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  1. History. Seven Arts Productions acquired Jack L. Warner 's controlling interest in Warner Bros. Pictures for $32 million in November 1966. [3][4][5] The merger between the two companies was completed by July 15, 1967, and the combined company was named Warner Bros.-Seven Arts.

  2. Warner Bros.-Seven Arts, Inc. was an American entertainment company active from 1967 until 1969. ... Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc. (1923-1967) Seven Arts Productions ...

  3. Seven Arts Productions, Ltd., has acquired 1,573,861 shares of Warner Bros. Pictures, Inc., from Jack L. Warner and related interests for $20 a share. Warner Bros. stock closed yesterday on the ...

  4. Oct 1, 2024 · Seven Arts Pictures was a low-profile/B-movie distribution company established on July 19, 1990, as a joint venture between Carolco Pictures and New Line Cinema (now part of Warner Bros. Pictures), and was headed by Mario F. Kassar. It didn't last long, as the joint venture collapsed by 1992; former Carloco CEO Peter Hoffman would later take ...

    • Logo
    • Sound Effects
    • Filmography
    • Notes

    When the merger happened, a new corporate logo was unveiled with a stylized combination of the letter "W" and the number "7", usually in a stylized shield outline. The first three cartoons produced by the studio utilized the same title sequences from DePatie-Freleng Enterprises and Format Films, although the last two would carry the Warner Bros.-Se...

    The sound effects used in the W7 cartoons were unusual compared with earlier Warner Bros. cartoons, typically using the same small amount of Hanna-Barbera and WB/Looney Tunes sound effects (the latter being mostly sounds rarely used in the Termite Terrace cartoons). This was possibly due to the limitations and budget at that time. The film editors ...

    Theatrical Shorts

    1. "Speedy Ghost to Town" (1967) 2. "Rodent to Stardom" (1967) 3. "Go Away Stowaway" (1967) 4. "Cool Cat" (1967) 5. "Merlin the Magic Mouse" (1967) 6. "Fiesta Fiasco" (1967) 7. "Hocus Pocus Powwow" (1968) 8. "Norman Normal" (1968) 9. "Big Game Haunt" (1968) 10. "Skyscraper Caper" (1968) 11. "Hippydrome Tiger" (1968) 12. "Feud with a Dude" (1968) 13. "The Door" (1968) 14. "See Ya Later Gladiator" (1968) 15. "3 Ring Wing-Ding" (1968) 16. "Flying Circus" (1968) 17. "Chimp & Zee" (1968) 18. "Bunn...

    Most prints of the 1935-1943 redrawn-colorized Looney Tunes cartoons from the Sunset Productionspackage have the Warner Bros. Seven Arts titles plastering over the altered Sunset Productions/Guild...
    As of currently, all of the shorts produced from this studio have been restored, except "Hocus Pocus Powwow" and "Injun Trouble".
    The Looney Tunes Cartoons short "Crumb and Get It" pays homage to the 1960s era of the classic Looney Tunesshorts, and as part of this, concludes with a parody of the "Abstract W7" closing logo, co...
    • 3 min
  5. An aging Jack Warner sells the Studio to Elliot and Ken Hyman, who rename it Warner Bros.- Seven Arts. 1969. Warner Bros.- Seven Arts was purchased by Steve Ross and his Kinney Corporation, and the company became Warner Communications, Inc. DC Comics, which Ross had purchased along with its characters in 1968, was folded into the WCI family. 1972

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  7. Oct 11, 2024 · Warner Bros. Studios Burbank, formerly known as First National Studio (1926–1929), Warner Bros.-Seven Arts Studios (1967–1970) and The Burbank Studios (1972–1990), is a major filmmaking facility owned and run by Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. in Burbank, California, United States. First National Pictures built the 62-acre (25 ha) studio lot in 1926 as it expanded from a film distributor ...

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