Passion Productions

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Background: Passion Productions was a public domain DVD distributor located in Wilmington, Delaware, formed by John Matarazzo as the successor to his previous company Saturn Productions. The company was notorious for its poor-quality releases, even for public domain standards, as well as accidentally releasing movies that weren't in the public domain; as such, the company operated under alternate names like 'Ace Video' and 'Digital Video Dreams.' In 2002, Passion Productions was purchased by PMC Corp., and assumed the name 'Miracle Pictures.' Miracle Pictures continued to release DVDs through 2003, mostly made-for-TV movies which had fallen into the public domain after their production companies went out of business. By 2004, PMC Corp. was closed, and Miracle Pictures took on the name '1st Miracle Pictures' before closing later that year.

(2001-2005)
<img align="bottom" alt="Passion Productions (2003)" height="258" src="http://image.wikifoundry.com/image/3/67cfe0724e1e5a63738bde52fe7ec1cd/GW320H258" title="Passion Productions (2003)" width="320"/><iframe frameborder="0" height="236" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/c4e6ef4e5e95e25be19433f302b67f4065ea16f1" width="419"></iframe>
Nicknames: "The Mountains", "Cheap CGI Mountain", "Passionless"

Logo: In a snowy environment with snowcapped mountains and a lake, the camera pans very fast towards a rock structure that features the bergundy text "PASSION PRODUCTIONS", in a generic Arial font, stacked onto it. The camera jerkily rotates to reveal the company name, then once it's shown, immediately cuts to the DVD menu.

FX/SFX: The camera panning across the CGI environment.

Music/Sounds: A techno tune.

Availability: Seen on some dollar-store public domain DVD releases of the time.

Editor's Note: This is not a good logo. The CGI isn't awful, but it is quite cheap, and the text looks like it was generated with WordArt. That, and the camera rotation at the end feels like it was done by somebody bored and messing around with the camera in whatever software this was produced in, not helped much by the very sudden ending.