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  1. ABC Motion Pictures was a boutique production company, and only made a few theatrical films a year. The studio's films were released by 20th Century-Fox Film Corporation (now 20th Century Studios). The studio's president was Brandon Stoddard, who figured that ABC would succeed in movie production as there were additional revenue sources from ...

  2. The screen zooms out and the background becomes white. A flash unveils " [motion pictures] " below the company name. Technique: 2D computer animation. Audio: A quick djembe soundtrack plays alongside whooshing. After a bird's squawk is heard, a dramatic synthesized horn and drum fanfare is performed. The latter insturment ends with a cymbal crash.

  3. Background. Orion Pictures (legally Orion Releasing LLC) was formed as the Orion Pictures Company in March 1978 as a joint venture between Warner Bros. and former United Artists executives Arthur B. Krim, Eric Pleskow and Robert S. Benjamin. When the studio was formed, they produced films that would be released through Warner Bros.

  4. Apr 26, 2002 · Production Company New Regency Productions, Davis Entertainment, Epsilon Motion Pictures, Atchity Entertainment International (AEI), Film Cass Entertainment Group, Monarchy Enterprises S.a.r.l. Release Date Apr 26, 2002

  5. Underneath the logo, " Patriot pictures " wipe in below while the logo stops zooming out. Trivia: The image of Liberty is sourced from a 1917 World War 1 propaganda poster promoting patrons to participate in the war either by joining the army or by buying bonds. This poster was illustrated by Howard Chandler Christy. Variants:

  6. Release Date Title Production Budget Opening Weekend Domestic Box Office Worldwide Box Office; Sep 28, 2001: Don’t Say a Word: $50,000,000: $17,090,474: $54,997,476

  7. Final Note. In 1982, Sunn Classic Pictures was re-established by Taft to produce TV movies and miniseries for network television. There was no logo for this incarnation, just a in-credit mention of Sunn Classic with a Taft Entertainment byline. Taft closed the division once again in 1988 and sold the home video rights of its programs to Lorimar.