Gaumont Columbia TriStar Home Video (France)

 Background : Gaumont Columbia TriStar Home Video is formed back in 1982 when Gaumount made a partnership with RCA/Columbia Pictures International Video to create "GCR Home Video", which is short for "Gaumont-Columbia-RCA Home Video", or "Gaumont/Columbia/RCA Video". In 1991, to reflect the name change of its parent, it was renamed to "Gaumont Columbia TriStar Home Video". The label was shuttered in the early 2000s and it was split up into Columbia TriStar Home Video France and Gaumont Home Video.

Gaumont Columbia Pictures RCA Video
(1982-1989)

 Logo :On a black background, a white rectangle spins upwards, containing the 1981-1995 Gaumont logo in white and slightly off center. It eventually rests at the top of the screen as the Columbia Pictures print logo at the time (but arranged horizontally) in blue spins up from the bottom left corner and rests below the Gaumont section. The 2 halves of the box then swing in around the logo and encase it. Below them, the text "RCA VIDEO" (with the former being the RCA logo and the latter being just a red outline) zooms in from below the screen and a incomplete rectangle then slides up, enclosing it and finishing the logo

 FX/SFX : Simple graphics.

 Music/Sounds :A fanfare that sounds identical to the 20th Century Fox fanfare and the Superman theme, but not as good.

 Availability :On French releases of Gaumont and Columbia Pictures (and Tri-Star Pictures) and even some Orion Pictures movies from the time. It's unsure but doubtful if it appears on Canadian French releases distributed by ISV, like Alone in the Dark (to name one).

 Editor's Note : Really simple animation.

Gaumont Columbia Films RCA Video
(1989-1992)

 Logo : On a space background, several balls zoom out with trail effects to the back of the screen. A 3D version of the Gaumont logo then drops down with a trail behind it and zooms out to its position, just as the balls stop. A blue wire frame trail then zooms in and reveals itself to be the Columbia Pictures print logo (but with "films" instead), swinging a bit before stopping in the middle. The RCA logo then comes in and moves into position, with the "A" flipping in the process. "VIDEO" zooms in beside it and 2 halves of a 3-tiered rectangle outline then come in, enclosing the logo. The spaces are then wiped with black to block out the stars. The final result is exactly the same as the previous logo; the differences being the Columbia logo and the tighter spacing.

 FX/SFX : Computer Graphics.

 Music/Sounds :Same as the previous logo.

 Availability : Same as the above.

 Editor's Note : Better than before, but it's very primitive.

Gaumont Columbia TriStar Home Video
(1993-Early 2000s)

 Logo : On a black background, we see a portrait of the Columbia Pictures torch lady spin in from the top left corner of the screen. The Tristar pegasus portrait does the same from the opposing direction. The words "TRISTAR" and "COLUMBIA" slide in from opposing sides of the screen, only to slightly zoom back and position themselves on their proper portrait. Then, a gradient lilac version of the Gaumont daisy zooms out and spins, situating itself on the top of the logo. The Gaumont text fades in while "HOME VIDEO" slides down from the two portraits and zooms back slightly. A box outline fades in, encasing the logo.

 Variant : A short version of the logo exists in its later years. It starts with the box slide then the zooms out and the company name slides in with a shine effect.

 FX/SFX : Computer Graphics.

 Music/Sounds : Same as the previous logos.

 Availability : Seen on French prints of material from Columbia and Tristar Pictures.