Difference between revisions of "Shock Film Company"
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(1982?)
Logo: On a black background, we see the words:
Then we fade to the text:
The lightning strikes "SHOCK FILM", turning red and damaged.
FX/SFX: The text fading in and out, the lightning striking the text, the text turning red and torn up.
Music/Sounds: A eerie synth fanfare, which is actually a stock music piece "Music, Drama, Billboard, Symphonic 02" from the Sound Ideas Series 1000 sound effects library, accompanied by a whoosh and a stock thunderclap from the Cinesound/BBC sound effects library (the same thunderclap used on the Ismail Productions, Lightning Video and Southern Star/Hanna-Barbera Australia logos).
Availability: Seen on post-1982 prints of “The Wizard of Gore” (1970).
Editor's Note:A pretty low-budget 80s logo; despite it trying to be scary, it doesn't do as good a job compared to other “scary” professional logos like the Viacom “V of Doom” and the Screen Gems “S from Hell."
(Created page with "<div class="WPC-editableContent"><font><br/>(1982?)<br/><br/><u>Logo</u>: On a black background, we see the words:<br/><br/><div align="center"><b>JIMMY MASLON</b></div><div a...") |
(No difference)
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Latest revision as of 13:39, 6 November 2020
(1982?)
Logo: On a black background, we see the words:
JIMMY MASLON
ERIC J. CALDIN
present
Then we fade to the text:
A
SHOCK FILM
COMPANY
PRESENTATION
FX/SFX: The text fading in and out, the lightning striking the text, the text turning red and torn up.
Music/Sounds: A eerie synth fanfare, which is actually a stock music piece "Music, Drama, Billboard, Symphonic 02" from the Sound Ideas Series 1000 sound effects library, accompanied by a whoosh and a stock thunderclap from the Cinesound/BBC sound effects library (the same thunderclap used on the Ismail Productions, Lightning Video and Southern Star/Hanna-Barbera Australia logos).
Availability: Seen on post-1982 prints of “The Wizard of Gore” (1970).
Editor's Note:A pretty low-budget 80s logo; despite it trying to be scary, it doesn't do as good a job compared to other “scary” professional logos like the Viacom “V of Doom” and the Screen Gems “S from Hell."