Lumiere Pictures: Difference between revisions
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=== Background=== |
=== Background=== |
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Lumiere Pictures was a British/French film and television company formed in [https://web.archive.org/web/20100705122847/http://www.europeanproducersclub.org/member/list/France 1992] as a merger between two French companies: Jean Cazes' Initial Groupe (est. 1984) and Investissements en Droits Audiovisuelles (est. 1987). Lumiere owned a substantial library of films from the [[Thorn EMI Screen Entertainment]]/[[Weintraub Entertainment Group|Weintraub]] library, representing a third of all films made in the UK from the beginning of silent pictures. In 1996, it was acquired by UGC, which was acquired in turn by Canal+ that same year. Cazes then spun-off Lumiere's Los Angeles branch into a new company, Lumiere International. The Lumiere Pictures library is now owned by [[StudioCanal (France)|StudioCanal]]. |
Lumiere Pictures was a British/French film and television company formed in [https://web.archive.org/web/20100705122847/http://www.europeanproducersclub.org/member/list/France 1992] as a merger between two French companies: Jean Cazes' Initial Groupe (est. 1984) and Investissements en Droits Audiovisuelles (est. 1987). Lumiere owned a substantial library of films from the [[Thorn EMI Screen Entertainment]]/[[Weintraub Entertainment Group|Weintraub]] library, representing a third of all films made in the UK from the beginning of silent pictures. In 1996, it was acquired by UGC, which was acquired in turn by Canal+ that same year. Cazes then spun-off Lumiere's Los Angeles branch into a new company, Lumiere International. The Lumiere Pictures library is now owned by [[StudioCanal (France)|StudioCanal]]. In Brazil, the company was brought in 1989 by Bruno Warner and his French filmmaker friend Marc Beauchamps. There, they had a strong presence, distributing and cão-producing famous Brazilian films such as ''City of God'' and many others, and at the time also having a contract with [[Miramax Films|Miramax]] to distribute their films. They've been inactive since 2005, when Bruno Wainer left and founded [[Downtown Filmes]]. |
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=== 1st (known) Logo (1992-1996)=== |
=== 1st (known) Logo (1992-1996)=== |
Revision as of 16:05, 24 October 2021
StephenCezar15
Captures by
Eric S., Livin', Supermarty-o and Logo Archive
Background
Lumiere Pictures was a British/French film and television company formed in 1992 as a merger between two French companies: Jean Cazes' Initial Groupe (est. 1984) and Investissements en Droits Audiovisuelles (est. 1987). Lumiere owned a substantial library of films from the Thorn EMI Screen Entertainment/Weintraub library, representing a third of all films made in the UK from the beginning of silent pictures. In 1996, it was acquired by UGC, which was acquired in turn by Canal+ that same year. Cazes then spun-off Lumiere's Los Angeles branch into a new company, Lumiere International. The Lumiere Pictures library is now owned by StudioCanal. In Brazil, the company was brought in 1989 by Bruno Warner and his French filmmaker friend Marc Beauchamps. There, they had a strong presence, distributing and cão-producing famous Brazilian films such as City of God and many others, and at the time also having a contract with Miramax to distribute their films. They've been inactive since 2005, when Bruno Wainer left and founded Downtown Filmes.
1st (known) Logo (1992-1996)
Logo: On a blue background, the word "LUMIERE" is seen in the middle of the screen, all in silver and shown in a isometric view, with the "I" being shown as a corner. Surrounding it is a golden structure with an column top until the "I", and a banner with the word "PICTURES" on it. Rays also are seen on top and bottom. The logo shines throughout.
FX/SFX: The shining.
Music/Sounds: None.
Availability: Uncommon. This logo was used on VHS releases in the USA. Appears on the Republic Pictures Home Video releases of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Amadeus, and the 1996 Director's Cut VHS of Highlander.
Editor's Note: None
2nd (known) Logo (1992-2009?)
Logo: Zooming through brown thunderstorm clouds, a yellow spotlight emerges in the middle of the screen. When we pass through the clouds, the light rises from the ground, fanning out to 4 smaller lights emerging through the corners. The camera rotates around the box, and it stops at one of the corners as the top light fans out, and some letters poke out for a bit. The corners and top light ut close before the walls around the exposed explode out, shining the entire screen in yellow light, with the faint indication of the letters "LUM ERE" on the former walls. The lights pivot to coat the entire screen in them, with the Lumiere logo exposed, but all in wine red, 2D, and doesn't have a banner with "PICTURES" under it.
FX/SFX: Wonderful CGI.
Music/Sounds: The sounds of thunder going off before transitioning into a cool jazz tune, which ends with a 2-beat choir theme when the logo reveals itself.
Music/Sounds Variants:
- On the 1997 DVD of Highlander, it uses the 1995 Republic Pictures theme. This is likely due to a strange plaster attempt.
- There exists a version of the music with more SFX of the light shining and the walls exploding.
Availability: Uncommon in European territories, but very rare in the United States. It can be seen on the 1997 DVD of Highlander (and the 1996 LaserDisc), the 1997 film Touch, and the Platinum Disc Corporation release of Somebody to Love. It is also seen on some R2/4 and StudioCanal BD releases of The Deer Hunter and Leaving Las Vegas. This logo is common in Brazil, can be seen in some Brazilian releases, as O Trapalhão e a Luz Azul, Olga, Os Normais - O Filme and Cidade de Deus.
Editor's Note: None.