I also noticed that in the international (Warner Bros. Pictures) version, the colors are darker compared to the domestic US/Canada (Paramount Pictures) version.
Co-incidentally at the time that Comedy Central, home of South Park, was co-owned by Time Warner & "old" Viacom (Warner Bros & Paramount's respective parents at the time before restructures of the two that would eventually become Warner Bros. Discovery & Paramount Global)
I noticed in the Warner Bros. version, Stan starts walking down the stairs and the next shot has him at the top of the stairs again, this doesn’t happen in the Paramount release.
but several movies shown more than one intro. Some examples: - The Bone Collector and Erin Brockovich (Universal/Columbia) - American President (Columbia/Castle Rock in the US, and Universal/Castle Rock internationally) - Angela’s Ashes (Paramount/Universal) - Deep Impact, Saving Private Ryan, and Transformers (Dreamworks/Paramount) - Small Soldiers, Gladiator and A Beautiful Mind (Dreamworks/Universal) - A.I, The Time Machine and The Island (Dreamworks/WB) - Hannibal, and Josie and The Pussycats (MGM/Universal) - Master and Commander (20th Century Fox/Miramax/Universal) So, I think it’s like some kind of an agreement between the involved studios.
I also noticed that in the international (Warner Bros. Pictures) version, the colors are darker compared to the domestic US/Canada (Paramount Pictures) version.
Also they use the regular Warner Bros. Pictures logo instead of the Warner Bros. Family Entertainment logo.
@@henryfreed-fundak5861 um, its a mature film part of Trey & Matt's South Park series
@@henryfreed-fundak5861the films rated R why would the WBFE logo even be on the film in the first place???!!
@@S1LLY_RUBY_L0V3RRI cant imagine the WBFE logo on an r rated movie I'm already laughing already imagining it
@@15voltz same lmao
Co-incidentally at the time that Comedy Central, home of South Park, was co-owned by Time Warner & "old" Viacom (Warner Bros & Paramount's respective parents at the time before restructures of the two that would eventually become Warner Bros. Discovery & Paramount Global)
That's why both Paramount and Warner Bros. were both involved.
I noticed in the Warner Bros. version, Stan starts walking down the stairs and the next shot has him at the top of the stairs again, this doesn’t happen in the Paramount release.
Paramount and Warner Bros., are going to merge together
I know. How insane is that?
Boy did that age bad
In the international version, The WB movie logo ends early, and the mountain slightly shows a bit earlier than the domestic.
0:07
Why couldn’t they use both logos together
This was the era in which each major studio didn’t have to share who gets to be 1st in a movie until the 2010s
but several movies shown more than one intro.
Some examples:
- The Bone Collector and Erin Brockovich (Universal/Columbia)
- American President (Columbia/Castle Rock in the US, and Universal/Castle Rock internationally)
- Angela’s Ashes (Paramount/Universal)
- Deep Impact, Saving Private Ryan, and Transformers (Dreamworks/Paramount)
- Small Soldiers, Gladiator and A Beautiful Mind (Dreamworks/Universal)
- A.I, The Time Machine and The Island (Dreamworks/WB)
- Hannibal, and Josie and The Pussycats (MGM/Universal)
- Master and Commander (20th Century Fox/Miramax/Universal)
So, I think it’s like some kind of an agreement between the involved studios.
@@elcanalpersonaldeldostor1289 correction, before the 2000s
Probably international licensing reasons
Paramount Pictures And
Warner Bros Pictures Presents