Baja Studios

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum


Background

Baja Studios (formerly Fox Studios Baja) is a film studio near the resort community of Rosarito, Baja California, Mexico. It was opened by 20th Century Fox in 1996 as a subsidiary, and was originally built to film scenarios of the 1997 film Titanic, which Fox distributed internationally. The studio would later produce more films, most of which did not involve 20th Century Fox, such as Tomorrow Never Dies, Deep Blue Sea, In Dreams, Pearl Harbor, and Ghosts of the Abyss.

Around 2006, Fox Studios Baja changed its name to its current one, and Fox sold the studios to Baja Acquisitions on May 2007 for an eight-figure US dollar sum.

Fox Studios Baja

Logo (October 6, 1999)


Visuals: It's a recreation of the 1994 20th Century Fox logo; however, the structure reads "FOX STUDIOS BAJA" instead, the logo takes place above the sea, the flash is omitted, and the byline and the registered trademark symbol are omitted as well.

Variant: On a documentary about the company for the San Diego Insider Magazine show, the logo is cut to the point where the camera is about to pass by the middle searchlight.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: Essentially just the audio of both of the logo's sources.

Availability: A portion of this logo was used for a documentary about the company from 1999 for the San Diego Insider Magazine show. The full version could be seen on a reel featuring portions of CGI animations.

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