Promise Pictures: Difference between revisions

From the Audiovisual Identity Database, the motion graphics museum

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(Created page with "{{PageCredits|description=MizukiAccent48 (Promise Frontier)|capture=MizukiAccent48 (Promise Frontier)|video=MatthewTheScienceGuy, ThatOneLebaneseGuy|edits=}} ===Background=== '''Promise Pictures''' was a Indian film company that produced Hindi films from the early 1990's until its closure sometime on early 2000's. ==={{Ordinal|1}} Logo (1990)=== center|frameless <center> <youtube width="240" height="180">KW3yuTHd2es</youtube> </cent...")
 
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File:Promise Pictures (2000).jpg
File:Promise Pictures (2000).jpg
File:Promise Pictures (2000, HD).jpg
File:Promise Pictures (2000, HD).jpg

Revision as of 09:11, 17 January 2022


Background

Promise Pictures was a Indian film company that produced Hindi films from the early 1990's until its closure sometime on early 2000's.

1st Logo (1990)

Logo: On sunset background, after a few seconds, the sun turns into the statue footage from Sham Ralhan Productions logo. Thyen it zooms in, and then the statue shoots the blue-sky words "Promise Pictures". Finally it freezes (except for the words) for about 12 seconds and the logo fades out.

FX/SFX: The smoky background and the texts.

Music/Sounds: The second part of the song "Vich Parvat De Maa" by Minoo Chadha and Mahendra Kapoor.

Availability: Only seen on Jaan Lada Denge.

Editor's Note: None.

2nd Logo (1999)

TBA!

3rd Logo (2000)

Notice: this template has been replaced by {{Guidance}} and {{Guidance detail}}

Nicknames: "Not a Winter Land", "This Is Not Kohmi Hirose's Company", "Kohmi Hirose, Get That Company Down!", "That Women with a Book and Gun"

Logo: Just a superimposed background with the texts "PROMISE PICTURES 1997 PRESENTS" moving down.

FX/SFX: None, unless the text animation.

Music/Sounds: The gun sounds, and then the Sham Ralhan Productions' dramatic fanfare.

Availability: Only seen on Geeta Mera Naam: The Revenge.

Editor's Note: In addition to the overuse of the Sham Ralhan dramatic fanfare, this logo is infamous for stealing the name of the 1997 song "promise" by Kohmi Hirose.

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