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The logo as it appears on The THX Ultimate Demo Disc, the THX website from 2003-2009 and the official THX YouTube channel
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"Enhanced" variant from 1993
THX Ltd. (which officially stands for "Tomlinson Holman's eXperiment") is an American company known for its namesake motion picture quality certification system (despite it being branded as a "sound system" until 1997), founded in 1983 by Tomlinson Holman and George Lucas to ensure the sound quality of the third Star Wars film Return of the Jedi. Named after Lucas's first film THX 1138 (1971), it was owned by Lucasfilm Ltd. from its inception until 2002, when it was spun off as its own company and sold to sound card manufacturer Creative Technology. In 2016, it was acquired by gaming peripheral manufacturer Razer.
THX certifies fine-tuned home theater equipment, TiVo DVRs, and some PCs; they previously certified physical media such as VHS, LaserDisc, DVD and Blu-ray (and HD-DVD for Brave Story in Japan and Pan's Labyrinth in France only) until around late 2012, as well as video games until 2010.
Trivia: The names given by Lucasfilm to some of the early THX trailers are derived from the earliest winners of the Academy Award for Best Picture, such as Wings, Cavalcade, and Cimarron. The only pre-1936 winners to not be a THX trailer namesake are All Quiet on the Western Front and It Happened One Night.
Variant: In a Movie Television report on THX's 10th anniversary, the trailer was in black and white.
Technique: Motion-controlled animation effects.
Audio: A synthesized crescendo sound effect known as the "Deep Note", coded by James Andy Moorer. It starts off with a group of 30 descending synthesized voices reminiscent of the sound of an airplane flying. Each voice moves slowly and randomly in a frequency sweep between 200hz and 400hz. This part of the Deep Note then repeats, and eventually, the voices proceed to their target notes, a drastic change of three octaves. The lower notes grow deeper, and the higher voices grow more shrill, becoming an ascending dramatic sound until the sounds stop in one pitch. Three voices are heard per note, slightly detuned, and two more voices are heard in the bass.
Availability: This only appeared on the theatrical premiere of Return of the Jedi in theaters in Dallas and Hollywood, and was never used on THX-certified video releases. However, it can still be seen on select Demo DVDs and at THX's website (plus their official Vimeo and YouTube). The alternate variant appears on one of the Return of the Jedi featurettes made exclusively for the Star Wars Trilogy: The Definitive Collection LaserDisc set.
Legacy: The Deep Note, being introduced in this trailer, is known to be one of the most notorious movie sound marks in history because of its often-frightening nature for younger viewers.
Visuals: On a black background, a blue rectangular outline fades in. The gray text "The Audience is Listening" (in the Bodoni Open font) fades inside the outline, then fades out. A few seconds later, the THX logo in silver appears, the rectangular outline fades out, and the "LUCASFILM LTD." text from before (now in Futura) appears in their respective positions above and below. The THX logo shines.
Variants: Throughout the years, this trailer had many different variants:
Technique: Camera-controlled shine animations. The remastered version uses CGI by Van Ling, a prolific visual effects supervisor and DVD menu creator for several of James Cameron's films (including Terminator 2), all of the Star Wars DVDs, and three official THX demo discs.
Audio:
Availability: This debuted on an unknown film in late 1983, and was last seen on the Indiana Jones: The Complete Adventures Blu-ray.
Legacy:
Visuals: On a black background, a small box containing a gray gradient background appears in the center of the screen. Then, the hand of a conductor, holding a baton, moves up in the box. The hand flicks the baton, blasting out a blue "hyperspace" far larger than the box that slowly turns red. Once the screen zooms through the other end of the wormhole, a silver THX logo slowly zooms past the camera, against a dark red abyss. After a few seconds, text reading "The Audience is Listening" fades in, in the same font and color used in "Broadway", followed by a subtitle reading "Lucasfilm Ltd. Sound System", along with a copyright notice at the bottom right of the screen and what appears to be the Dolby "Spectral Recording" logo at the bottom left.
Trivia: The copyright notice has a 1987 date on it, indicating it was completed by then.
Variants:
Technique: CGI (mixed with live-action footage for the hand) by Industrial Light & Magic, animated with Alias software.
Audio:
Availability: This is the first alternate THX trailer, introduced in 1988 with the original theatrical release of Willow in THX certified theaters.
Legacy: This is one of three trailers that used a theme other than the original Deep Note, the others being "Grand" (the 4th trailer) and "Tex 2: Moo Can" (the 7th trailer). It proved to be unpopular among viewers. Andy Moorer, in an interview with Twenty Thousand Hertz, recalled that "Nobody liked [the sounds], nobody remembered them".[3] The original version is infamous for its extreme rarity. Various reconstructions have been made, and some audio had resurfaced, but no one was exactly sure what the original version sounded like beyond a general idea until video footage of the logo was uploaded in mid-February 2022.
Visuals: On a black background is some white text that reads "This auditorium is equipped with a THX sound system." A few seconds later, the background turns into a dark red cloudy background. There are some white text that reads "The Audience Is Listening." After that, the red-black background slowly turns dark blue, somewhat similar to the previous background. Seconds after, a light with lens flares moves upward and a 90° turned THX logo rotates to its front in a blue gradient background, with "LUCASFILM LTD" above it and "SOUND SYSTEM" below.
Variants:
Technique: CGI by Industrial Light and Magic, done with Alias software (like the previous logo), according to The THX Ultimate Demo Disc.
Audio: Some chimes and wind howling. When the background opens, wind whistles, then various ascending notes and sounds, until a Star Wars laser-gun sound and a whooshing sound occurs as the THX logo appears and ends with a choir-like version of the Deep Note. The sound for this trailer was apparently created at Skywalker Sound and designed by David Slusser and Marco d'Ambrosio, according to The THX Ultimate Demo Disc.
Availability: Alongside DTS's "Stand Alone" trailer, this debuted on the original theatrical release of Jurassic Park (according to the 1998 Lucasfilm THX "The Audience is Listening on DVD" disc and the THX Ultimate Demo Disc), and then it was seen in all THX-certified theaters from 1993 until 1997, as well as online, on the DVDs that came with second-edition and third-edition copies of the book DVD Demystified by Jim Taylor and on the 2002 Fox Five-Star Collection DVD release of Speed. The "DELL PC" version is exclusive to the THX Picture and Sound Optimizer disc. The DTS version was only being used on early DTS films such as the aforementioned Jurassic Park; and it took until May 2022 for this variant to be discovered.
Visuals: On a black background, the familiar rectangle from the Brodway trailer fades in. It then crossfades to the front of the fictional Springfield Aztec Theatre, complete with a film marquee displaying the text "SISKEL & EBERT: THE MOVIE" and "TWO THUMBS UP" - SISKEL & EBERT" below it (referencing the TV series Siskel & Ebert [later At the Movies] hosted by movie critics Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert). The screen then cuts to many Simpsons characters in theater seats, including Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, and Abe (Grampa) Simpson. The light dims and then brightens a bit. Then it cuts to the movie screen, then a white screen with "THX" on it (not the same as the other trailers, obviously to avoid any legal trouble) appears, with "SOUND SYSTEM" and "THE AUDIENCE IS LISTENING" under it. The Deep Note shakes the theater/cinema, as several moviegoers, including Hans Moleman, coil back in their seats. Chaos then ensues, with Moleman's glasses breaking, another man having his teeth shatter in a close-up shot, an exit sign exploding, the ceiling beginning to crumble and fall, and a man's head exploding (a reference to the film Scanners). After the chaos, the screen cuts back to the screen as the audience cheers for the logo. The theatre screen fades to black and the scene then cuts to Grampa (voiced by Dan Castellaneta) who, with his hand cupped to his ear, yells "Turn it up! TURN IT UP!".
Variant: Compared to the scene from the original episode, the pacing of the trailer is slightly slower to fit in with the full version of the Deep Note. The colors are also more vivid, and the animation is more detailed and slightly less rough. Despite now being an official trailer, this version retains the legally distinct logo from the original scene.
Technique: Cel animation by Film Roman, outsourced to Anivision in South Korea.
Audio: The atmosphere, Grampa's dialogue, and the Deep Note. In the original scene, car horns are heard during the establishing shot of the theatre.
Availability: This was originally a scene from The Simpsons episode "Burns' Heir" (which originally aired on April 14, 1994), but Lucasfilm executives liked the parody so much that they asked to use the scene as an official trailer.
Visuals: The THX logo fades in as it usually would. All of a sudden, the logo sputters and then breaks down as if due to an electrical failure. A light is switched on a light blue background as a red robot named Tex rolls in from off-camera. Tex opens a panel on the "X", grabs a rocket pack, and flies off-screen, pulling out a hammer just before he goes off-screen, muttering "Oh, George..." (referring to George Lucas). Tex hammers at something on the right side of the screen, drills at something on the left side and then flies over to between the "T" and the "H", bumps the "H" out of the way, and opens another panel inside the "T". He moves a large switch inside it, causing the logo to re-activate and complete its usual sequence with the "LUCASFILM LTD." and "SOUND SYSTEM" text as the background fades back to black. Tex notices that the panel in the "X" is still open and kicks the logo, which closes it. A black screen falls, reading "The Audience Is Listening".
Trivia:
Variants:
Technique: CGI by Pixar Animation Studios.
Audio: The Deep Note in -1.5 lower pitch (from the Broadway DVD variant), Tex's dialogue, and the sounds corresponding to the animation. According to The THX Ultimate Demo Disc, the sound design was done by Gary Rydstrom.
Audio Variants:
Audio Trivia: The sound when a piece of metal hits the ground after hitting Tex in the extended version was actually re-used from the sound effects created for Toy Story. The sound effect in question is in the scene when Buzz Lightyear drops a toy jack he's holding while Woody is confronting him.
Availability: It can be found on most Pixar movies on DVD, such as Toy Story, A Bug's Life, Toy Story 2, and Cars (the last THX-certified Disney DVD as no other format of Cars uses THX), as well as some THX demo DVDs and the DVDs that come with all three editions of the book DVD Demystified by Jim Taylor. According to the THX Ultimate Demo Disc, the 1998 "The Audience is Listening on DVD" disc and the insert on the THX Picture and Sound Optimizer disc, this trailer was released in time for the film Independence Day.
Visuals: There is a gray, lifeless THX logo. Tex the robot, from the previous trailer, drops down from the top of the screen, and shows the viewer a cow-in-a-can toy. He flips it over, but the mooing sound is very faint, and he shrugs. He flies to the THX logo in the background, opens the same hatch in the "X" as his previous trailer, and then pulls out a cable from it. He then returns with the can and holds the cable up with his opposite hand, revealing it to have a plug, and plugs it into the can. Tex flips the can again and more realistic mooing sounds were heard, as the THX logo turns silver and starts to rise up from the middle of the screen to its usual position nearly at the top and shines. Tex smiles and nods when suddenly the THX logo begins to rumble and shake, as if a stampede of cows were heard. Tex sees this, jumps back in surprise, and he nervously flies off with the can and the plug. The cable causes the logo to jolt to its left side for a moment before the plug disconnects from the can, putting the logo back to its normal position. The cable is pulled back into the logo, the hatch closes, and like the last trailer, the black screen with the text "The Audience is Listening" and a copyright info under it falls to the screen.
Trivia: This trailer's original name was "Stampede", according to the DVD menu of Pixar's employee-exclusive "Made in Point Richmond" DVD.
Variants:
Technique: CGI; like before, this was done by Pixar.
Audio: Same as the previous trailer, except the Deep Note is replaced by cows mooing it (if one listens carefully, a high-pitched voice is heard towards the end of the mooing, which sounds like someone yelling "STOP!" before the sound of rumbling and cracking). The sound design is by Gary Rydstrom and Marco d'Ambrosio (who did the cow chord) according to The THX Ultimate Demo Disc. A variant of the Monster THX logo (website intro only) uses some electrical sounds from the Terminator 2 THX trailer, of which Rydstrom also did the sound design. Like the previous two logos, prints existed in all three digital sound formats.
Audio Variant: On some earlier home video releases that feature this trailer (like the aforementioned Monsters, Inc. VHS, Toy Story 2 Ultimate Toy Box DVD and the version on the Made in Point Richmond DVD, as well as both versions on the discs from the second and third editions of DVD Demystified), the logo is slightly louder, and more mooing sounds are added in, and the moo noise heard at the end is heard later.
Availability: Seen in THX-certified theaters for some time, though for how long remains a mystery. It debuted likely in front of Alien Resurrection, as the logo debuted on Thanksgiving weekend (in the U.S.) of that year according to several THX demo discs. The Lucasfilm byline variant can be seen on various THX-certified DVDs from 2000 to 2005, mostly on films from Pixar (such as Toy Story 2, Monsters, Inc., Toy Story 10th Anniversary Edition, and Finding Nemo) and Fox (such as Speed 2 and The Day The Earth Stood Still), as well as THX Demo discs, the DVDs that came with second-edition and third-edition copies of the book DVD Demystified by Jim Taylor, and even the VHS of Monsters, Inc., although Disney Channel's original print of the film plastered this with the VHS version of Broadway instead, possibly due to time compression. The remastered variant without the Lucasfilm byline debuted in the US on Star Wars: Clone Wars Volume Two on December 6, 2005. (internationally, it debuted on Toy Story 2 Special Edition on November 28, 2005) A variant is also on the Lair video game for PlayStation 3. This was also seen online as well. This trailer also appears in the Pixar employees only Made in Point Richmond DVD along with the Tex logo. It was also seen on the French (2 disc) Ultimate Edition DVD release of The Transporter (Le Transporteur) and the Japanese DVD releases of Waterboys (ウォーターボーイズ), Check it Out, Yo!! (チェケラッチョ!!), and Swing Girls (スウィングガールズ).
Visuals: On a black background, the phrase "LET'S SEE IT IN" (in the Geneva font) zooms in word-by-word at the center of the screen. Then the THX logo fades in and shines, followed by "LUCASFILM" fading in above.
Technique: CGI.
Audio: A shorter version of the Deep Note that begins right before the rapid pitch change. However, new voices are added to the Deep Note and drown out most of the original voices except for the lower ones.
Availability: Seen in THX-certified theaters at the time. Although the THX Ultimate Demo Disc claims the trailer debuted in late 1999, this trailer did indeed debut on Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace in May of that year. This also appears on The Adventures of Indiana Jones (2003 release only), The THX Ultimate Demo Disc and the Lucasfilm THX Surround EX Demonstration Disc.
Visuals: In a darkly-lit environment, the camera zooms in toward a glassy light blue sphere, which has clouds rolling and lightning flickering. The environment illuminates, showing that the sphere is barely hovering over a textured blue floor. Suddenly, the sphere shatters, and the sky is revealed to contain several rolling gray clouds. The glass then liquefies and gathers in the center. Some lightning strikes it and is forms a silver THX logo. If one looks closely while the logo forms, one can see rain pouring down. Then, the environment fades to black as "LUCASFILM", spaced out to fit the width of the THX logo, fades in on top of it and a shimmering blue rectangle (the same one from "Broadway") is drawn clockwise around the logo (like a laser).
Variants:
Technique: CGI by Van Ling.
Audio: First, there is the sounds of rainfall, and then thunderclaps/electric shocking sounds, followed by glass shattering, then the Deep Note. A laser-like sound is heard as the rectangle is formed.
Audio Trivia:
Audio Variant: In the T2 variant, music from Terminator 2 is heard which fades into the Deep Note used in Broadway 2000; the sound design and mix are by Gary Rydstrom at Skywalker Sound according to the credits of the T2 Ultimate Edition DVD.
Availability: The T2 version was first seen on the Terminator 2: Judgment Day "Ultimate Edition" DVD, released on August 29, 2000, with the regular version appearing in most THX-certified theaters starting on May 25, 2001 with Pearl Harbor.[5] Seen on several THX DVDs, such as Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace, Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones, Alien Quadrilogy, From Hell, Re-Animator, La Mentale, 36th Precinct (36 Quai des Orfèvres), The Incredibles, Bayside Shakedown 2, THX 1138, the 2004 Star Wars Trilogy DVD set, and X-Men 1.5; in THX-certified theaters, and on the video games NBA 09: The Inside, MLB 08: The Show, and MLB 09: The Show. It's also the intro to the menu of The THX Ultimate Demo Disc. The final appearance of the Lucasfilm byline variant was Star Wars: Clone Wars Volume One, released on March 22, 2005, and the remastered variant with the THX website URL but no Lucasfilm byline appears on the French DVD releases of Ghost Rider and L'Ennemi Intime, as well as most THX certified DVDs released by Wild Side Video, and even the HD DVD release of Pan's Labyrinth (Le Labyrinthe de Pan).
Visuals: On a black background, there are out-of-focus movie clips on a THX logo. Some of these clips include Star Wars: Episode I, Alien and Jurassic Park. The logo then starts to shine as the blue outline from the Broadway trailer appears around the screen and the words "CERTIFIED CINEMA" appear under the THX logo. Everything except the blue outline fades out and is replaced by the THX website URL on the top, copyright information on the bottom, and the phrase "20 Years of Making Great Movies Come Alive."
Technique: CGI.
Audio: In this order, sound/dialogue clips from the following movies are heard:
After this, the -1.5/low-pitched Deep Note from the "Tex" and "Broadway" (DVD variant) trailers starts playing as the final sound clips play from:
The sound design was done by Gary Rydstrom and Steve Boeddeker of Skywalker Sound.
*1 denotes Skywalker Sound title *2 denotes THX-certified title
Availability: This was only seen in THX-certified theaters in 2003 and early 2004 when THX celebrated its 20th anniversary; licensing issues have probably prevented this trailer from being used again, as THX doesn't own the rights to the clips featured.
Visuals: On a black background, the white text "THE SCIENCE" fades in, the letters of which slowly come together. As that text turns black with a white drop shadow, "OF SENSATION" blurs in below and zooms in, with a purple flare appearing under the "O" in "OF". The text fades out, leaving the flare behind. Then, the THX logo appears with the text "CERTIFIED CINEMA" below, with the flare moving along the bottom of the logo. The logo then fades out, with the flare following suit a second later. The URL "WWW.THX.COM" fades in as copyright information is seen below.
Trivia: This trailer was originally created for use with digital cinema projectors, not only for the use of the tagline, but also including a flare so it can immerse the viewer with a sharper and cleaner picture in the auditorium before a film would start.
Variants:
Technique: CGI.
Audio: A remastered Deep Note, some shining sounds, and whooshes. In this remastered Deep Note, some voices are reminiscent of the newer ones from the Broadway 2000 version, and some of the voices reach their final pitches before the others do.
Audio Trivia: The audio used in this trailer made an appearance in Over the Hedge (the glimmer is heard briefly, if one listens closely).
Audio Variants:
Availability: After the logo first appeared to THX newsletter subscribers on May 11, 2005, it officially premiered on the theatrical release of Star Wars Episode III - Revenge of the Sith due to it being an all-digital production, and seen in some theaters for some time after.
Visuals: On a black background, the metallic of the THX logo fades in. Then the shiny silver color fades inside the logo. The logo glows and makes a big shine with some sparkles. Below, the following disclaimer fades in: "THX and the THX logo are trademarks of THX Ltd., which may be registered in some jurisdictions. All Rights Reserved."
Variants:
Technique: CGI by Eyestorm Productions.
Audio: The -1.5/low-pitched Deep Note from the "Tex" and "Broadway" (DVD variant) trailers. None for the still variant.
Audio Variant: On a THX Spartial Audio demo from 2018, the logo uses the audio from the Eclipse trailer.
Availability: Can be seen on THX Demo Disc II, in HD on the games NBA 08 and MLB 07: The Show (PlayStation 2 and PlayStation 3), The Bourne Conspiracy, and whenever a THX-Certified TiVo is turned on. The alternate HD variant seen on a promotional disc on the HD-DVD side for the French HD-DVD release of Pan's Labyrinth (Le Labyrinthe de Pan) (also in SD on the DVD side), the Japanese DVD of I Just Didn't Do It (それでもボクはやってない), the French DVDs of L'Ennemi Intime (hidden in title 7) and Shine a Light (hidden in title 13), as well as the French (2-disc) DVD of Hot Fuzz.
Visuals: The THX logo starts up as normal, but just as the Deep Note starts to intensify, the logo suddenly falls down revealing Shrek and Donkey creating the Deep Note with a wind chime, an xylophone, a bagpipe, a kazoo and an accordion. The two realize they've been exposed, before looking at each other and smiling awkwardly as Shrek raises the logo (which is apparently a cardboard cut-out) back up. The Deep Note starts back up and the logo shimmers in green from left to right. While the Deep Note is playing, Donkey comes out and plays the kazoo over the last few seconds. Shrek whispers at him, and the two walk off-screen. The screen fades to black as the words "illuminate your senses" fade in on the top and shine, a smaller THX Certified Cinema logo in the middle, and copyright info on the bottom.
Trivia: The "LUCASFILM" text above the THX logo is visible for a split second when Shrek lifts it up. This is an editing mistake that made it to the final trailer, as this trailer was initially supposed to premiere in late 2001 when THX was still part of Lucasfilm.
Technique: CGI by Pacific Data Images and DreamWorks Animation.
Audio: The Deep Note (the descending part at first with it falling over), the instruments, and the dialogue. Mike Myers and Eddie Murphy reprise their respective roles as Shrek and Donkey from the film.
Audio Trivia: Donkey's "Uh-oh..." is taken from an early part of the first Shrek film when he realizes he ran out of fairy dust while he is trying to escape Lord Farquaad's guards.
Availability: This was initially supposed to premiere on November 2, 2001, the date of Shrek's home video release, but was pulled at the last second. It was theorized that Disney threatened to cut ties with THX over the trailer since this was the same day their film Monsters, Inc. opened in theaters (Disney has denied this), but THX themselves stated it was due to not wanting to be associated with a specific film. It eventually debuted online in 2006 to promote Shrek the Third[6], with the trailer also appearing theatrically on the film itself (and possibly other films). It was later uploaded to the company's YouTube channel as well.
Visuals: On a gray background, there is a clapperboard on screen. The clapperboard claps and then disappears off-screen. The camera then zooms out and turns, revealing the background to be a gray BMW car with the iconic "kidney grille". Tex flies on-screen and stops in front of the car, giving a "stop" signal. Tex mutters "Uh oh..." then tries to fly away but ends up getting sucked into the car. He gets flung around the car's engine uncontrollably and is eventually able to stop and regain his balance. He then looks up and sees part of the engine spraying. After spraying for a few seconds, it explodes, and Tex gets covered in black ash. Another part of the engine then pushes Tex up, and he gets chased by another explosion. He manages to escape from the car just in time, but then he loses control and hits the THX logo off-screen. He then stands back up, shakes his arms and foot, looks back at the THX logo, and does a "Ta-dah!" pose. A copyright notice fades in and out on the bottom right.
Variants:
Technique: CGI.
Audio: A man saying "And...action!" when the clapperboard is on-screen, Tex's voice, some car sounds, and other sound effects, and the -1.5/low-pitched Deep Note from before.
Availability: Seen on THX-certified DVD players in some cars, and seen in theaters during this time period; it's said to have premiered before Cars. This was spotted on the 2006 DVD of District B13 and THX Demo Disc II, as well as the 2006 Japanese releases of Brave Story on DVD, HD-DVD, and Blu-ray.
Visuals: The sequence starts out with an octagon shape figure rising out of a silver surface (à la a ripple effect), and forms into another figure, which looks like petals from a flower (it in fact is a blue passion flower) because we're looking at it from the top. Inside the "flower" is a crown shape figure that has wings on top of it, slowly spinning around, producing the held organ note sound, as the screen zooms in on it. Then, the scene changes. Following this is another set of wings that also spin around, but faster. A ring is spinning around with it and goes down towards the bottom of the screen, producing the buzzer. And the scene changes again. The same set of wings from the first scene is shown, once again spinning slowly, with shades seen on the left side of the screen. As the scene changes again, a tulip is seen zooming in towards the camera as it opens up its front, producing the deep brass sound. Then the screen zooms in on a mushroom as it bumps up a bit and makes drum beats. Then a set of butterflies fly by (with some stopping in the front center of the screen), producing some flapping sound is the flowerhead-like plant with dragonfly wings as petals, it pushes one-by-one clockwise, making dolphin chirping sounds, then there is a lotus seed head opening and closing its holes as it makes a melody played on a glockenspiel. Intact with the drumbeats of the jingle, there is a variety of mushrooms as they "beat" and bump up the drumbeats, and then the scene changes to swirly-like circles that vibrate, as the screen zooms from one to another, making the bass horn stab. The screen zooms into another tulip, making another deep brass sound, and suddenly, the camera flies over all of the above-mentioned items. As the camera tilts toward the front and zooms back is that the plant-covered structure is actually the THX logo. The plants then retract back, revealing the silver color of the logo; this version looks slightly (but also noticeably) different than the other trailers of the past. The logo zooms back as the copyright info fades in on the bottom.
Trivia:
Variant: On the 2008 DVD of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (and the 2008 DVD reprints of the other three Indiana Jones films), the Japanese Blu-ray of The Magic Hour, and the Star Wars: The Prequel Trilogy, this logo is formatted in 2.35:1 as compared to most other releases (2008 Blu-ray of Crystal Skull, Avatar, etc.) containing the trailer in 1.78:1.
Technique: CGI by Eyestorm Productions (who previously animated the Ziegfeld trailer).
Audio: A variety of instruments playing in sync with each plant, performed by Low in the Sky. This ends with a less noisy version of the 2005 Deep Note, accompanied by the swoosh. Unlike the previous THX trailers, the music starts at the ending note (blended into the background instrumentation at first) and comes to a quick end rather than fading out smoothly. Mixed by Gary A. Rizzo at Skywalker Sound.
Availability: Seen in most THX-certified theaters starting in late November 2007, and THX DVDs/Blu-rays from 2008-2012 such as Star Wars: The Clone Wars, The Magic Hour (ザ・マジックアワー) (Japan only), Shine a Light (France only), Outlander: Le Dernier Viking (Outlander) (France only), Largo Winch (France only), Indiana Jones: The Adventure Collection (2008 reprints of the 2003 DVDs originally containing Broadway 2000, as well as the first home release to feature this trailer), and the 2008 Blu-ray of Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of The Crystal Skull. On Avatar, Red Tails, and Star Wars: The Prequel Trilogy (Blu-ray only), it appears at the end. It was also seen online as well. Also seen at the end of the THX Optimizer video on THX-certified TiVo DVRs, which are no longer manufactured as of 2013.
Visuals: On a black background is this odd speck that talks in a familiar voice to Horton (from Horton Hears a Who; voiced by Jim Carrey). It turns out to be Mayor Ned McDodd (voiced by Steve Carell), the mayor of Whoville, trying to hear him.
Horton: "Come in, Mr. Mayor. Can you hear me?"
Mayor: "Uh, not quite!"
Horton: "How about now? Is this better?"
Mayor: "Ye-yeah... Yeah, sort of."
Horton: "Hello? Am I getting through?"
Then, the mayor says, "Kinda losing you...", causing Horton to drop the THX logo, and he appears while shouting "How about this?! If I get up real close, can you read me?!" knocking the mayor off-screen, then followed by the Deep Note. Horton then turns to the audience laughing, winks, and then goes off-screen. The THX logo shines as usual. Then the screen transitions to a message reading "THE AUDIENCE IS HEARING" (spoofing the "The Audience is Listening" motto, with "HEAR" in the same font as the movie's title treatment). The mayor peeks out of the left side of the screen with his clothes blowing.
Trivia: Horton's line "How about this?! If I get up real close, can you read me?!" was also used in the film.
Technique: CGI by the now-defunct Blue Sky Studios, animated with Autodesk Maya.
Audio: The dialogue, sound effects corresponding to the animation, and the 2005 Deep Note (if one listens closely).
Availability: It was only seen in THX-certified theaters to help promote Horton Hears a Who!, and also appeared in front of the film itself in said theaters. Also seen on the THX website.
Visuals: On a deep cloudy background, there is a light tunnel of many rainbow colors, as well as a shadow in the distance. The shadow then emerges to reveal a silver and shining THX logo, as well as a crystal blue rectangle outline from the Broadway trailers, which zoom slowly at us. A small copyright notice is seen below the THX logo.
Technique: CGI by Van Ling.
Audio: The 2005 Deep Note.
Availability: Can be found on the THX Calibrator disc, 3D movies in cinemas and 3D Blu-ray releases, like the 3D Blu-ray of Avatar (to date, the last certified THX home media release with logos on it) and the theatrical premiere of Tron: Legacy.
Visuals: On a black background, there is a blue trail of light fly around. It flies to an atmosphere with a purple hue. A pink, blue, purple, and green trail of light follows the blue trail and flies around with it. A closeup shot of the two trails of light flying is then seen. The rainbow trail of light makes some shapes, while the blue trail flies around the shapes and makes some mini shockwaves. The screen then cuts to a white background but is revealed to be the back of the blue trail of light in the purple atmosphere. The rainbow trail of light joins the blue trail, and the two trails fly towards the THX logo, which is seen in the distance. Everything is in slow motion for a split-second, and then the two trails quickly charge towards the THX logo and reveal it. This version looks noticeably different from the other trailers of the past, due to the THX logo being noticeably thinner than normal. The THX logo shines as the two trails of light into the bottom line of the logo and causes a bright light to appear. This bright light takes up the entire screen.
Technique: CGI.
Audio: Sound effects accompanying the atmosphere, followed by the Deep Note.
Availability: This was a prototype logo that was found on THX's website for a short time.
Visuals: The sequence starts in a shooting starfield. Then, a large black eclipse fades in, glows, and spins. Then, many shiny white/black sticks and veins appear all over the eclipse, representing the iris of the human eye, and the screen zooms further into it as the sticks and veins move around and form in different ways. Suddenly, a large shock wave appears in the middle and the screen zooms through it, revealing the THX logo, which is black and has a dark shine on it. The text "see you on the other side" wipes in underneath the THX logo.
Variants:
Technique: CGI by Two-Shots Production (now Vortex Film).
Audio: A redone version of the Deep Note, also done by James Andy Moorer. It sounds more synthesized than before, and is even louder than before. It starts off with the synths ascending and descending over and over again until they rapidly change their pitches. During the rapid pitch change, the clashing pitches of the lower synths cause a "rumbling" sound as the Deep Note gets louder, and the final pitch gets louder and louder as more and more synths join them at the final chord. The highest synths on the final chord create a synth organ-like sound, while the lowest synths create a deep humming sound. Mixed by Lora Hirschberg (with assistance by Gary Rydstrom) at Skywalker Sound.
Audio Variant: In the longer versions, after the synths switch back and forth between ascending and descending, the louder synths are stretched out until the final chord.
Availability: This made its debut online and has been seen in theaters. The normal 30-second variant has been reported to have been seen on Terminator Genisys. The Razer variant was only seen as a promotional video on Vimeo titled "THX Is Evolving". The 60-second variant was only used in the Warren chain of cinemas.
Legacy: The logo gained infamy for the much louder Deep Note, and thus is sometimes thought to be the among the scariest of the THX trailers due to this fact.
Visuals: On a black background, the phrase "The Audience is Listening" fades in. It disappears by sliding to the right. The background becomes a bluish green gradient. A black line with light blue marks slides to the right of the screen and starts to gently shake. It becomes liquid and breaks up into small circles. The screen zooms through the liquid. Multiple grouped lines start swirling around in a circular motion, then forms into a 4-layered sphere. A light blue glow surrounds the sphere. It becomes liquid and opens up, revealing blue electric lines. It later explodes to fill the background with black, then zooms out in the form of the THX logo. It later fills up with metallic material, making it look normal. Some of the light blue lines remain, then later disappear completely. Finally, two copyright notices appear:
Variants:
Technique: CGI by Uwe Schweer-Lambers of Human Workshop, all created in the span of a month.
Audio: First, the beginning half of the 2005 Deep Note plays, then gets interrupted by whooshes, liquid sound effects, and a low synth note, followed by a choir. During the glow, the Deep Note resumes, followed by another whoosh, and an explosion.
Audio Trivia:
Audio Variant: During the "making of" video, there was no Deep Note.
Availability: First seen on the Human Workshop website. It's currently unknown if this trailer has been used in other places as of this writing.
Visuals: A large purple smoke cloud explodes on the screen, and the camera zooms out to reveal a nebula. The sequence continues to zoom out through the space-like background as a mountain range appears below. The mountains then appear reflected in a waterdrop on a dragonfly's wings. The dragonfly beats its wings in slow-motion clearing the waterdrops, and flies through a new background, featuring some plants that appeared in the "Amazing Life" trailer. The camera dips down into a pool of water and emerges to reveal a city at night, as a helicopter flies past. The city is revealed to be inside a snowglobe on a table of various items. The camera pans back to reveal two similar tables with blue holographic domes on them. Then, Tex appears from the left and flies to a table in the front and loads up a similar holographic dome over the table and flies off. The camera continues to zoom out, revealing that Tex is aboard a star cruiser of some sort. The ship makes a light-speed jump, and the camera pans through the space station the ship was docked at. It is then revealed that the space station is in the shape of the THX logo, which becomes a more traditional silver color. The space background fades to blue, and then everything gradually fades out.
Trivia:
Variant: At the THX Ultimate Cinema, once the THX logo is shown it continues to zoom away and a blue box (similar to the Broadway rectangle) surrounds it, the text "ULTIMATE CINEMA" fades in, then it fades to black.
Technique: CGI by Andrew Kramer (who also owns Video Copilot) and American Meme.
Audio: Sounds accompanying the environments, along with descending sounds invoking the Deep Note. When the sequence starts panning through the space station, there is the Deep Note, with multiple stop-starts during the early stages. The stop-starts get faster and faster until the Deep Note converges into a single sound.
Audio Variants:
Availability: It debuted on THX's YouTube and Twitter pages, and also appears in THX-certified theaters such as the THX Ultimate Cinema.
Visuals: In a glassy room in the same spaceship from the "Genesis" trailer, Tex and a drone named Bob attempt to place an orb in a socket, in front of a window with a floating THX logo in the background. When Tex tries inserting the orb the first time, the THX logo flashes a little, and the orb pops out of the socket. When Tex is distracted trying to fix a small door that has somehow opened, Bob starts playing with the orb like a basketball right before Tex tries to grab it. Bob finally loses the orb as it rolls towards the screen, while he follows it off, hitting the camera in the process. The camera then topples and various things fall off-screen, such as a ladder, while Tex is noticeably shocked. Tex flies over and fixes the camera as what appears to be a fire extinguisher-like object flies over him and hits the floor. The orb then rolls towards him as Bob then falls to the floor beside him and loses power. Tex flies over and fixes Bob back up. Tex is about to place the orb into the socket, but notices Bob is visibly sad. They compromise and Tex lets the drone slam dunk the orb into the socket, which causes the THX logo to power up and light up. Both robots move to the side as the camera zooms up to the THX logo. They then fist pump. the screen fades to the THX print logo, the text "SPATIAL AUDIO" fades underneath it.
Variant: A prototype or alternate version appears on EyeBelieve's Vimeo channel. The ending of the trailer is slightly different, with the Deep Note being the 2005 version instead of the low-pitched/-1.5 Deep Note. After that, a strange "powering off" sound effect plays, cutting it off.
Technique: CGI by EyeBelieve.
Audio: Whirring of the flying drones, pinging, balls flying and hitting things, robotic grunts, a slamming noise and then the Deep Note (-1.5/low-pitched).
Availability: Premiered on THX's YouTube channel, used as a demo of THX's Spatial Audio technology.