4 Studio (Or Production House) Logos every Tokusatsu fan loves to see.

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Russia

seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from China

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from Australia
seen from South Korea
seen from India

seen from Switzerland
seen from United States
seen from Vietnam
seen from China
seen from South Korea
seen from Taiwan

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Malaysia
4 Studio (Or Production House) Logos every Tokusatsu fan loves to see.
Made this for fun. I made one with sandy cheeks before. (psst: my old files were deleted)
But, it's gonna be for my youtube channel. I hope.
This is the most fucking stupidest thing I have ever heard.
And after its 100th anniversary, I still fail to trust them between the brand name. And when I get my own studio, I'll just buy 20th Century myself. Then I'll give it back to Rupert Murdoch himself. But, alas, Thank you Walt Disney, for happines, laughter and joy to everyone. Except Bob Chapek. I don't know, but I now don't accept him.
Edit: OK, Now I don't trust Bob Iger. I though he was good. Bob Chapek is good.
Finally. I wanted to post this for ages now but never had the time to.
You could guess about what this is.
Summer is over, so I wanted to adjust this art, with a video.
This art showcases Nitrogen Studios, Thirteen, CBS, and Universal just hanging.
Nitrogen is sometimes sleepy so he's just a sleepy guy on rides in cars, boats, airplanes, buses, taxis or trains.
Universal is writing this down in his journal.
CBS is listening to some music. maybe Headcanon this.
Thirteen is just looking at his phone watching NBC Sports, or what he airs on his station or some Sprout.
Universal Pictures, 1983 3D logo, correctly proportioned
The Universal logo only used on two films, both released in 1983 (Jaws 3-D and Metalstorm: The Destruction of Jared Syn, the latter of which is where this logo comes from), but correctly proportioned so the globe appears circular instead of oblong.
Republic Pictures.
The Quiet Man (1952).
Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse Opening Titles by Deva Studios
The logo sequence was an integral part of the film, a surreal onramp to the wild ride that the viewer was about to be plunged into. We walked out beyond inspired, ready to break all the logo-sequence rules to craft an intensely memorable opening for this fantastic film, in a tremendous collaboration with the Spider-Verse film-makers.