UA have to be the worst company for logo plastering. The film was barely a year old and they plastered the logo with the new one (which was very temporary at that!)
FYEO was the last UA film before the MGM acquisition, and it looks like any UA film before that all get plastered. You see can this with the Rocky franchise too. All films from 1982 onward retain their original theatrical logo (with some exceptions).
FYEO had a unique one-off logo I recall before it was plastered with first this one and then the rotating one. The 1982 rotating UA logo whilst used heavily on video was only used briefly on theatrical prints - Rocky III was one example. Once the MGM/UA marquee went above the lion, there was no UA logo anymore, just UNITED ARTISTS PRESENTS.. @@Stockslivevan
@@MysteryManfrom79which is too bad, because I really like that rotating logo. It feels perfect for a blockbuster to build up anticipation. Like the THX logo. But of course MGM wanted to push their own branding, not giving UA its own unique logo for another five years until TLD came out.
3:03
Film Goof:
The optical camera image bleeds over Blofeld's wrist.
I will buy you a delicatessen in stainless steel
UA have to be the worst company for logo plastering. The film was barely a year old and they plastered the logo with the new one (which was very temporary at that!)
FYEO was the last UA film before the MGM acquisition, and it looks like any UA film before that all get plastered. You see can this with the Rocky franchise too. All films from 1982 onward retain their original theatrical logo (with some exceptions).
FYEO had a unique one-off logo I recall before it was plastered with first this one and then the rotating one. The 1982 rotating UA logo whilst used heavily on video was only used briefly on theatrical prints - Rocky III was one example. Once the MGM/UA marquee went above the lion, there was no UA logo anymore, just UNITED ARTISTS PRESENTS.. @@Stockslivevan
@@MysteryManfrom79which is too bad, because I really like that rotating logo. It feels perfect for a blockbuster to build up anticipation. Like the THX logo. But of course MGM wanted to push their own branding, not giving UA its own unique logo for another five years until TLD came out.