Cinergi Pictures Entertainment
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Logo captures by Eric S., Enormous Rat and Livin'
Video capture by Eric S.
Background: Cinergi was a production company formed by Andrew G. Vajna in 1989, after he left Carolco. It produced very few successes, eventually closing in 1998. Most of Cinergi's library assets were acquired by Buena Vista/The Walt Disney Company, which distributed most of Cinergi's productions. However, 20th Century Fox owned the rights to Die Hard: With a Vengeanceuntil 2019 when it was acquired by Disney after its merger with Fox. The other assets were to be merged into <a class="external" href="http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=335017" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">CPEI Acquisition, Inc.</a>, a joint venture between Vajna and the Valdina Corporation. Cinergi's first release was Medicine Man on February 7, 1992, which had the print logo on the poster and trailers, though no logo was used in the film itself. However, the animated onscreen logo made its first appearance on Tombstone. In 2003, Cinergi would make a revival when Vajna bought video game company Games Unlimited and renamed it Cinergi Interactive. The company would operate until 2007.
(December 24, 1993-February 20, 1998)
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Logo: On a blue/black background, a transparent "C"-like figure appears and rotates as it zooms-out. The beginning has the company name reflected on the "C". When it's finished, the word "CINERGI" emerges from the background with sparkles and appears in blue below the logo. The logo continues to zoom out from us, then stands still.
Video capture by Eric S.
Background: Cinergi was a production company formed by Andrew G. Vajna in 1989, after he left Carolco. It produced very few successes, eventually closing in 1998. Most of Cinergi's library assets were acquired by Buena Vista/The Walt Disney Company, which distributed most of Cinergi's productions. However, 20th Century Fox owned the rights to Die Hard: With a Vengeanceuntil 2019 when it was acquired by Disney after its merger with Fox. The other assets were to be merged into <a class="external" href="http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=335017" rel="nofollow" target="_blank">CPEI Acquisition, Inc.</a>, a joint venture between Vajna and the Valdina Corporation. Cinergi's first release was Medicine Man on February 7, 1992, which had the print logo on the poster and trailers, though no logo was used in the film itself. However, the animated onscreen logo made its first appearance on Tombstone. In 2003, Cinergi would make a revival when Vajna bought video game company Games Unlimited and renamed it Cinergi Interactive. The company would operate until 2007.
(December 24, 1993-February 20, 1998)
<iframe frameborder="0" height="150" src="http://wikifoundrytools.com/wiki/closinglogos/widget/unknown/a48266363caffbd1cbd061c1e9ca12eb1e74d532" width="266"></iframe>
Logo: On a blue/black background, a transparent "C"-like figure appears and rotates as it zooms-out. The beginning has the company name reflected on the "C". When it's finished, the word "CINERGI" emerges from the background with sparkles and appears in blue below the logo. The logo continues to zoom out from us, then stands still.
Trivia: The logo was created by Rod Dyer Design.
Variants:
FX/SFX: The "C" rotating and the appearance of "CINERGI".
Music/Sounds: A 12-note horn stinger followed by an uplifting orchestral finish, composed by Jerry Goldsmith. On films such as Evita, Renaissance Man, Nixon, and Deep Rising, it would be silent or have the films respective opening themes.
Music/Sounds Variant: The fanfare was reportedly conducted by Bruce Broughton, as stated on the expanded score release. This might be because Jerry Goldsmith composed a score for Tombstone (the first movie to use this logo), but got rejected in favor of Broughton's score.
Availability: Seen on several of Cinergi's films including Tombstone, Evita, Renaissance Man, Shadow Conspiracy, The Color of Night, The Scarlet Letter, Judge Dredd, Die Hard With a Vengeance, and An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (the last release from the company). Also seen on the Scud games. It also appears on the international versions of Deep Rising and Up Close & Personal (domestic releases of the mentioned two have the Hollywood Pictures and Touchstone Pictures logos respectively). The closing credits logo is only seen on international prints of films.
Editor's Note: None.
- Nixon has a shortened version, starting at the zoom-out.
- On the Scud video games, a still gold version of the logo is used on a black background.
- On Evita, the logo is in black & white.
- There is a closing credits logo with the 3-D "C" with "DISTRIBUTED BY" above and below "CINERGI PRODUCTIONS N.V. INC.".
FX/SFX: The "C" rotating and the appearance of "CINERGI".
Music/Sounds: A 12-note horn stinger followed by an uplifting orchestral finish, composed by Jerry Goldsmith. On films such as Evita, Renaissance Man, Nixon, and Deep Rising, it would be silent or have the films respective opening themes.
Music/Sounds Variant: The fanfare was reportedly conducted by Bruce Broughton, as stated on the expanded score release. This might be because Jerry Goldsmith composed a score for Tombstone (the first movie to use this logo), but got rejected in favor of Broughton's score.
Availability: Seen on several of Cinergi's films including Tombstone, Evita, Renaissance Man, Shadow Conspiracy, The Color of Night, The Scarlet Letter, Judge Dredd, Die Hard With a Vengeance, and An Alan Smithee Film: Burn Hollywood Burn (the last release from the company). Also seen on the Scud games. It also appears on the international versions of Deep Rising and Up Close & Personal (domestic releases of the mentioned two have the Hollywood Pictures and Touchstone Pictures logos respectively). The closing credits logo is only seen on international prints of films.
Editor's Note: None.