Flying Bark Productions: Difference between revisions

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'''Flying Bark Productions''' was founded in 1962 in Israel by Yoram Gross as "'''Yoram Gross Films'''". In 1968, it moved to Australia, where it made ''Dot and the Kangaroo''. The film was such a hit that eight more sequels followed. The studio became famous upon the success of franchises such as ''Dot'', ''Blinky Bill'' and ''Tabaluga''.
'''Flying Bark Productions''' was founded in 1962 in Israel by Yoram Gross as "'''Yoram Gross Films'''". In 1968, it moved to Australia, where it made ''Dot and the Kangaroo''. The film was such a hit that eight more sequels followed. The studio became famous upon the success of franchises such as ''Dot'', ''Blinky Bill'' and ''Tabaluga''.


After season 2 of ''Blinky Bill'', [[Village Roadshow Pictures|Village Roadshow]] purchased Gross' animation studio in 1996. Two years later, it teamed up with [[EM.TV & Merchandising AG (Germany)|EM.TV Television]] to distribute its shows around the world after a buyout from Village Roadshow. In 2007, when EM.TV Television closed down, the company was renamed "Flying Bark Productions". The Yoram Gross/EM.TV library was sold to [[Studio 100 (Belgium)|Studio 100]] in 2008; that same year, they acquired Flying Bark as well after EM.TV changed its name to EM.Sport Media AG.
After season 2 of ''Blinky Bill'', [[Village Roadshow Pictures|Village Roadshow]] purchased Gross' animation studio in 1996 under the new name of [[Yoram Gross Village Roadshow (Australia)|Yoram Gross Village Roadshow]]. Two years later, it teamed up with [[EM.TV & Merchandising AG (Germany)|EM.TV Television]] to distribute its shows around the world after a buyout from Village Roadshow. In 2007, when EM.TV Television closed down, the company was renamed "Flying Bark Productions". The Yoram Gross/EM.TV library was sold to [[Studio 100 (Belgium)|Studio 100]] in 2008; that same year, they acquired Flying Bark as well after EM.TV changed its name to EM.Sport Media AG.


In 2012, Flying Bark formed a multi-year production deal with Studio 100, which would distribute their films under the Studio 100 Animation label, with Flying Bark aiming to release a film every two years. As of 2014, after the theatrical release of ''Maya the Bee: The Movie'' (based on the ''Maya the Bee'' CGI series and the book of the same name), Flying Bark is the only high-end animation studio in Australia, producing animated series for [[ABC3]], [[Seven Network National IDs (Australia)|Seven Network]] and [[ABC Kids (Australia)|ABC Kids]], as well as for television and streaming services.
In 2012, Flying Bark formed a multi-year production deal with Studio 100, which would distribute their films under the Studio 100 Animation label, with Flying Bark aiming to release a film every two years. As of 2014, after the theatrical release of ''Maya the Bee: The Movie'' (based on the ''Maya the Bee'' CGI series and the book of the same name), Flying Bark is the only high-end animation studio in Australia, producing animated series for [[ABC3]], [[Seven Network National IDs (Australia)|Seven Network]] and [[ABC Kids (Australia)|ABC Kids]], as well as for television and streaming services.
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[[File:Yoram Gross Films (1977).jpg|center|thumb]]
[[File:Yoram Gross Films (1977).jpg|center|thumb]]
[[File:Yoram Gross Films (1976).jpg|center|thumb]]
[[File:Yoram Gross Films (1976).jpg|center|thumb]]
[[File:Yoram Gross Presents (1993).jpg|center|thumb]]
[[File:Yoram Gross Presents (1995).jpg|center|thumb]]
[[File:Yoram Gross Film Studio Pty Ltd (1993).jpg|center|thumb]]


'''Logo:''' During the opening titles of the film, we see Yoram Gross' signature. The word "presents" is under it.

'''Logo:''' During the opening titles of each film and the first two seasons of the original Blinky Bill series, we see Yoram Gross' signature. The word "presents" is under it.

'''Variants:'''

* TBA.


'''FX/SFX:''' None.
'''FX/SFX:''' None.

Revision as of 01:29, 5 January 2022


Background

Flying Bark Productions was founded in 1962 in Israel by Yoram Gross as "Yoram Gross Films". In 1968, it moved to Australia, where it made Dot and the Kangaroo. The film was such a hit that eight more sequels followed. The studio became famous upon the success of franchises such as Dot, Blinky Bill and Tabaluga.

After season 2 of Blinky Bill, Village Roadshow purchased Gross' animation studio in 1996 under the new name of Yoram Gross Village Roadshow. Two years later, it teamed up with EM.TV Television to distribute its shows around the world after a buyout from Village Roadshow. In 2007, when EM.TV Television closed down, the company was renamed "Flying Bark Productions". The Yoram Gross/EM.TV library was sold to Studio 100 in 2008; that same year, they acquired Flying Bark as well after EM.TV changed its name to EM.Sport Media AG.

In 2012, Flying Bark formed a multi-year production deal with Studio 100, which would distribute their films under the Studio 100 Animation label, with Flying Bark aiming to release a film every two years. As of 2014, after the theatrical release of Maya the Bee: The Movie (based on the Maya the Bee CGI series and the book of the same name), Flying Bark is the only high-end animation studio in Australia, producing animated series for ABC3, Seven Network and ABC Kids, as well as for television and streaming services.

Yoram Gross Films

(1976-1998)

Logo: During the opening titles of the film, we see Yoram Gross' signature. The word "presents" is under it.

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: The opening theme of the movie.

Availability: Rare. Can be found on DVDs of Dot and the Kangaroo and its sequels. It can also seen on other series such as The Adventures of Blinky Bill.

Yoram Gross/EM.TV

1st Logo (1998-2006)


Logo: On a sky background, we see Yoram Gross' signature from the 1st logo flying in the sky. Next to that, we see Blinky Bill holding a sack. Under this, we see the EM.TV Television logo.

Variants:

  • On Bambaloo, a still version appears on a black background.
  • On The Dumb Bunnies, a still version appears with the Village Roadshow logo was on the bottom.
  • On Deadly, a widescreen version exists.

FX/SFX: The logo zooming into place.

Music/Sounds: The ending theme of the show.

Availability: Seen on Flipper and Lopaka, Old Tom, Fairy Tale Police Department, Bamabaloo, Seaside Hotel, and Deadly.

2nd Logo (2006-2007)

Logo: On a black background, we see two squares. One square has three dots (one green, one tan and one white). The other has the EM.TV Television logo from the last logo. Under them, we see the words "Yoram Gross-EM.TV".

FX/SFX: None.

Music/Sounds: Same as the previous logo.

Availability: Rare. Can be seen on early episodes of Dive, Olly, Dive on PBS Kids Sprout.

Flying Bark Productions

(2007-)


Logo: Over a blue backdrop, we see a distorted rectangle with a dog with a propeller tail on him, with the EM.TV logo in a red square next to it. He barks and the word "BARK" floats out of his mouth and lands next to him, as the text "FLYING" and "PRODUCTIONS" fades in around it.

Variant: The animated distribution variant appears before the opening, while the production logo is still and shown in the closing credits.

Bylines:

  • 2007-2008: Just the EM.TV logo.
  • 2008-: "A STUDIO100 COMPANY" (with "STUDIO100" in the Bank Gothic MD BT font)

FX/SFX: Flash animation or none.

Music/Sounds: The dog barking. For the closing version, it's the end theme of the show.

Availability: Currently seen on Flying Bark's content.

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