General Cinema Corporation Feature Presentation IDs

Logo descriptions by Kris Starring, Gerald Fogg, TheMisterFree Revisions by CooleyBoy10

1st (known) Open (1964-1980) General Cinema Corporation - CLG WikiGeneral Cinema Corporation (1964?-1980)General Cinema Corporation - CLG Wiki

Nicknames: "Projector", "'60s GCC", "Kaleidoscopic Projector"

Logo: On a black background, we see a white translucent GCC logo: an abstract projector made out of the letter G, and two C's representing film reels above and below the G to the slightly aligned to the right. A jazzy drumbeat begins and the film reels (the C's) begin to rotate, as the projector begins to spool out a line of dots. A harpsichord riff briefly cuts in, and the word "GENERAL" comes out of the projector, followed by more dots. The musical trade-off repeats two more times, with the words "CINEMA" and "CORPORATION" spooling out of the projector along with the dots. Then, after "CORPORATION," the brushes finally take it home, allowing the projector enough time to spool out the entire line of dots as "FEATURE PRESENTATION" appears with the final hit of the drum.

Variants: In 1970, the background was changed from black to a kaleidoscopic purple/red, resembling the opening credits to Family Affair. There was another variant of this opening with a blue background, and a plain purple background.

FX/SFX: The film reels rotating and the projectors spooling out the dots that morphed into the titles. This snipe was produced by Pike Productions of Newport, Rhode Island.

Cheesy Factor: The harpsichord break with the company's name is very rough, and the kaleidoscopic background in the 1970 re-doing is an obvious cliche of the '70s, looking more like someone wadded up some purple-colored Saran wrap and stuck it on there.

Music/Sounds: A snazzy jazz beat established on a snare drum with brushes, occasionally interrupted on the off-beat by a catchy harpsichord riff. The drums give the feel of the sound a projector makes. A few double bass notes are also heard on the third harpsichord riff.

Availability: Extinct. It appeared only in General Cinema theaters before the start of a movie or trailers during the '60s and '70s.

Scare Factor: Low to medium. The harpsichord riff and psychedelic graphic effects could catch some off guard, but this is a favorite of many.

2nd Open (1980-1986) General Cinema Corporation (1980-1986)

Nicknames: “Projector 2.0”, “80s GCC”, “Blue Projector”

Logo: On a background of blue spotlights, we see the GCC Projector logo from the 1st open at the left of the screen. A star traces the logo ending with a star that flashes on the projector-end of the "G". The C's begin to rotate as the G puts out a line with lens flares that travel to the right, culminating in a bright flash of light which brings forth “GENERAL CINEMA THEATRES”. A byline then fades in at the bottom of the screen (centered under the name): “A SUBSIDIARY OF GENERAL CINEMA CORPORATION”. The company name and byline fade out as a star sparkles on the projector and another line and lens flares is projected which flashes into “FEATURE PRESENTATION”. A star appears on the projector for the last time before the C's stop and a lens flare travels across “FEATURE PRESENTATION”.

FX/SFX: Now this is how you update a logo! The animation and lighting effects make up for a suitable successor to the original Projector.

Music/Sounds: A flute/brass rendition of the first music mixed with a Rhodes piano. Chimes are heard whenever a star shines. Also, like in the first logo, the animation is supported by reverberated percussion that simulates the sound of a projector.

Availability: Extinct. It was only used in General Cinema theaters back in the early '80s.

Scare Factor: Low. The music is much more soothing than the first logo, plus the graphics are less bizarre than its predecessor.

3rd Open (1986-1995) General Cinema Corporation - CLG Wiki

Nicknames: “GCC in the Sky”

Logo: We see some time-lapsed clouds in the sky. A blue circle with the gold letters “GCC” inside (arranged like the old Projector logo but in a different, more modern typeface) appears in CGI. The screen fades to night, and the words “General Cinema” appear at the bottom in a gold Century Gothic. The logo and company name fade out to reveal the words “Feature Presentation”.

FX/SFX: The sky, which is live-action, was shot from Hawaii, which took the film crew six days just to get right.

Music/Sounds: Some ethereal synth music that culminates into a 6-note fanfare with timpani drums and a choir, which fades out with the logo.

Availability: Once again, extinct, as it only appeared in theaters (though there are some accounts that this logo, but with the next logo's "CandyBand" policy trailer instead of this logo's "Space Candy" policy trailer, showed up in some theaters as late as 1995).

Scare Factor: Low. It could get high in the parts with the GCC logo's background becoming dark, but other than that this is a nice open.

4th Open (1993-1997)

Nicknames: “Searchlights", “GCC Moon”, “Moon and Searchlights”, “Moon Of Boredom”

Logo: We zoom out from the ground as streaks of light fly by. We then see a horizon at night, and the light rays are streaking towards a “sun” that rises and splits into three spotlights. The spotlights project the letters “GCC” into the sky, then onto a moon which comes fromGeneral Cinema Corporation (1993-1997) the top-left. The moon turns into the GCC logo, which slowly rotates to the right, and “General Cinema” appears at the bottom in the same font as the previous logo, followed by “Feature Presentation.”

FX/SFX: The CGI light effects; all the work of Industrial Light & Magic along with the "CandyBand" policy trailers that were packaged with this opener as well as the next.

Cheesy Factor: Rather simple animation by ILM standards. They must have put most of their energy in the "CandyBand" trailers and the "Coming Attractions" variant rather than the actual Feature Presentation snipe. Although the previous FP animation was rather simple as well, at least the music was more fitting as this sounds more like music you'd find in Microsoft PowerPoint.

Music/Sounds: Some dreamy synth music, a slight choir, a few backwards-played "whoosh" noises, and a cymbal hit when the searchlights activate, followed by a fanfare with four chime-esque noises when the "GCC" letters are projected, and a fast electronic drum beat. Very corporate sounding and not so majestic as would be appropriate for a theater snipe.

Availability: Extinct, as usual.

Scare Factor: None. It's more boring than anything. Fortunately, this only lasted a short period of time, and what they came up with after this was hundreds of times better.

5th Open (1997-2002) General Cinema final logo

Nicknames: "City Searchlights", “Searchlights 2.0”, “Searchlights Redux”

Logo: Transitioning out from Popcorn Bob in the preceding "CandyBand '97" trailer, we fly out from some shrubs on a mountain at night to see an aerial view of a city very much like LA illuminated with lights. In the center of the city there are some searchlights moving back and forth, at some sort of circular structure, which we fly towards. We pan upwards to see the searchlights merge into a glowing blue, smoky circle over a cloudy night sky. The spotlights fade out leaving a blue circle with the General Cinema logo from before, in white. "General Cinema" fades in underneath in gold for a brief moment, followed the words "Feature Presentation" which are in gold as well.

Variant: One variant does not begin with Popcorn Bob. This appeared in theaters known for using the first "CandyBand" trailer, rather than the 1997 rearrangement.

FX/SFX: The searchlights, the flight over the city, and the clouds moving, all very decent CGI from ILM and much better than the previous logo. A little bit reminiscent of the Showtime feature presentation bumper from the early '80s.

Music/Sounds: A somber oboe theme progressing into a majestic string piece, ending in a timpani hit when the words "Feature Presentation" appear.

Availability: Extinct, seeing that it was only used in theaters. This opening was used alongside the infamous "CandyBand" trailers that advertised General Cinema's concession stands. General Cinema continued to use this and those additional trailers until the bitter end in March 2002 when AMC Theaters, Inc. bought the chain after its crippling bankruptcy in 2000.

Scare Factor: Low. The timpani hit at the end may get to some, but this was a great end to a company with a long line of memorable opening logos.