MGM Kids

Background
MGM Kids was a kids and family label of MGM Home Entertainment. It was founded in 1988 as "MGM/UA Family Classics" and was rebranded "MGM/UA Family Entertainment" in 1994, "MGM Family Entertainment" in 1998, and "MGM Kids" in 2003. The label was discontinued in 2008 and was folded into MGM Home Entertainment.

1st Logo (1995-1998)
Nicknames: "Leo's Family", "Leo the Lion", "Leo and the Cubs"

Logo: The standard MGM logo is posed against a light blue shaded background, but without "TRADE MARK", and lion cubs replace the drama mask. We see Leo inside a filmstrip circle with four filmstrips. The text "MGM/UA FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT", with two lines above and below the name, is at the bottom of the cubs. Leo roars twice.

Variants:
 * There is a high-quality golden variant with no animation used in some games. The lines and text are in white.
 * On All Dogs Go To Heaven Activity Center and Babes in Toyland, the frame rate of MGM lion roaring is choppy.
 * Some trailers have the logo shortened, using the lion's first roar.

FX/SFX: Leo roaring.

Music/Sounds: Leo's 1994 roar. However on the 2nd roar, it's the same first roar, only edited.

Music/Sounds Variant: On the PC software titles such as Babes in Toyland, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang's Adventure in Tinker Town and All Dogs Go To Heaven Activity Center, the 1995 roar is used. Although Chitty Chitty Bang Bang's Adventure in Tinker Town has the roar in a lower tone.

Availability: Uncommon, found on material released under the MGM/UA Family Entertainment label.
 * One example of this being the 1995 VHS release of The Pebble and the Penguin.
 * Also survives on some interactive family-oriented games based on some cartoon movies such as All Dogs Go To Heaven Activity Center.
 * Was also seen on a 1998 print of The Princess Bride as well as the VHS releases of All Dogs Go To Heaven 2 and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

Editor's Note: None.

2nd Logo (1998-2003)
Nicknames: "Leo's Family Returns", "Leo the Lion II", "Leo and the Cubs II"

Logo: We have the same MGM lion and the cubs as before, inside a half dark teal oval-cut on an orange shaded background. Underneath the lion is a golden drama mask. Above the logo is a golden engraved bar that reads "MGM FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT".

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: The ending of the promo.

Availability: This was only used for promos for VHS's or DVDs released under the label or as a print logo on them. As for on-screen, they'll use ether the previous logo or the 1998 MGM Home Entertainment/1998 MGM DVD logo.

Editor's Note: None.

3rd Logo (2003-2008)
Nicknames: "Young Leo", "Little Leo", "The MGM Kids Cub", "Leo Jr."

Logo: On a blue background we see the white words "MGM KIDS" zooming out on a red shadow effect zooming out to the bottom of the screen. We see a cub replacing Leo, inside a golden filmstrip circle, which starts growling and roaring and pushes the name. "MGM KIDS" starts wiggling twice. The cub roars again and the last M in MGM moves lightly, the right side of the ribbon then pushes back the M to it's normal place.

Trivia: Unlike the movie logo, the lion depicted here is Leo Jr.

FX/SFX: The cub roaring and wiggling of the text.

Music/Sounds: A cheerful theme with a kid giggling and Leo Jr. roaring.

Availability: Not used anymore since MGM Kids was folded into MGM Home Entertainment, but still somewhat easy to find.
 * Like with the previous two logos, it can be seen at the end of some trailers of material that was released under the label.
 * On actual material, this can be found on early DVD releases of All Dogs Go to Heaven and All Dogs Go to Heaven 2. Some DVD releases of Hello Kitty's Furry Tale Theater may have this also. It also appeared on a few Hi-5 US releases.
 * It was also seen on the DVD release of The Adventures of the American Rabbit, Stellaluna, as well as the VHS and DVD releases of It's A Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie and Christmas Carol: The Movie.
 * European DVD releases of MGM Kids products don't this logo, and just use the standard MGM DVD logo. Australian releases, however do have it.

Editor's Note: None.