Your Dream Variations - Miramax Films

CheesyBob42

'''Yin Yang Yo! The Movie (2009):''' 1987 Miramax Films logo plays, but Yin jumps in and "yin-cinerates" the M and it crumbles.

Doraemon: Nobita and the Animal Planet (Japanese version from 1990, English dubbed version from July 2, 2010): The 1987 "Big M" logo plays after the Miramax Family logo from 1999, but the music is the same pitch as the 1992 Miramax Family Films logo.

(In other words, a double-pitched version of the normal 1987 Miramax jingle)

Doraemon: Nobita's Little Star Wars (1985, English subbed version from August 7, 2009): The 1987 Miramax "presents" variation plays, but when "presents" fades in, the 1987 Miramax jingle begins, carrying into the Toho Company & Doraemon the Movie logos.

Donkey Kong 64: The Movie (2000, Direct-to-Video, closing variant): After the end credits, we see the Nintendo 64 sequence at the beginning of DK64, but the N64 logo is replaced with an M (in the Miramax font) doing the same thing. Then, it cuts to the Miramax Family Films "Banner of Boredom" being drawn in like the Rareware logo at the beginning of Donkey Kong Country. As a side note, the Miramax Family Films logo at the beginning and the closing variant are both (strangely enough) retained on the 2001 re-release by Warner Bros.

domnickjr

Dom in Outer Space (2000): The 1999 logo plays, but "PRESENTS" is in place of "FILMS".

Adventure_Time:

LOL: A Smiley Movie (2003): The Big M is bigger than usual but then a Smiley flies and makes it the usual size.

wolfie14

Here He Comes (October 11, 2002): The 1987 logo plays, but it is red.

The Picnic of Doom (October 25, 2000): The 1987 logo is blue, crudely drawn, and is on a yellow background.

Lazlo25:

The Victim (2011): A flashlight's light is turned on to reveal the Miramax Films logo crudely drawn on the wall.

lukesams

Booksquirm (October 12, 2001): Exactly like in The Musketeer, but the word "MIRAMAX" is green.

RauciousMan

PBS Apocalypse (February 11, 2011): The current logo plays as normal, but when the logo forms, General P-Head (played by R. Lee Eremy) walks into the logo and blows it up with an RPG, making him fly into the 1984 PBS logo, but  FILMS  appears below  PBS  and is burnt, seguing into the movie. This existed in the 2D version of the film. On the teaser trailer, the 1987 Miramax Films "Still Picture" logo is used, but the entire logo burns one-by-one. On theatrical trailers, the logo has General P-Head on top of  MIRAMAX . On the TV spots, the logo is on fire. On the 3D versions of the movie,  MIRAMAX  and  FILMS  zoom in. When the logo blows up by General P-Head's RPG and he flies into the 1984 PBS logo,  PBS  zooms in with  Films  fading in and zooming in as well.

lukesams

PBS Parody Quadrilogy (2011, 2012, 2013, 2014): The current logo plays as normal, but when the logo fades out, the "A" in "MIRAMAX" stays intact, seguing into the 1971 PBS logo.

'''Flea Attack! (1997):''' The 1987 logo animates in reverse. Also, the text is replaced with a flea with the 1987 Miramax Films "Still Picture" logo below.

Nitwitz (1990): The 1987 logo is on a dark red background.

Nitwitz 2 (1995): The 1987 logo plays, but the word "MIRAMAX" is blue.

Nitwitz 3 (2002): The 1987 logo plays, but when the music finishes, the word "FILMS" and the two lines fade out and "MIRAMAX" fades into "I DON'T KNOW!".

The Distinguished Knucklehead (1989): The 1987 logo plays, but "MIRAMAX" is pink, "FILMS" and the two lines are light gold, and the logo freezes when the word "FILMS" fades in.

Cluedo (January 20, 2012): The 1987 logo plays, but the entire logo turns dark blue at the end and turns into a zoetrope, seguing into the Hasbro logo.

Hog Fashion (1997) and Mean Boars (2004): The 1987 logo is mirrored.

offcampusstudent1993:

Brett Aspel and the Todd Who Shagged Me (2011) and Clerks 3 (2014): The 1987 logo plays, but it is in black and white and the logo is zoomed in,so that the top and bottom of the big "M" aren't seen. This is perhaps due to the. Also, the logo is in high tone. In other words, the jingle is the low-pitched version of the 1990s Miramax Family Films logo's jingle.

Brett Aspel: Goldfinger (2012): The 1987 logo plays, but the words "MIRAMAX" after the formation is in orange, while the purple replaces the blue in the logo. The music is at the same pitch as the 1990s "Miramax Family Films" logo.

Total Drama: The Movie (2014): On the film, the Big "M" logo appears, rather than "The Banner of Boredom". Only seen on the Theatrical Trailers, the "Banner of Boredom" plays, but the background is a forest (which TDI took place in), and the words "Miramax Films" are in Yellow.

The Swan Princess (1994): Same as the "Chasing Amy" variant, but the "M" that forms the word "Miramax", and the blue aura background, that surrounds the big "M", are teal. "MIRAMAX" is tinted in pink-gold. "FILMS" are tinted in light pink. The music is half a semitone lower than usual.

BrianHanson

Night of the Vampires (2007): The 1987 logo plays, but it is red. Also, the music is a horror version of the Miramax Family Films logo's jingle.

Johnnytestphantom199:

Digimon: The Movie (2000, Electricsoldier1997 Release: January 1, 2010): The 1987-1999 logo plays, but the music is in low-pitch. Seen on the opening variant, proceeded by the 20th Century Fox Logo. On the closing variant, the same logo appeared, but it reads "Miramax Home Entertainment" and the music plays normally.