

Music/Sounds Variant: On Terminal Velocity, a synthpad theme with whooshing sounds was used.Īvailability: Uncommon. Music/Sounds: None, or the opening theme of the movie.
As the camera eases back a bit, “COMMUNICATIONS” appears under “INTERSCOPE” and the oval shines into a stylized oval with a lower case “ i”. When the camera goes into the light, the light changes to an oval and the background changes with a flash to purple. The hue turns orange and the word “INTERSCOPE” appears and heads towards the light. The camera scrolls down-left and heads towards one of the lights.
Closing logos platinum dunes movie#
Logo: The logo starts off inside a movie studio complete with a camera, a boom, a director’s chair and several lights, shown in a purple hue. Nickname: "The (CGI) Interscope Studio", "The PolyGram Era Interscope" This logo is not intended to be seen on Jersey Girl (the 1992 movie).
Closing logos platinum dunes tv#
Seen on TV movies from the time from Interscope, such as Shoot First: A Cop's Vengeance. Music/Sounds: Just the closing theme of the program.Īvailability: Extremely rare. As this happens, the word "I N T E R S C O P E" in white slides in from the right and a red line slides in below from the left.įX/SFX: The oval pieces flying in and sliding together, the "I N T E R S C O P E" and red line sliding in.

Logo: On a black background, three pieces of the stylized oval with the lower case " i" ease in towards the screen. Seen on some TV movies from the era made by Interscope, such as Everybody's Baby: The Rescue of Jessica McClure, Murder Ordained, and The Father Clements Story, among others. The letters "INTERSCOPE COMMUNICATIONS" also are flipping to us with the logo.Īvailability: Ultra rare. Logo: On a blue background, we see a white circle made of lines with an "i" inside it flipping as it zooms in at us. While the film production part of Interscope eventually was made a subdivision of PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, its record label (which Field created in 1989 and was originally distributed by Atlantic) still exists as the Interscope/Geffen/A&M unit of the Universal Music Group. Field sold his company to PolyGram in 1993. For the first several years of its existance, it did not use an on-screen logo until the late 1980s. Background: Interscope Communications was founded in 1982 by film producer Ted Field.
