Whether it’s a lion roaring wildly, a paramount mountain peak or a child fishing from a crescent moon, they are all powerful images that are worthy of opening some of the best movies ever made. But do you know how they made it there? Here is the story of how Hollywood’s most iconic studio logos came to be.
1. DreamWorks
Spielberg wanted a computer generated image as the company’s logo and had an idea for one where a man climbs up on the moon and starts fishing. Illustrator Robert Hunt tweaked the idea so that the animation starts from the fly hitting the water, and it then pans to the boy sitting on the moon fishing. Curiously, the boy used was Hunt’s son, William.
2. Columbia Pictures
Columbia was founded in 1918 as Cohn-Brandt-Cohn Film and it wasn’t until six years later that they adopted the current name. It is a historical and poetic name used for the United States and the woman on the logo is its visual representation. The now iconic image, however, underwent five major transformations since it was first introduced in 1928. The most distinguishing difference is the American flag which was adorning the woman in the crude, early versions of the logo. The current version was adopted in 1992.
3. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Perhaps the most iconic of all logos in Hollywood, it carries the studio’s motto Ars Gratia Artis, meaning “Art for art’s sake”. The logo is older than the company itself. It was created in 1916 by Howard Dietz for Goldwyn Pictures which merged with Metro Pictures and Louis B. Mayer Pictures to create MGM in 1924. The original logo featured the company’s mascot Leo the Lion but numerous others were used in later years. You might be amazed to find out that the famous roar existed even in the days of silent cinema!
Check out the video for the full stories behind the five most famous logos of Hollywood studios, including Paramount Pictures and The Walt Disney Company.
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