Difference between revisions of "Guild Home Video (UK)"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Created page with "<div class="WPC-editableContent" id="WPC-area?cellId=Guild+Home+Video+%28UK%29&version=136&savePath=%2Fpage%2FGuild%2BHome%2BVideo%2B%2528UK%2529&saveType=page"><f...") |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
− | <div class="WPC-editableContent" id="WPC-area?cellId=Guild+Home+Video+%28UK%29&version=136&savePath=%2Fpage%2FGuild%2BHome%2BVideo%2B%2528UK%2529&saveType=page"><font size="3"><i><font color="#ffa500">Logo captures by</font> Eric S.<br/><font color="#ffa500">Video captures courtesy of</font> swedishintros, rarevideosUK, dylanman10, CannonFilms, dylanstonepark, Cesar Blanco, killianm2,</i><i> Eric S and rj4712.<br/></i><br/><u>Background</u>: Guild Home Video was one of the earliest and most successful independent video companies in the United Kingdom, formed in 1979. In its early years, Guild was known for the high quality of their releases and having a large catalog compared to other companies of the time, and being a distributor for other companies' titles helped them survive the 1984 Video Recordings Act, which caused many other video companies at the time to go out of business. Guild remained strong in the 1990s when video became dominated more by major studios as opposed to indie labels until 1996, when both Guild Home Video and [[Guild Film Distribution (UK)|Guild Film Distribution]] merged with <a href="/page/Path%C3%A9+%28France%29" target="_self">Path</a></font><font size="3"><a href="/page/Path%C3%A9+%28France%29" target="_self"><font size="3">é</font></a> to form <a href="/page/Guild+Path%C3%A9+Cinema+%28UK%29" target="_self">Guild Path</a></font><font size="3"><a href="/page/Guild+Path%C3%A9+Cinema+%28UK%29" target="_self"><font size="3">é</font> Cinema</a>. In 1998, Guild Pathé Cinema was renamed to Pathé Distribution, thus ending the Guild name for good.<br/><br/>1st Logo<br/>(1980-1983)<br/> </font><div align="center"> <font size="3"> | + | <div class="WPC-editableContent" id="WPC-area?cellId=Guild+Home+Video+%28UK%29&version=136&savePath=%2Fpage%2FGuild%2BHome%2BVideo%2B%2528UK%2529&saveType=page"><font size="3"><i><font color="#ffa500">Logo captures by</font> Eric S.<br/><font color="#ffa500">Video captures courtesy of</font> swedishintros, rarevideosUK, dylanman10, CannonFilms, dylanstonepark, Cesar Blanco, killianm2,</i><i> Eric S and rj4712.<br/></i><br/><u>Background</u>: Guild Home Video was one of the earliest and most successful independent video companies in the United Kingdom, formed in 1979. In its early years, Guild was known for the high quality of their releases and having a large catalog compared to other companies of the time, and being a distributor for other companies' titles helped them survive the 1984 Video Recordings Act, which caused many other video companies at the time to go out of business. Guild remained strong in the 1990s when video became dominated more by major studios as opposed to indie labels until 1996, when both Guild Home Video and [[Guild Film Distribution (UK)|Guild Film Distribution]] merged with <a href="/page/Path%C3%A9+%28France%29" target="_self">Path</a></font><font size="3"><a href="/page/Path%C3%A9+%28France%29" target="_self"><font size="3">é</font></a> to form <a href="/page/Guild+Path%C3%A9+Cinema+%28UK%29" target="_self">Guild Path</a></font><font size="3"><a href="/page/Guild+Path%C3%A9+Cinema+%28UK%29" target="_self"><font size="3">é</font> Cinema</a>. In 1998, Guild Pathé Cinema was renamed to Pathé Distribution, thus ending the Guild name for good.<br/><br/>1st Logo<br/>(1980-1983)<br/> </font><div align="center"> <font size="3">[[File:YbB0rs-Gtjx2inPQB0GoUQ17622.jpeg|209px|Guild Home Video - CLG Wiki]][[File:XZg1opbAsoqBsz7IywgBmQ10357.jpeg|238px|Guild Home Video [VIA] logo]]<br/><iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/769fe775ef8307572839a4587dd2be2d2df07ef5" width="223"></iframe><iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/bea1b61c9e5f02a8f051b0c3dcc81c80ca324b6a" width="223"></iframe><br/></font><div align="left"><font size="3"><u><br/>Nicknames</u>: "The Hexagon G", "G Over Square & TV Tube"<u><br/><br/></u></font></div><div align="left"><font size="3"><u>Logo</u><font color="#333333">: On a dark blue background, a </font><font color="#e8c500">gold-yellow</font><font color="#333333">, hexagon-formed "</font><font color="#e8c500">G</font><font color="#333333">" with a square underneath it zooms in downward, a la RKO's 1981 logo, leaving behind a residue trail. When it gets to the center, the "</font><font color="#e8c500">G</font><font color="#333333">" and the square turn from solid to segmented, and a line draws what looks like a TV tube, surrounding it. Both parts of the logo zoom in, and we quickly fade to the same logo, only smaller, and with "</font><font color="#e8c500" face="Helvetica">G</font><font color="#e8c500" face="Helvetica">UILD HOME VIDEO presents</font><font color="#333333">" (in a </font><font color="#e8c500">yellow</font><font color="#333333"> Helvetica font) underneath. </font></font></div></div><font size="3"><br/><u>Variant</u><font color="#333333">: A rare still variant with "</font><i><font color="#e8c500" face="Helvetica">video is alive – live with it</font></i><font color="#333333">" shown below was used at the end of Guild tapes.</font><br/><br/><u>FX/SFX</u><font color="#333333">: Early computer graphics.</font><br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds</u><font color="#333333">: A twinkling synth-xylophone/flute/clarinet tune, which sounds similar to the beginning of the song "Tubular Bells" by Mike Oldfield (most famously used in </font><i>The Exorcist</i>)<font color="#333333">.</font><br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds Variant</u><font color="#333333">: On the "</font><i><font color="#e8c500" face="Helvetica">video is alive – live with it</font></i><font color="#333333">" variant, it's silent.</font><br/><br/><u>Availability</u><font color="#333333">: On UK tapes of Guild releases from that era, including </font><i>Baron Blood</i><i> </i><font color="#333333">and </font><i>Scanners</i><font color="#333333">.</font></font><div><font size="3"><br/><u>Editor's Note</u>: None.<br/></font><font size="3"><br/><br/><br/>2nd Logo<br/>(1983-1986)<br/> </font><div align="center"> <font size="3">[[File:XKx0kWuxy3vRDXU9WsAkCw23519.jpeg|240px|Guild Home Video - CLG Wiki]]<i><br/></i></font></div><div align="center"><font size="3"><iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/a797093d6967c37dea994870fdf4d2b0ce77cce3" width="220"></iframe><iframe frameborder="0" height="165" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/05ea7f98026796c081ce837bee57ca58c4c9374a" width="221"></iframe><iframe frameborder="0" height="165" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/f2fa625a24f4439763c6f66fc5818b5e0532102f" width="221"></iframe><br/></font><div align="left"><font size="3"><u><br/>Nickname</u>: "The Hexagon G II", "G Over Square & TV Tube II", "The Tick"<br/><br/></font></div></div><font size="3"><u>Logo</u>: In the top-left corner of a black background, we see a bright light flashing before our eyes. The light reveals the same "G Over Square" logo, but colored <font color="#0000ff">cerulean</font>. Again, the TV tube is drawn around the logo, but underneath a light draws a teal/dark pink line that starts downward, then upward, and then straight. When the line is finished, another lights reveals the words "Guild Home Video" above the line, and below it another reveals "Quality Video Entertainment". The logo then sparkles a bit. <br/><br/><u>Variant</u>: A variant seen at the end of tapes starts with the name flashing in. <br/><br/><u>FX/SFX</u>: The lights bringing forth all parts of the logo. It may be early CGI, but it's not too bad.<br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds</u>: A weird synth tune in the beginning, then a synth-orchestra tune at the end.<br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variant</u>: Sometimes, this is accompanied by an announcer saying "Before you enjoy our main feature, here's a trailer from another major release from Guild, which is available at your local stockist now.". Oddly, the announcer has an American accent, despite Guild being a British distributor (the same announcer is heard in Guild's trailers, as well)!<br/><br/><u>Availability</u>: Hard to find. Check an old VHS or Beta PAL tape for this logo. An example is the UK pre-cert release of <i>Cujo. </i>It is also seen on the first<i> Thomas & Friends</i> tapes. Some prints use the Central Video or The Video Collection logos.<br/><br/><u>Editor's Note</u>: None.<br/><br/><br/><br/>3rd Logo<br/>(1986-1989)<br/></font><div align="center"> </div><font size="3"><br/></font><div align="center">[[File:7PSjFYI6b4xUwy7tziZ6TA11773.jpeg|275px|Guild Home Video (1985)]][[File:9793cef9bebe140c498f306dc87052db.png|241px|Guild]]</div><div align="center"><font size="3"><iframe frameborder="0" height="183" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/91d9bf432b9566c90ed6b4c03c60e1212d4c867f" width="244"></iframe></font></div><font size="3"><u><br/>Nicknames</u>: "The Hexagon G III"<br/><br/><u>Logo</u>: On a <font color="#0000ff">blue</font> background, <font color="#ffa500">orange </font>bar segments fly in from the left and right of the screen, while they sparkle and zoom out. Eventually, the bars start forming the Guild logo (without the TV tube and the square on the bottom). When the logo is fully formed, this fades in below the logo— <br/><br/> </font><div align="center"> <font color="#333333" size="3">GUILD</font></div> <div align="center"> <font size="3"><font color="#333333">Home Video</font><br/> </font><div align="left"> <font size="3">in white.</font></div></div><font size="3"> <br/><u>FX/SFX</u>: Great animation.<br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds</u>: A synth note is held throughout, with a synth bass line that speeds up slightly near the end, followed by a synth fanfare. A female chorus hums during this section, ending in them shouting "Go Guild!" (hence the nickname; it's hard to tell because the chorus is rather muffled).<br/><br/><u>Availability</u>: Rare given its nearly 4-year lifespan. Appears on releases such as <i>Roses are For the Rich </i>and <i>Action Jackson</i>.<br/><br/><u>Editor's Note</u>: None.<br/><br/><br/><br/>4th Logo<br/>(1987-1994)<br/><br/><br/></font><div align="center"> <font size="3">[[File:DhUQf6TKaUwgaHGQ3lAoSw20655.jpeg|243px|Guild Home Video (1993)]]<iframe frameborder="0" height="186" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/863d6ddf2d74d46f34243e73a41bf46f8f3d9f9f" width="247"></iframe></font></div> <div align="center"> </div><font size="3"><u> <br/>Nicknames</u>: "The Hexagon G IV", "CGI G"<br/><u><br/>Logo</u>: Set on a white background, many of the rectangular parts of the Guild "G" fly in all directions. When two parts of the G meet in the middle later on, it zooms out, and extra rectangles that make the stem of the "G" fly in. "GUILD Home Video" fades in below, and the logo shines with a "wipe" effect.<br/><br/><u>FX/SFX</u>: Also good CGI for the 1980s.<br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds</u>: An upbeat synthesizer tune.<br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds Variant</u>: Rental copies of <i>The Wizard </i>have the logo music start before the logo actually appears, due to an error.<br/><br/><u>Availability</u>: More recent and easier to find than the previous logos, but still hard to find. Seen on the 4Front Video re-release of <i>First Blood</i>, and the original rental releases of <i>The Wizard </i>and <i>Total Recall</i>.<br/><br/><u>Editor's Note</u>: None.<br/><br/><br/><br/>5th Logo<br/>(1988-1994)</font></div><div><font size="3"><br/> </font><div align="center"><font size="3">[[File:RoIOmfO-Dfz2N3V4xR7Pwg8345.jpeg|229px|Guild Home Video (1988-1994)]][[File:D7f84781a7c15cbb2131b4dfbe6aca3e.png|215px|Guild Home Video (1988)]][[File:JSWSpyeL403xzjVkLMHB-Q15459.jpeg|283px|Guild Home Video ( 10 Anniversary ) 1990]]</font></div><div align="center"><iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/b90854f5a284176993e4da7be98a6051600a12a9" width="296"></iframe><font size="3"><iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/04a9c20c35f04d00f3741f52f787e7cff1c42489" width="222"></iframe></font></div><div align="left"><font size="3"><u><br/>Nicknames</u>: "The Hexagon G V", "Neon Theater"<br/></font></div><font size="3"><u><br/>Logo</u>:</font></div><div><ul><li><font size="3"><u>Before Trailers</u>: On a black background, we see a glowing outline of a movie theater with little flashing lights inside. Two sets of red and yellow light streaks slide up, the last set flashing and bringing forth a white Guild Home Video logo. The streaks zoom out to outline the theater in blue with a ticket box in the front, little light blue "chaser" light windows on the sides, yellow "<<<>>>" lights on the marquee sides, pinkish lights surrounding the center of the marquee, and more yellow lights on the top.</font></li><li><u>After Trailers</u><font color="#333333" face="Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">: Same as above, but "</font><font color="#ffff00" face="Times">SOLID GUILD</font><font face="Arial">", in golden yellow, zooms out like a roller coaster out of the door. All, except the text in gold, fades into blue.</font></li></ul><font size="3"><u>Variant</u>:</font>In 1990, a 10th anniversary variant was used, which has the theatre fade out and the Guild logo zoom forth and turn gold. A number 10 at the top surrounded by a round banner with stars and the years "1980" and "1990" on the sides fade in. "<b><font face="Times">TEN YEARS OF"</font></b> and "<font face="Times"><b>independence</b></font>" are shown below. The logo shines with a few pings.</div><div><font size="3"><br/><u>FX/SFX</u>: The neon effects and the obvious chyron effects of the Guild logo.<br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds</u>: Breaking Glass (One) by James Kaleth and Richard Thomas with whooshes from the lasers, along with an overly excited announcer saying "Introducing future releases from Guild Home Video!" or "Look out for these and other great new releases from Guild at your local video library!". The first variant uses the beginning, while the other two use the end of the track.<br/><br/><u>Availability</u>: Used concurrently with the 4th logo to introduce movie trailers, and used quite frequently as a result. Seen on the original rental release of <i>The Wizard</i>.<br/><br/><u>Editor's Note</u>: None.<br/><br/><br/>6th Logo<br/>(1993-1997)<br/></font><div align="center"> <div align="left"> <font size="3"><u><br/></u><br/></font><div align="center"> <font size="3">[[File:Nz7DcIgNSK-USDyJWCoYjQ28620.jpeg|247px|Guild Home Video - CLG Wiki]]<iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/4f06a3e69aeaa6cdb08756763ec14eda3781b43e" width="223"></iframe></font></div><font size="3"><u><br/>Nicknames</u><font face="Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">: "The Hexagon G VI", "The Director's Chair"</font><br/><u><br/>Logo</u><font face="Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif"><font color="#333333">: Against a black background, we see a director's chair in a </font><font color="#0000ff">blue</font><font color="#333333"> spotlight. The camera pans around the chair, and both parts of the Guild logo slide from both sides of the screen in a tilted position, then "</font></font><b><font face="Garamond">GUILD</font></b><font face="Arial, Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">" appears underneath when we zoom into the chair. </font><br/></font></div></div><font size="3"> <br/><u>FX/SFX</u>: Top-notch CGI for the early '90s.<br/><br/><u>Music/Sounds</u>: A mystical pan-flute tune, complete with a synth whoosh and an orchestra at the end.<br/><br/><u>Availability</u>: Rare. It appears on VHS tapes of later films that Guild released until their merger with Pathé in 1997, such as the re-release of <i>Universal Soldier, Night Trap, James and the Giant Peach, Stargate, Army Of Darkness, Matinee</i>, and <i>Serial Mom</i>. This logo also appeared theatrically with Guild Film Distribution releases from 1993 until the Pathé merger, with films including <i>James and the Giant Peach.</i><br/><u><br/>Editor's Note</u>: None.<br/></font></div><br/></div> |
Latest revision as of 18:09, 3 November 2020
Logo captures by Eric S.
Video captures courtesy of swedishintros, rarevideosUK, dylanman10, CannonFilms, dylanstonepark, Cesar Blanco, killianm2, Eric S and rj4712.
Background: Guild Home Video was one of the earliest and most successful independent video companies in the United Kingdom, formed in 1979. In its early years, Guild was known for the high quality of their releases and having a large catalog compared to other companies of the time, and being a distributor for other companies' titles helped them survive the 1984 Video Recordings Act, which caused many other video companies at the time to go out of business. Guild remained strong in the 1990s when video became dominated more by major studios as opposed to indie labels until 1996, when both Guild Home Video and Guild Film Distribution merged with <a href="/page/Path%C3%A9+%28France%29" target="_self">Path</a><a href="/page/Path%C3%A9+%28France%29" target="_self">é</a> to form <a href="/page/Guild+Path%C3%A9+Cinema+%28UK%29" target="_self">Guild Path</a><a href="/page/Guild+Path%C3%A9+Cinema+%28UK%29" target="_self">é Cinema</a>. In 1998, Guild Pathé Cinema was renamed to Pathé Distribution, thus ending the Guild name for good.
1st Logo
(1980-1983)
<iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/769fe775ef8307572839a4587dd2be2d2df07ef5" width="223"></iframe><iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/bea1b61c9e5f02a8f051b0c3dcc81c80ca324b6a" width="223"></iframe>
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G", "G Over Square & TV Tube"
Variant: A rare still variant with "video is alive – live with it" shown below was used at the end of Guild tapes.
FX/SFX: Early computer graphics.
Music/Sounds: A twinkling synth-xylophone/flute/clarinet tune, which sounds similar to the beginning of the song "Tubular Bells" by Mike Oldfield (most famously used in The Exorcist).
Music/Sounds Variant: On the "video is alive – live with it" variant, it's silent.
Availability: On UK tapes of Guild releases from that era, including Baron Blood and Scanners.
Editor's Note: None.
2nd Logo
(1983-1986)
Variant: A variant seen at the end of tapes starts with the name flashing in.
FX/SFX: The lights bringing forth all parts of the logo. It may be early CGI, but it's not too bad.
Music/Sounds: A weird synth tune in the beginning, then a synth-orchestra tune at the end.
Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variant: Sometimes, this is accompanied by an announcer saying "Before you enjoy our main feature, here's a trailer from another major release from Guild, which is available at your local stockist now.". Oddly, the announcer has an American accent, despite Guild being a British distributor (the same announcer is heard in Guild's trailers, as well)!
Availability: Hard to find. Check an old VHS or Beta PAL tape for this logo. An example is the UK pre-cert release of Cujo. It is also seen on the first Thomas & Friends tapes. Some prints use the Central Video or The Video Collection logos.
Editor's Note: None.
3rd Logo
(1986-1989)
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G III"
Logo: On a blue background, orange bar segments fly in from the left and right of the screen, while they sparkle and zoom out. Eventually, the bars start forming the Guild logo (without the TV tube and the square on the bottom). When the logo is fully formed, this fades in below the logo—
FX/SFX: Great animation.
Music/Sounds: A synth note is held throughout, with a synth bass line that speeds up slightly near the end, followed by a synth fanfare. A female chorus hums during this section, ending in them shouting "Go Guild!" (hence the nickname; it's hard to tell because the chorus is rather muffled).
Availability: Rare given its nearly 4-year lifespan. Appears on releases such as Roses are For the Rich and Action Jackson.
Editor's Note: None.
4th Logo
(1987-1994)
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G IV", "CGI G"
Logo: Set on a white background, many of the rectangular parts of the Guild "G" fly in all directions. When two parts of the G meet in the middle later on, it zooms out, and extra rectangles that make the stem of the "G" fly in. "GUILD Home Video" fades in below, and the logo shines with a "wipe" effect.
FX/SFX: Also good CGI for the 1980s.
Music/Sounds: An upbeat synthesizer tune.
Music/Sounds Variant: Rental copies of The Wizard have the logo music start before the logo actually appears, due to an error.
Availability: More recent and easier to find than the previous logos, but still hard to find. Seen on the 4Front Video re-release of First Blood, and the original rental releases of The Wizard and Total Recall.
Editor's Note: None.
5th Logo
(1988-1994)
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G V", "Neon Theater"
Logo:
FX/SFX: The neon effects and the obvious chyron effects of the Guild logo.
Music/Sounds: Breaking Glass (One) by James Kaleth and Richard Thomas with whooshes from the lasers, along with an overly excited announcer saying "Introducing future releases from Guild Home Video!" or "Look out for these and other great new releases from Guild at your local video library!". The first variant uses the beginning, while the other two use the end of the track.
Availability: Used concurrently with the 4th logo to introduce movie trailers, and used quite frequently as a result. Seen on the original rental release of The Wizard.
Editor's Note: None.
6th Logo
(1993-1997)
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G VI", "The Director's Chair"
Logo: Against a black background, we see a director's chair in a blue spotlight. The camera pans around the chair, and both parts of the Guild logo slide from both sides of the screen in a tilted position, then "GUILD" appears underneath when we zoom into the chair.
FX/SFX: Top-notch CGI for the early '90s.
Music/Sounds: A mystical pan-flute tune, complete with a synth whoosh and an orchestra at the end.
Availability: Rare. It appears on VHS tapes of later films that Guild released until their merger with Pathé in 1997, such as the re-release of Universal Soldier, Night Trap, James and the Giant Peach, Stargate, Army Of Darkness, Matinee, and Serial Mom. This logo also appeared theatrically with Guild Film Distribution releases from 1993 until the Pathé merger, with films including James and the Giant Peach.
Editor's Note: None.
Video captures courtesy of swedishintros, rarevideosUK, dylanman10, CannonFilms, dylanstonepark, Cesar Blanco, killianm2, Eric S and rj4712.
Background: Guild Home Video was one of the earliest and most successful independent video companies in the United Kingdom, formed in 1979. In its early years, Guild was known for the high quality of their releases and having a large catalog compared to other companies of the time, and being a distributor for other companies' titles helped them survive the 1984 Video Recordings Act, which caused many other video companies at the time to go out of business. Guild remained strong in the 1990s when video became dominated more by major studios as opposed to indie labels until 1996, when both Guild Home Video and Guild Film Distribution merged with <a href="/page/Path%C3%A9+%28France%29" target="_self">Path</a><a href="/page/Path%C3%A9+%28France%29" target="_self">é</a> to form <a href="/page/Guild+Path%C3%A9+Cinema+%28UK%29" target="_self">Guild Path</a><a href="/page/Guild+Path%C3%A9+Cinema+%28UK%29" target="_self">é Cinema</a>. In 1998, Guild Pathé Cinema was renamed to Pathé Distribution, thus ending the Guild name for good.
1st Logo
(1980-1983)
<iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/769fe775ef8307572839a4587dd2be2d2df07ef5" width="223"></iframe><iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/bea1b61c9e5f02a8f051b0c3dcc81c80ca324b6a" width="223"></iframe>
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G", "G Over Square & TV Tube"
Logo: On a dark blue background, a gold-yellow, hexagon-formed "G" with a square underneath it zooms in downward, a la RKO's 1981 logo, leaving behind a residue trail. When it gets to the center, the "G" and the square turn from solid to segmented, and a line draws what looks like a TV tube, surrounding it. Both parts of the logo zoom in, and we quickly fade to the same logo, only smaller, and with "GUILD HOME VIDEO presents" (in a yellow Helvetica font) underneath.
Variant: A rare still variant with "video is alive – live with it" shown below was used at the end of Guild tapes.
FX/SFX: Early computer graphics.
Music/Sounds: A twinkling synth-xylophone/flute/clarinet tune, which sounds similar to the beginning of the song "Tubular Bells" by Mike Oldfield (most famously used in The Exorcist).
Music/Sounds Variant: On the "video is alive – live with it" variant, it's silent.
Availability: On UK tapes of Guild releases from that era, including Baron Blood and Scanners.
Editor's Note: None.
2nd Logo
(1983-1986)
<iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/a797093d6967c37dea994870fdf4d2b0ce77cce3" width="220"></iframe><iframe frameborder="0" height="165" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/05ea7f98026796c081ce837bee57ca58c4c9374a" width="221"></iframe><iframe frameborder="0" height="165" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/f2fa625a24f4439763c6f66fc5818b5e0532102f" width="221"></iframe>
Nickname: "The Hexagon G II", "G Over Square & TV Tube II", "The Tick"
Logo: In the top-left corner of a black background, we see a bright light flashing before our eyes. The light reveals the same "G Over Square" logo, but colored cerulean. Again, the TV tube is drawn around the logo, but underneath a light draws a teal/dark pink line that starts downward, then upward, and then straight. When the line is finished, another lights reveals the words "Guild Home Video" above the line, and below it another reveals "Quality Video Entertainment". The logo then sparkles a bit. Nickname: "The Hexagon G II", "G Over Square & TV Tube II", "The Tick"
Variant: A variant seen at the end of tapes starts with the name flashing in.
FX/SFX: The lights bringing forth all parts of the logo. It may be early CGI, but it's not too bad.
Music/Sounds: A weird synth tune in the beginning, then a synth-orchestra tune at the end.
Music/Sounds/Voice-over Variant: Sometimes, this is accompanied by an announcer saying "Before you enjoy our main feature, here's a trailer from another major release from Guild, which is available at your local stockist now.". Oddly, the announcer has an American accent, despite Guild being a British distributor (the same announcer is heard in Guild's trailers, as well)!
Availability: Hard to find. Check an old VHS or Beta PAL tape for this logo. An example is the UK pre-cert release of Cujo. It is also seen on the first Thomas & Friends tapes. Some prints use the Central Video or The Video Collection logos.
Editor's Note: None.
3rd Logo
(1986-1989)
<iframe frameborder="0" height="183" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/91d9bf432b9566c90ed6b4c03c60e1212d4c867f" width="244"></iframe>
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G III"
Logo: On a blue background, orange bar segments fly in from the left and right of the screen, while they sparkle and zoom out. Eventually, the bars start forming the Guild logo (without the TV tube and the square on the bottom). When the logo is fully formed, this fades in below the logo—
GUILD
Home Video
in white.
FX/SFX: Great animation.
Music/Sounds: A synth note is held throughout, with a synth bass line that speeds up slightly near the end, followed by a synth fanfare. A female chorus hums during this section, ending in them shouting "Go Guild!" (hence the nickname; it's hard to tell because the chorus is rather muffled).
Availability: Rare given its nearly 4-year lifespan. Appears on releases such as Roses are For the Rich and Action Jackson.
Editor's Note: None.
4th Logo
(1987-1994)
<iframe frameborder="0" height="186" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/863d6ddf2d74d46f34243e73a41bf46f8f3d9f9f" width="247"></iframe>
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G IV", "CGI G"
Logo: Set on a white background, many of the rectangular parts of the Guild "G" fly in all directions. When two parts of the G meet in the middle later on, it zooms out, and extra rectangles that make the stem of the "G" fly in. "GUILD Home Video" fades in below, and the logo shines with a "wipe" effect.
FX/SFX: Also good CGI for the 1980s.
Music/Sounds: An upbeat synthesizer tune.
Music/Sounds Variant: Rental copies of The Wizard have the logo music start before the logo actually appears, due to an error.
Availability: More recent and easier to find than the previous logos, but still hard to find. Seen on the 4Front Video re-release of First Blood, and the original rental releases of The Wizard and Total Recall.
Editor's Note: None.
5th Logo
(1988-1994)
<iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/b90854f5a284176993e4da7be98a6051600a12a9" width="296"></iframe><iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/04a9c20c35f04d00f3741f52f787e7cff1c42489" width="222"></iframe>
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G V", "Neon Theater"
Logo:
- Before Trailers: On a black background, we see a glowing outline of a movie theater with little flashing lights inside. Two sets of red and yellow light streaks slide up, the last set flashing and bringing forth a white Guild Home Video logo. The streaks zoom out to outline the theater in blue with a ticket box in the front, little light blue "chaser" light windows on the sides, yellow "<<<>>>" lights on the marquee sides, pinkish lights surrounding the center of the marquee, and more yellow lights on the top.
- After Trailers: Same as above, but "SOLID GUILD", in golden yellow, zooms out like a roller coaster out of the door. All, except the text in gold, fades into blue.
FX/SFX: The neon effects and the obvious chyron effects of the Guild logo.
Music/Sounds: Breaking Glass (One) by James Kaleth and Richard Thomas with whooshes from the lasers, along with an overly excited announcer saying "Introducing future releases from Guild Home Video!" or "Look out for these and other great new releases from Guild at your local video library!". The first variant uses the beginning, while the other two use the end of the track.
Availability: Used concurrently with the 4th logo to introduce movie trailers, and used quite frequently as a result. Seen on the original rental release of The Wizard.
Editor's Note: None.
6th Logo
(1993-1997)
<iframe frameborder="0" height="167" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/4f06a3e69aeaa6cdb08756763ec14eda3781b43e" width="223"></iframe>
Nicknames: "The Hexagon G VI", "The Director's Chair"
Logo: Against a black background, we see a director's chair in a blue spotlight. The camera pans around the chair, and both parts of the Guild logo slide from both sides of the screen in a tilted position, then "GUILD" appears underneath when we zoom into the chair.
FX/SFX: Top-notch CGI for the early '90s.
Music/Sounds: A mystical pan-flute tune, complete with a synth whoosh and an orchestra at the end.
Availability: Rare. It appears on VHS tapes of later films that Guild released until their merger with Pathé in 1997, such as the re-release of Universal Soldier, Night Trap, James and the Giant Peach, Stargate, Army Of Darkness, Matinee, and Serial Mom. This logo also appeared theatrically with Guild Film Distribution releases from 1993 until the Pathé merger, with films including James and the Giant Peach.
Editor's Note: None.