Summit Entertainment

Background
Summit Entertainment is a film studio that was originally founded in 1991 by Bernd Eichinger, Arnon Milchan, and Andrew G. Vajna to handle foreign sales, and officially launched in 1993 by Rob Friedman and Patrick Wachsburger as a limited partnership (LP). The studio was originally a production/distribution/sales organization, which usually co-released and internationally released films by other studios (such as Touchstone Pictures, 20th Century Fox, and Warner Bros.), but they became fully independent in 2006; their first film as a fully independent studio was P2 in 2007. The next year, Summit released Twilight (based on the novel by Stephenie Meyer), which spawned a film series spanning four sequels and brought a huge success for the studio. On January 13, 2012, Lionsgate acquired Summit for $412.5 million.

1st Logo (October 4, 1996-October 5, 2007)
Nicknames: "Peaceful Summit", "CGI Peaceful Summit", "Abstract Mountain", "Summit Outline"

Logo: On a black background, we see a moving ribbon. The ribbon slowly floats down, and it falls. The ribbon then moves up to become an outline of a mountain. The mountain moves back, and the words: Serif in Trajan Pro fade in below.

Variants:
 * Gods of Egypt (2016): The logo nriefly features a silhouette of pyramids, and in its final appearance is colored ochre red.
 * La La Land (2016): The logo gets a retro look. As the film is a throwback to the musical films of yore, the logo is a riff on what Summit's brand would look like in the 1960s.
 * Man on a Ledge (2012): The Summit Entertainment logo has a background of New York skyscrapers on it.
 * Step Up: 4 Revolution (2012): The Summit Entertainment logo gets spray-painted.
 * The Twilight film series (2008-2012) has a collection of these in dark weather.

FX/SFX: The ribbon floating down and moving up forming the mountain. Nice CGI.

Music/Sounds: A whoosh sound on some sort of flute, then a dreamy synth tune with a tympani beat at the end and a synthesized flute. For Summit's post-2000 films, the logo was silent.

Music/Sounds Variants:
 * On Splendor, some prints of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, and Wrong Turn, it uses wind sounds followed by a different sounding flute.
 * On Bound (which was the first movie to use this logo) and Keeping Mum, it uses a dramatic orchestral fanfare.

Availability: Uncommon. It appears on some Universal, Touchstone, Fox, Alcon, and Warner Bros. releases internationally, such as Racing Stripes and Lock, Stock, and Two Smoking Barrels. The last movie to have this logo was Michael Clayton.

Editor's Note: This logo is well liked by most people who have seen it.

2nd Logo (November 9, 2007-August 17, 2018; June 21, 2019)
Nicknames: "Peaceful Summit II", "CGI Peaceful Summit II", "Summit Outline II"

Logo: On a black background, a light shines, showing the outline of a mountain. The resulting mountain outline gradually zooms out, and the light gradually gets brighter until there is something akin to a flash on the screen. The background becomes ice blue, the mountain's outline becomes white, and this zooms out until the logo becomes an ice blue rectangle with a mountain outline. The light fades out in the distance, and the rectangle is on a /white gradient background. The company name, in the same manner as the previous logo, fades in below the mountain on the rectangle.

Bylines:
 * November 9, 2007-February 24, 2012: (Bylineless)
 * July 27, 2012-June 21, 2019: "A LIONSGATE COMPANY"

Trivia: This was done by Intralink Film Graphic Design, who also done the 1998 Warner Bros. Pictures logo for their 75th anniversary. It is possible, though unconfirmed, that someone named Jamie Anderson was involved in production as well.

Variants:
 * A still version exists, sometimes on a black background.
 * Fly Me to the Moon has the background in with "presents" and without the mountain.
 * An enhanced variant debuted on The Cold Light of Day, released on September 7, 2012. In it, the light in the beginning is more, the flash is brighter and more realistic, the logo zooms out further, the gradient background has been replaced with a white gradient background, and a Lionsgate byline fades in (which previously debuted on Step Up: Revolution).
 * Starting in 2014, the Lionsgate byline is larger and zooms in.

FX/SFX: The light shining and the background changing. The CGI is once again amazing, and really shows how a simple design can be very effective.

Music/Sounds: A soft and dramatic orchestral fanfare that gradually becomes more majestic. Most films with this logo have it silent or the opening theme of the movie is used.

Availability: Common.
 * It appears on all of Summit's films from the era, such as the Twilight films, Fly Me to the Moon, P2, Sex Drive, Astro Boy, the first two John Wick films and Warm Bodies.
 * The still variant can be seen at the end of some films and also appears on the Scene It: Twilight video game.
 * The last film to use this logo was Down a Dark Hall, released on August 17, 2018, but it later appeared on Anna, which was intended for release that year, but was delayed following sexual misconduct allegations against its director.

Editor's Note: None.

3rd Logo (April 19, 2018-)
Nicknames: "The Lionsgate Sky", "Lionsgate Summit", "Summit in the Clouds", "Bland Summit", "The Summit/Lionsgate Transition", "Mountainless Summit"

Logo: On a sky background in the middle of several moving clouds, the stacked text "SUMMIT ENTERTAINMENT", with "SUMMIT" in Lionsgate's corporate font floats in the middle of the screen, in. The text then rotates to reveal the stacked text "A LIONSGATE COMPANY", with "LIONSGATE" in the same corporate font.

FX/SFX: The clouds and the text. This was done by Devastudios, who also did the current Lionsgate logo.

Music/Sounds: Same as the previous logo, but sometimes the opening theme plays over it.

Availability: Rare. First seen on the trailer for Blindspotting.
 * The fully animated version debuted on Escape Plan 2: Hades, and it appeared on some new releases from the studio such as Uncle Drew.
 * Although this logo is infrequently used, it is credited at the end of Summit-produced movies, such as Hellboy (2019), John Wick: Chapter 3 - Parabellum, and Fatale.

Editor's Note: This logo has gained criticism due to its simple and uninspiring animation, the removal of the mountains, and also the fact that the Lionsgate "byline" takes up more time than the company name. This also bears resemblance to the final product of the Lionsgate "Gears" logo, especially the byline scene.