Chi Luen Film Company (Hong Kong)

1st Logo (1950's-Late 1960's?) Logo: On a red-colored fastly-moving sunbeam background, we see a golden censer with a flame sending it's bursts over it. Below it are the Olympic Rings, which none of them are colored (possibly colored as a statue, but there's no conclusive proof). Below it, we see a flat, plain and blue ribbon. The chinese text on the top, on red with white shadows over it, which translates to "Chi Luen" along with the white text which displays "Film Company Limited", appears zooming in either the top of the screen on the ribbon. The logo stays still for the rest of the logo and then we fade to black.

Variant: On it's earliest years of life, the logo was in black and white. The text just appears as well.

FX/SFX: The sunbeam background, the flame sending fire and the texts zooming in. Neutral animation for it's time.

Cheesy Factor: Why did they use the olympic rings? They have an obsession from sports long when the company was founded or what? Also, the sunbeam background looks more like an explosion (possibly a bloody one, mainly due to it's color).

Music/Sounds: An overall triumphant fanfare by trumpets, either full or abriged.

Availability: Rare, bordering on extinct. Seen on their films of the time.

Scare Factor: Depends on the variant.
 * Black and White variant: Medium to high. The triumphant fanfare and the darkness of the logo may get many of the people get at least one bone marrow, also that the text just appears may be a problem to some. The scare factor is lower for those who used to it.
 * Color variant: High. It has added some color, which doesn't include any darkness anyway, but the sunbeam background has a hellish scheme, which adds to the scare factor. The text zooming in can also contribute to the mix of the creepiness.