and the "Paramount" script in blue zooms out and takes its position. The final star thrown by the girl swoops by forming the word "Animation" in a handwritten blue script font on the bottom as the star takes its place. The byline fades in below.

Alternate Descriptive Video Transcription: A girl skips a stone across a blue lake in front of a pyramid like mountain with a snow covered peak. The stone becomes a star and it zooms up the wooded slope of a mountain. It turns into a row of stars which form an arch over the mountain: Paramount Animation.

Trivia: The logo and Star Skipper were designed by Christopher Zibach, who worked on DreamWorks' Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie as a lead visual development artist and art director. According to president Mireille Soria, the studio chose Star Skipper as their mascot because she "captured the magic" of the division.

Byline(s):


 * September 19, 2019: Bylineless.
 * November 14, 2019: "A VIACOM COMPANY" in a blue color.
 * January 29, 2020- "A ViacomCBS Company" in a white color.

Variants:
 * An open-matte 4:3 version exists.
 * A faster, abridged version (with the fanfare off-sync) is seen on international Netflix prints of The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run.
 * Starting in 2020, the background's shading is slightly different, streaks are seen when the star flies through the forest and up the hills to the mountain, and "Animation" is in the same blue color as the "Paramount" script.

FX/SFX: Excellent CGI from Reel FX and ATK PLN.

Music/Sounds: We hear birds chirping and nature sounds, followed by water sounds, and some whooshes, Sparkling sounds are heard when the stone transforms into a star and when "Animation" appears. The 2012 Paramount Pictures fanfare by Michael Giacchino plays throughout.

Music/Sounds Variants: The ViacomCBS variant features different nature sounds. Wind is also audible when the star flies to the mountain. Also, more sparkling sounds are heard. Then as the other 21 stars encircle the mountain, whooshes are heard. This can be heard on ATK PLN's Vimeo account.

Availability: Brand new. It first debuted on an article published by Variety. The variant with the Viacom byline only appeared on the first trailer for the aforementioned SpongeBob Movie: Sponge on the Run, which was technically that logo's theatrical debut. The logo with the ViacomCBS byline debuted on the Super Bowl trailer for the previously-mentioned film. It can also be seen on the teaser for the upcoming film Rumble.

Editor's Note: A fantastic logo that pays homage to the old Paramount Cartoons logo. However, the blue color used on the Viacom byline version is too dark and is hard to see.