InterStar Releasing: Difference between revisions

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

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m (Text replacement - "Category:American film logos" to "Category:American film logos{{American film logos}}")
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'''InterStar Releasing Corporation''' was a theatrical distribution company controlled (with a 51% stake) by Westinghouse Broadcasting. Between 1990 and 1993, InterStar made deals with exhibitors to cut the theatrical and ancillary grosses of low-to-medium-budget films. Westinghouse ended the venture in May 1993.
'''InterStar Releasing Corporation''' was a theatrical distribution company controlled (with a 51% stake) by Westinghouse Broadcasting. Between 1990 and 1993, InterStar made deals with exhibitors to cut the theatrical and ancillary grosses of low-to-medium-budget films. Westinghouse ended the venture in May 1993.


===(November 1, 1991-1993)===
===Logo (November 1, 1991-1993)===
<gallery mode=packed heights=200>
<gallery mode=packed heights=200>
File:InterStar Releasing (1991).png
File:InterStar Releasing (1991).png
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</gallery>
</gallery>
{{youtube|id=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpXd5oUYDWc}}
{{youtube|id=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FpXd5oUYDWc}}
'''Visuals:''' On a black background, we see a close-up of an oval-shaped piece of granite zooming out towards a comfortable distance, alongside a circular orange orb which brightens the object. The orb spins around the oval as it flips and stretches in width. As it happens, the word "I N T E R S T A R" appears in a closed-blinds effect. When it reaches a certain distance, the granite becomes a white oval , tilted at a 90-degree angle with an "i" carved into it, while the orb becomes an {{color|orange}} sphere which dots the "i". The background fades to {{color|green}} marble.
'''Visuals:''' On a black background, there is a close-up of an oval-shaped piece of granite zooming out towards a comfortable distance, alongside a circular orange orb which brightens the object. The orb spins around the oval as it flips and stretches in width. As it happens, the word "I N T E R S T A R" appears in a closed-blinds effect. When it reaches a certain distance, the granite becomes a white oval , tilted at a 90-degree angle with an "i" carved into it, while the orb becomes an {{color|orange}} sphere which dots the "i". The background fades to {{color|green}} marble.


'''Technique:''' CGI.
'''Technique:''' CGI.
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[[Category:Film logos]]
[[Category:Film logos]]
[[Category:American film logos]]
[[Category:American film logos]]{{American film logos}}
[[Category:United States]]
[[Category:United States]]
[[Category:Paramount Pictures]]
[[Category:Paramount Pictures]]

Revision as of 04:14, 22 December 2023

Background

InterStar Releasing Corporation was a theatrical distribution company controlled (with a 51% stake) by Westinghouse Broadcasting. Between 1990 and 1993, InterStar made deals with exhibitors to cut the theatrical and ancillary grosses of low-to-medium-budget films. Westinghouse ended the venture in May 1993.

Logo (November 1, 1991-1993)

Visuals: On a black background, there is a close-up of an oval-shaped piece of granite zooming out towards a comfortable distance, alongside a circular orange orb which brightens the object. The orb spins around the oval as it flips and stretches in width. As it happens, the word "I N T E R S T A R" appears in a closed-blinds effect. When it reaches a certain distance, the granite becomes a white oval , tilted at a 90-degree angle with an "i" carved into it, while the orb becomes an orange sphere which dots the "i". The background fades to green marble.

Technique: CGI.

Audio: None in some cases. However, an alternate version with wind noises and chimes was spotted on an Amazon Prime print of Split Second.

Availability: Seen on U.S. and international prints of Knight Moves and Split Second. This might have been on theatrical prints of Highlander II: The Quickening and A Midnight Clear, but home video releases of those films don't use this logo.
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