Difference between revisions of "The Samuel Goldwyn Company"
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(Created page with "<div class="WPC-editableContent" id="WPC-area?cellId=The+Samuel+Goldwyn+Company&version=182&savePath=%2Fpage%2FThe%2BSamuel%2BGoldwyn%2BCompany&saveType=page"><fon...") |
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− | <div class="WPC-editableContent" id="WPC-area?cellId=The+Samuel+Goldwyn+Company&version=182&savePath=%2Fpage%2FThe%2BSamuel%2BGoldwyn%2BCompany&saveType=page"><font size="3"><font color="#ffa500"><i>L</i></font><font color="#333333"><i><font color="#ffa500">ogo description by</font> Logoboy95<br/></i></font><font color="#333333"><i><font color="#ffa500">Logo captures by</font> Logoboy95, Eric S., and V of Doom<br/></i></font><font color="#333333"><i><font color="#ffa500">Editions by</font> V of Doom, Shadeed A. Kelly, and betamaxtheflyer<br/><font color="#ffa500">Video capture courtesy of</font> Eric S. and DudeThatLogo</i><br/><br/><br/><u>Background</u>: The Samuel Goldwyn Company, Inc. was an independent film company founded in 1979 by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr., the son of the famous Hollywood mogul, Samuel Goldwyn, Sr., producing and distributing independent films. In 1991, SGC merged with [[Heritage Entertainment]] and was later reincorporated as "Samuel Goldwyn Entertainment". In </font><font color="#333333">1996, SGE</font><font color="#333333"> and its library were acquired by Metromedia and merged with [[Orion Pictures|Orion Pictures Corporation]], and was later sold to [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures|Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]] under the Tracinda Corporation in 1997, who </font><font color="#333333">currently</font><font color="#333333"> handles most of the SGE in-house productions<i>. </i>However, films SGE merely distributed are now in different hands:</font><font color="#333333"> </font><font color="#333333"><i>The Chipmunk Adventure </i>(a [[Bagdasarian Productions|Bagdasarian]] production) is now released by [[Paramount Home Entertainment|Paramount Home Media Distribution]];</font><font color="#333333"><i> Oklahoma! </i>and <i>South Pacific</i> are owned by the Rodgers & Hammerstein estate through [[20th Century Fox Film Corporation|20th Century Fox]]</font><font color="#333333">; and all of the Samuel Goldwyn, Sr.-produced films are owned by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. via the Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. Family Trust and licensed to [[Warner Bros. Pictures|Warner Bros.]] for US distribution and </font><font color="#333333">[[Miramax Films]]</font></font><font color="#333333" size="3"><font size="3"> for international distribution. Two years later, Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. founded [[Samuel Goldwyn Films]] as his new film company, which he ran up until his death on January 9, 2015. His son Tony now co-runs the company.</font><br/><br/><br/>(November 9, 1979-February 28, 1997)<br/></font> <div align="center"> <font size="1"> | + | <div class="WPC-editableContent" id="WPC-area?cellId=The+Samuel+Goldwyn+Company&version=182&savePath=%2Fpage%2FThe%2BSamuel%2BGoldwyn%2BCompany&saveType=page"><font size="3"><font color="#ffa500"><i>L</i></font><font color="#333333"><i><font color="#ffa500">ogo description by</font> Logoboy95<br/></i></font><font color="#333333"><i><font color="#ffa500">Logo captures by</font> Logoboy95, Eric S., and V of Doom<br/></i></font><font color="#333333"><i><font color="#ffa500">Editions by</font> V of Doom, Shadeed A. Kelly, and betamaxtheflyer<br/><font color="#ffa500">Video capture courtesy of</font> Eric S. and DudeThatLogo</i><br/><br/><br/><u>Background</u>: The Samuel Goldwyn Company, Inc. was an independent film company founded in 1979 by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr., the son of the famous Hollywood mogul, Samuel Goldwyn, Sr., producing and distributing independent films. In 1991, SGC merged with [[Heritage Entertainment]] and was later reincorporated as "Samuel Goldwyn Entertainment". In </font><font color="#333333">1996, SGE</font><font color="#333333"> and its library were acquired by Metromedia and merged with [[Orion Pictures|Orion Pictures Corporation]], and was later sold to [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures|Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer]] under the Tracinda Corporation in 1997, who </font><font color="#333333">currently</font><font color="#333333"> handles most of the SGE in-house productions<i>. </i>However, films SGE merely distributed are now in different hands:</font><font color="#333333"> </font><font color="#333333"><i>The Chipmunk Adventure </i>(a [[Bagdasarian Productions|Bagdasarian]] production) is now released by [[Paramount Home Entertainment|Paramount Home Media Distribution]];</font><font color="#333333"><i> Oklahoma! </i>and <i>South Pacific</i> are owned by the Rodgers & Hammerstein estate through [[20th Century Fox Film Corporation|20th Century Fox]]</font><font color="#333333">; and all of the Samuel Goldwyn, Sr.-produced films are owned by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. via the Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. Family Trust and licensed to [[Warner Bros. Pictures|Warner Bros.]] for US distribution and </font><font color="#333333">[[Miramax Films]]</font></font><font color="#333333" size="3"><font size="3"> for international distribution. Two years later, Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. founded [[Samuel Goldwyn Films]] as his new film company, which he ran up until his death on January 9, 2015. His son Tony now co-runs the company.</font><br/><br/><br/>(November 9, 1979-February 28, 1997)<br/></font> <div align="center"> <font size="1">[[File:327378a13d869e5d6cdcab310a71530c.png|200px|Samuel Goldwyn Release]][[File:4817013fef90b7a03860770a33f0b0a9.png|199px|A Samuel Goldwyn Release (1980)]]<font color="#333333">[[File:2szBr1syRFG-D7OzCC2IJQ63021.png|200px|Samuel Goldwyn Company]]</font><font color="#333333">[[File:PEgoZ96TU5MRpdRZtZjYUg15708.jpeg|200px|Samuel Goldwyn Company]][[File:EKj3X 8KaDCTkc1xr66tfg20190.jpeg|200px|The Samuel Goldwyn Company (1982, B&W)]]</font><font color="#333333"><br/></font><font color="#333333">[[File:7unACtAC 7g72WUC0dKi3A23867.jpeg|200px|The Samuel Goldwyn Company (1982, Closing)]]</font><font color="#333333">[[File:VNhTC9rDFp1NxRUrjevmlQ16733.jpeg|200px|Samuel Goldwyn Distribution]][[File:635c1b41f7b3e3e211935973d0c32a7b.jpeg|200px|The Samuel Goldwyn Company (1958/1984)]]</font><font color="#333333"><br/><iframe height="148" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/33ba54282ea7b025af4a983be3a150350d5dc2d4" width="198"></iframe><iframe height="148" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/578545437c13278743ae048b687fa45284426d88" width="198"></iframe></font></font></div><font color="#333333" size="3"> <br/><font size="3"><u>Nickname</u>: "The Signature"<br/><br/></font></font><font size="3"><font color="#333333"><u>Logo</u>: On a </font><font color="#0000ff">blue</font><font><font color="#333333"> background, we see the words "</font><i><font color="#e8e8e8">Samuel Goldwyn</font></i><font color="#333333">" writing themselves in a script font, with a line drawing itself underneath the name. T</font></font><font><font color="#333333">he text "</font><b><font color="#e8e8e8">THE SAMUEL GOLDWYN COMPANY</font></b><font color="#333333">" flies up from the bottom of the screen and positions itself below the "</font><i>Samuel Goldwyn</i><font color="#333333">" signature. Otherwise, the name fades in.</font><br/><br/></font><font color="#333333"><u>Variants</u>:<br/></font> </font><ul><li> <font size="3"><font><font color="#333333">The early variant has the words "</font><font color="#e8e8e8" face="Times"><b>A</b></font><font color="#333333">" and "</font><font color="#e6e6e6" face="Times"><b>RELEASE</b></font><font color="#333333">" appearing above and below Goldwyn's name, respectively.</font></font> </font></li><li> <font size="3"><font color="#333333">A </font><font>black</font><font color="#333333"> & </font><font color="#e6e6e6">white</font><font color="#333333"> variant of this logo appeared at the beginning of classic Goldwyn movies by Samuel Goldwyn Productions (example is the 1941 Samuel Goldwyn movie <i>The Little Foxes</i>).</font> </font></li><li> <font color="#333333" size="3">The closing variant has the text "<b>DISTRIBUTED BY</b>" above the logo. A cable print of <i>South Pacific</i> inserts this variation in the opening credits.</font></li><li><font color="#333333" size="3">The logo often appeared on a </font><font size="3">black</font><font color="#333333" size="3"> background and was seen on a re-release print of <i>Oklahoma!</i><br/></font></li></ul><font size="3"><font color="#333333"> <br/></font><font color="#333333"><u>FX/SFX</u>: The "Samuel Goldwyn" name writing itself, and the line drawing. None for the early variant. For the closing variant, depends on the movie.<br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds</u>:<br/></font></font><ul><li><font size="3"><font color="#333333">Usually silent, or uses the opening audio/music of the film.</font></font></li><li><font size="3"><font color="#333333">On some '90s films, a </font>dramatic fanfare (that is currently used for the <font color="#0066cc">[[Samuel Goldwyn Films]] </font>logo) is used.</font></li></ul><font size="3"><div><br/><u>Music/Sounds Variants</u>:</div></font><ul><li><font size="3"><font color="#333333">On the Trimark/Pioneer DVD of </font><i>La Femme Nikita</i><font color="#333333">, it uses the Gaumont fanfare (there is 7 seconds of a </font>black<font color="#333333"> screen then the logo fades in at the middle half of the fanfare).<br/></font></font></li><li><font size="3">On older prints of <i>The Care Bears Movie</i>, the logo has a whimsical, synthesized version of the first few notes of the movie's theme song, "Care-A-Lot".</font></li><li><font size="3">On YouTube prints of <i>Guys and Dolls, </i>the 1995 [[Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures|MGM]] roar was heard, due to sloppy plastering. It's currently unknown if other current prints have this plaster.</font></li></ul><font color="#333333" size="3"><u><br/></u></font><font color="#333333" size="3"><u>Availability</u>: Uncommon.</font><div><ul><li><font size="3">Can be seen on films released by this company such as <i>Mystic Pizza</i>, <i>Gregory's Girl</i>, <i>Oleanna</i>, and <i>American Buffalo</i>, among others.</font></li><li><font size="3">On most films put out by MGM DVD/BD, this is retained with the MGM lion and/or the 1996 Orion Pictures logos preceding it.</font></li><li><font size="3">On some films, such as <i>Henry V</i> and <i><font color="#333333">The Madness Of King Georg</font><font color="#333333">e</font></i><font color="#333333">, this is plastered by the 1996 Orion Pictures logo; while on some DVDs, such <i>Eat Drink Man Woman</i>, </font><font color="#333333"><i>Love Is All There Is</i></font><font color="#333333">, <i>Rock-a-Doodle</i><i>,</i> and <i>The Care Bears Movie</i>, it is replaced with the 2001 MGM lion.</font></font></li><li><font size="3">On some of their output released through Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, with examples being the Spanish films <i>Matador</i> and <i>Women On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown</i>, it is plastered with the Sony Pictures Classics logo.</font></li><li><font size="3">This was seen on the original VHS release of <font color="#333333"><i>The Chipmunk Adventure</i>, but most current releases (including the 1998 Universal VHS, 2007 Paramount and 2014 Bagdasarian DVD & BD) omit this logo and go into the opening scene.</font></font></li><li><font size="3">This was also seen on earlier international prints of <i>Two Moon Junction</i>, and makes an appearance on MST3K broadcast of <i>Laserblast</i> as the MST3K gang are entering the theater; It also appears on the Cult Video/Full Moon VHS release of the aforementioned film after the Media Home Entertainment logo.</font></li><li><font size="3">The black & white variant of this logo can be found on <i>The Little Foxes</i> and other black & white films of the era.</font></li><li><font size="3">It can be also seen on re-issues of <i>Oklahoma!</i><i> </i>and <i>South Pacific</i>; the 1990 VHS of the latter film shows the logo twice, before and at the end of the overture, but the 1994 and 1999 VHS releases cut the logo out entirely.</font></li><li><font size="3">This can be found on the 1999 HBO Video DVD release of <i>Rock-a-Doodle</i>.</font></li><li><font size="3">This also may be seen on foreign prints of <i>Witchboard</i>, <i>Getting Even</i> (AKA: <i>Hostage: Dallas</i>), <i>3:15 - Moment of Truth</i>, <i>Lady in White</i>, and <i>The Understudy: Graveyard Shift II</i>, among possible others, as Samuel Goldwyn held international distribution rights for those films. It's unknown if this appears the theatrical release of <i>Swan Lake</i>.</font></li></ul></div><br/></div> |
Latest revision as of 16:35, 3 November 2020
Logo description by Logoboy95
Logo captures by Logoboy95, Eric S., and V of Doom
Editions by V of Doom, Shadeed A. Kelly, and betamaxtheflyer
Video capture courtesy of Eric S. and DudeThatLogo
Background: The Samuel Goldwyn Company, Inc. was an independent film company founded in 1979 by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr., the son of the famous Hollywood mogul, Samuel Goldwyn, Sr., producing and distributing independent films. In 1991, SGC merged with Heritage Entertainment and was later reincorporated as "Samuel Goldwyn Entertainment". In 1996, SGE and its library were acquired by Metromedia and merged with Orion Pictures Corporation, and was later sold to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer under the Tracinda Corporation in 1997, who currently handles most of the SGE in-house productions. However, films SGE merely distributed are now in different hands: The Chipmunk Adventure (a Bagdasarian production) is now released by Paramount Home Media Distribution; Oklahoma! and South Pacific are owned by the Rodgers & Hammerstein estate through 20th Century Fox; and all of the Samuel Goldwyn, Sr.-produced films are owned by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. via the Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. Family Trust and licensed to Warner Bros. for US distribution and Miramax Films for international distribution. Two years later, Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. founded Samuel Goldwyn Films as his new film company, which he ran up until his death on January 9, 2015. His son Tony now co-runs the company.
(November 9, 1979-February 28, 1997)
<iframe height="148" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/33ba54282ea7b025af4a983be3a150350d5dc2d4" width="198"></iframe><iframe height="148" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/578545437c13278743ae048b687fa45284426d88" width="198"></iframe>
Nickname: "The Signature"
Logo: On a blue background, we see the words "Samuel Goldwyn" writing themselves in a script font, with a line drawing itself underneath the name. The text "THE SAMUEL GOLDWYN COMPANY" flies up from the bottom of the screen and positions itself below the "Samuel Goldwyn" signature. Otherwise, the name fades in.
Variants:
FX/SFX: The "Samuel Goldwyn" name writing itself, and the line drawing. None for the early variant. For the closing variant, depends on the movie.
Music/Sounds:
Music/Sounds Variants:
Availability: Uncommon.
Logo captures by Logoboy95, Eric S., and V of Doom
Editions by V of Doom, Shadeed A. Kelly, and betamaxtheflyer
Video capture courtesy of Eric S. and DudeThatLogo
Background: The Samuel Goldwyn Company, Inc. was an independent film company founded in 1979 by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr., the son of the famous Hollywood mogul, Samuel Goldwyn, Sr., producing and distributing independent films. In 1991, SGC merged with Heritage Entertainment and was later reincorporated as "Samuel Goldwyn Entertainment". In 1996, SGE and its library were acquired by Metromedia and merged with Orion Pictures Corporation, and was later sold to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer under the Tracinda Corporation in 1997, who currently handles most of the SGE in-house productions. However, films SGE merely distributed are now in different hands: The Chipmunk Adventure (a Bagdasarian production) is now released by Paramount Home Media Distribution; Oklahoma! and South Pacific are owned by the Rodgers & Hammerstein estate through 20th Century Fox; and all of the Samuel Goldwyn, Sr.-produced films are owned by Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. via the Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. Family Trust and licensed to Warner Bros. for US distribution and Miramax Films for international distribution. Two years later, Samuel Goldwyn, Jr. founded Samuel Goldwyn Films as his new film company, which he ran up until his death on January 9, 2015. His son Tony now co-runs the company.
(November 9, 1979-February 28, 1997)
<iframe height="148" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/33ba54282ea7b025af4a983be3a150350d5dc2d4" width="198"></iframe><iframe height="148" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/578545437c13278743ae048b687fa45284426d88" width="198"></iframe>
Nickname: "The Signature"
Logo: On a blue background, we see the words "Samuel Goldwyn" writing themselves in a script font, with a line drawing itself underneath the name. The text "THE SAMUEL GOLDWYN COMPANY" flies up from the bottom of the screen and positions itself below the "Samuel Goldwyn" signature. Otherwise, the name fades in.
Variants:
- The early variant has the words "A" and "RELEASE" appearing above and below Goldwyn's name, respectively.
- A black & white variant of this logo appeared at the beginning of classic Goldwyn movies by Samuel Goldwyn Productions (example is the 1941 Samuel Goldwyn movie The Little Foxes).
- The closing variant has the text "DISTRIBUTED BY" above the logo. A cable print of South Pacific inserts this variation in the opening credits.
- The logo often appeared on a black background and was seen on a re-release print of Oklahoma!
FX/SFX: The "Samuel Goldwyn" name writing itself, and the line drawing. None for the early variant. For the closing variant, depends on the movie.
Music/Sounds:
- Usually silent, or uses the opening audio/music of the film.
- On some '90s films, a dramatic fanfare (that is currently used for the Samuel Goldwyn Films logo) is used.
Music/Sounds Variants:
- On the Trimark/Pioneer DVD of La Femme Nikita, it uses the Gaumont fanfare (there is 7 seconds of a black screen then the logo fades in at the middle half of the fanfare).
- On older prints of The Care Bears Movie, the logo has a whimsical, synthesized version of the first few notes of the movie's theme song, "Care-A-Lot".
- On YouTube prints of Guys and Dolls, the 1995 MGM roar was heard, due to sloppy plastering. It's currently unknown if other current prints have this plaster.
Availability: Uncommon.
- Can be seen on films released by this company such as Mystic Pizza, Gregory's Girl, Oleanna, and American Buffalo, among others.
- On most films put out by MGM DVD/BD, this is retained with the MGM lion and/or the 1996 Orion Pictures logos preceding it.
- On some films, such as Henry V and The Madness Of King George, this is plastered by the 1996 Orion Pictures logo; while on some DVDs, such Eat Drink Man Woman, Love Is All There Is, Rock-a-Doodle, and The Care Bears Movie, it is replaced with the 2001 MGM lion.
- On some of their output released through Sony Pictures Home Entertainment, with examples being the Spanish films Matador and Women On The Verge Of A Nervous Breakdown, it is plastered with the Sony Pictures Classics logo.
- This was seen on the original VHS release of The Chipmunk Adventure, but most current releases (including the 1998 Universal VHS, 2007 Paramount and 2014 Bagdasarian DVD & BD) omit this logo and go into the opening scene.
- This was also seen on earlier international prints of Two Moon Junction, and makes an appearance on MST3K broadcast of Laserblast as the MST3K gang are entering the theater; It also appears on the Cult Video/Full Moon VHS release of the aforementioned film after the Media Home Entertainment logo.
- The black & white variant of this logo can be found on The Little Foxes and other black & white films of the era.
- It can be also seen on re-issues of Oklahoma! and South Pacific; the 1990 VHS of the latter film shows the logo twice, before and at the end of the overture, but the 1994 and 1999 VHS releases cut the logo out entirely.
- This can be found on the 1999 HBO Video DVD release of Rock-a-Doodle.
- This also may be seen on foreign prints of Witchboard, Getting Even (AKA: Hostage: Dallas), 3:15 - Moment of Truth, Lady in White, and The Understudy: Graveyard Shift II, among possible others, as Samuel Goldwyn held international distribution rights for those films. It's unknown if this appears the theatrical release of Swan Lake.