This page only shows primary logo variants. For other related logos and images, see:
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Contents | |||||
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1919–1922 | 1919–1980 | 1967–1968 | 1968–1975 | 1975–1982 | 1982–1987 |
1987–1994 | 1994–2000 | 2000–2001 | 2001–present | 2019–present |
1919–1922[]
An SVG version of this logo is recommended but not required.
You can help Closing Logo Group by uploading it here.
1919–1980[]
1967–1968[]
An SVG version of this logo is recommended but not required.
You can help Closing Logo Group by uploading it here.
This logo was introduced after the company's purchase by Transamerica Corporation.
1968–1982[]
1968–1975[]
1975–1982[]
1982–1987[]
This logo was designed by Sandy Dvore.
1987–present[]
1987–1994[]
2001–present[]
After 7 years of absence, the 1987 logo returned, but the text was changed to a different font. The print version of the logo was in use in tandem with the placeholder logo for the latter half of 2000 before being reintroduced on screen in 2001.
1994–2000[]
An SVG version of this logo is recommended but not required.
You can help Closing Logo Group by uploading it here.
2000–2001[]
An SVG version of this logo is recommended but not required.
You can help Closing Logo Group by uploading it here.
This logo (used in films and online) was ultimately a placeholder logo for the reintroduction of the 1987 UA logo in 2001.
2019–present[]
Notes[]
- Until 2019, Hot Tub Time Machine (2010) remains the final film to be distributed by United Artists to date; with MGM being demoted to a co-distributor with Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures, Warner Bros. and others, United Artists is no longer active as a distributor and remains solely as a production company.
- In 1988, United Artists licensed the video releases for its more obscure titles to a small specialty video distributor called Wood Knapp Video. This deal lasted until 1995.
- [1]
- On February 5, 2019, MGM and Annapurna Pictures resurrected the United Artists brand to expand their US joint theatrical distribution venture, rebranding it as United Artists Releasing. The decision was made to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the studio's foundation. The company has a release slate of 10 to 14 films per year, including four to six films set for worldwide release from MGM, two to four low budget genre films from Orion Pictures (another revived MGM holding, whose distribution team was absorbed into UA Releasing to bolster and accompany its existing staff), and three to five auteur-driven films from Annapurna. It also intends to work with third-party filmmakers and production companies to supplement its slate, offering content creators an alternative distribution option outside the studio system. (The announcement can be seen on the official UA Releasing website.)
See also[]