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Walt Disney Home Entertainment (1978-1983) This one is seen on the early 80s releases with the "Home Entertainment" tag. Walt Disney Home Video (1984-1987) Same as the first logo, but the text for "WALT DISNEY" is in the corporate font and "HOME VIDEO" is seen below. The Mickey outlines are one-by-one: Blue, purple, red, yellow, green.
The following is a list of films that were released straight to home video and thus did not have a theatrical release. They were either produced by Walt Disney Pictures, Disney Television Animation, and/or Disneytoon Studios, and the majority are sequels or spin-offs of Walt Disney Animation Studios films (not being part of the Disney Animated Canon [2]).
Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Inc. [3] (doing business as Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment) is the home entertainment distribution arm of the Walt Disney Company.The division handles the distribution of Disney's films, television series, and other audiovisual content across digital formats and platforms.
December 20, 2002 [15] 85 minutes Winnie the Pooh: A Very Merry Pooh Year: United States: Jamie Mitchell: Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment DisneyToon Studios: Traditional: Direct-to-video: November 12, 2002: 63 minutes WXIII: Patlabor: Japan: Traditional: Theatrical: March 30, 2002: 94 minutes
Cinderella II: Dreams Come True was released on February 26, 2002, on DVD and VHS. [4] It was then re-released on December 18, 2007, as a special-edition DVD, going back in the Disney Vault on January 31, 2008.
Mike's New Car is a 2002 American animated comedy short film, starring the protagonists from Pixar's Monsters, Inc., Mike Wazowski and James P. "Sulley" Sullivan.Directed by Pete Docter and Roger L. Gould, it is the first Pixar short to use dialogue and the first to take characters and situations from a previously established work.
March 29, 2002 The Rookie: Walt Disney Pictures April 5, 2002 Big Trouble: Touchstone Pictures The Jacobson Company and Sonnenfeld/Josephson Worldwide Entertainment April 26, 2002 Frank McKlusky, C.I. Touchstone Pictures Robert Simonds Productions: May 6, 2002 Ultimate X: The Movie: ESPN Films: May 17, 2002 The Importance of Being Earnest ...
The typeface is not, as many assume, based on the actual handwriting of Walt Disney; rather, it is an extrapolation of the Walt Disney Company's corporate logotype, which was based on a stylized version of Walt Disney's autograph. First released in 2000, Walt Disney Script was continuously updated and eventually renamed Waltograph in 2004.