The 25 most iconic movie company logos, from A24 to Pixar to TriStar

In honor of Napoleon and Ridley Scott's Scott Free imprint, these are our favorite film studio and production company logos

Film Features TriStar
The 25 most iconic movie company logos, from A24 to Pixar to TriStar
Film production company logos (from top left): Scott Free, Blumhouse, Walt Disney, Jerry Bruckheimer, Monkeypaw, Lionsgate Image: The A.V. Club

A good studio logo says something about the movie you’re about to see. Sometimes it’s as literal as “this movie is based on a Marvel comic book,” sometimes it’s a testament to a studio’s place in film history, and sometimes it’s—at the risk of sounding very cool—a total vibe that gives you a sense of what to expect from the movie you’re about to see. There are even extremely rare occasions when the logo is so good at hyping up a movie that it makes you wish the Dark Universe hadn’t been a catastrophic flop.

So, in honor of the release of Ridley Scott’s Napoleon and the beautifully haunting logo for Scott Free Productions, here are The A.V. Club’s 25 favorite production company logos (in alphabetical order, so no fighting!) and what they say about the movies they’re attached to.

previous arrow20th Century Fox next arrow
20th Century Fox Intro HD

What is it? The legendary 20th Century Fox logo is everything that the modern, self-obsessed Disney logo wishes it could be (more on that in a minute). It’s all big, triumphant spectacle, set to a musical fanfare that makes you just want to… sit down quietly and enjoy a film. Just a giant logo, towering above some kind of magical fantasy land called Hollywood, inviting you to the show.What does it mean? Big excitement, with a classical old Hollywood-inspired flair. One of those logos that says “get ready, you’re about to watch a dang movie.”As seen in: , the last movie to feature this logo before it became 20th Century Films

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