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  1. On a black background, a large lens flare glares and releases a faint rainbow ring, and light rays cause a massive supernova in the center of the screen. Within the ever-expanding supernova, a trio of lights, colored red, green, and blue respectively, swirl around and circle the center of the supernova. As the streaks reach the center, they turn sharply at a diagonal angle upwards and fly off ...

  2. Below the logo, the following text fades in a Futura font: SONY PICTURES DVD CENTER. MASTERING THE ART OF TECHNOLOGY. Variant: Another variant has the text read this in an Arial Font: S O N Y P I C T U R E S. DIGITAL AUTHORING CENTER. Technique: 2D computer animation. Audio: The sounds of wind blowing through play, as well as what sounds like ...

  3. Taken from Columbia Tristar Home Entertainment, Columbia Tristar Home Video and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment DVD releases.

    • 8 sec
    • 3K
    • ABC200
    • Columbia Pictures Home Entertainment
    • RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video
    • Columbia Tristar Home Video
    • Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

    1971, 1975–1977

    This logo is simply a television-shaped tube with stripes and a white, simplistically stylized/abstract Torch Lady inside. However, it is unknown whether this showed up on covers for early Super 8mm, U-Matic, Cartrivision, Betamax or VHS releases of Columbia Pictures product or not, or whether this was ever a on-screen logo.

    1982–1983

    Again, the on-screen counterpart to this logo was only the 1981 Columbia Pictureslogo with no video indicator whatsoever.

    1992–2001

    This print logo debuted in 1992 on tape and disc covers of movies and TV shows on VHS and Laserdisc, In 1993, this replaced the previous print logo.

    2004–present

    The SPHE logo was first used as a print logo on November 30, 2004,although the onscreen variant was not introduced on any UMD, DVD or VHS releases until April 5, 2005. The previous CTHE logo was still used on British, Irish and French-Canadian VHS releases, however, until April 2006.

    • (1991-1992) Nicknames: "CT Boxes", "Start of an Era" "Part I: The Boxes Cometh", "Split Rectangle", "Prototype CT Boxes", "Rectangular Boxes", "Night of the Living Boxes", "The First of Columbia Tristar"
    • (1992-1995) Nicknames: "CT Boxes II", "The Boxes Take Form", "Dawn of the Boxes" Logo: On a white background, we see two boxes outlined with a black border.
    • (May 19, 1993-March 27, 2001) Nicknames: "CT Boxes III", "Part III: Will This Logo Ever Die?!" , "Sliding Boxes", "Blue BG Boxes", "Day of the Boxes", "Columbia Tristar III"
    • (1995-1996) Nicknames: "CT Boxes IV", "Part IV: Take Hollywood Home!" , "Sliding Boxes II", "Land of the Boxes", "The Bedsheets", "The Boxes of Boredom Prototype", "Columbia Tristar IV"
  4. A set of white lines of light appear and zoom out to solidify into the 1991 Sony Pictures Entertainment's logo, which give off rays of light. As this happens, the background turns black. The rays die down and we see "SONY PICTURES" in the Sony font appear below the Bars, a line is drawn underneath that, and "HOME ENTERTAINMENT" appears underneath.

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  6. Sony Pictures Entertainment was founded on December 21, 1987 as Columbia Pictures Entertainment when The Coca-Cola Company spun off Columbia Pictures, and merged it with Tri-Star Pictures. After a brief period of independence with Coca-Cola maintaining a financial interest, the combined studio was eventually acquired by the Japanese company, Sony on November 8, 1989, and renamed Sony Pictures ...

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