Aarti Pictures (India)

1st Logo (1989) Logo: We start off with a series of candles on an extreme closeup of the legs/foot of a ultimately dark statue. Then, we zoom out to the statue itself (starting with it's silhouette), on a black, blue/pink numerous amount of smoke background. For over seconds still with it's silhouette, the statue reveals itself, which is a four-armed God with a laurel wreath over it's shoulder and stomach and some collars on it's neck (also has a short towel on it) which in it's head has a moon and a symbol, and has a trident on it, a la Pramod Films logo, with some candles on it's borders. The statue then gets more brighter and then the camera zooms in to us, revealing the statue's full head. We then cut to a black background, and the statue with it's full body. We then zoom in to it's legs again, which whom the text "Aarti" on cursive, "PICTURES'" on imprent and "Present" on cursive, all in red, appear over the legs and foot of the God.

FX/SFX: The zooming-in and out of the things included on this logo, and the revelation of the statue. All overtime and overrated.

Cheesy Factor: In par with the ASK Productions logo, they overused the smoke on many different levels, and the statue zooming in to us is just inexcusable for a logo. If you look closely, there's an black part of the minuscule a of "Aarti" And said text just appeared over the statue's legs. Very outdated details and cheap animation of the camera, even for an 1980's logo.

Music/Sounds: A deep scream of a person, following a very sinister echoed xylophone ditty a la Murghan Enterprises logo, To finish the music, another sudden deep scream of a person.

Availability: Rare, bordering on extinct. The only film that follows this logo is the horror/thriller movie Sau Saal Baad,

Scare Factor: High to nightmare. The smoke, the sudden scream of the person, the sinister melody and the zooming in of the statue, combined with the sudden text on red, may shiver everyone's bones and run in fear for some audiences. The nature of the logo exacerbrates it even further. It may vary for those who used to it. Regardless, considering the fact that what it follows is a horror movie, this is undeniably intentional.