@rircproductions Yes, I Think Some Bengali Logos Within Along with Pakistani, Sri Lankian, Indian & Nepali logos tandem with bad quality and old film style which is from the ages 1930's-1970's, Not 1980's, 1990's, 2000's and Early 2010's
1:32 eso a mí a traumado antes me gustaba pero ahora traumo demasiado y ví una película de esa producción que es Meyerao Manush y me traumo demasiado y no me importa si es acción eso no es acción ni ficción es algo que daña la mente y el cerebro y trauma demasiado y por eso es que ya nunca más veré Meyerao Manush nunca jamas
I think a variety of them were made with cheap computer editing softwares, but what really confuses me like some of the Pakistan ones is why they put an apostrophe (this symbol: ') in the word "presents".
It's bc Bangladesh is a third world country, meaning that country is poor af, and their films are CHEAP, meaning that their films are deteriorated and scratched bc high quality is expensive.
Nicknames: "S.S. of Doom", "The Dark S.S.", "S.S. from Hell", "Bengali Screen Gems", Screen Gems' Bengali Cousin of Doom", "Screen Gems of Bangladesh", "S from Hell's evolved form", "Congratulations!, your S from Hell evolved into S.S. from Hell", "Rip-off of Screen Gems". Logo: On a gray background, we see an S moving to the left. Then we cut to the two S's colliding towards to each other. A heart-like thing appears inside of the icon, then the words "S.S. PRODUCTIONS" abruptly appears below the symbol. A thick border slowly appears around the symbol and text before the logo cuts off. FX/SFX: The collision, the elements appearing and the border zooming. Music/Sounds: A series of loud noises and a loud rumble, followed by a guitar-like fanfare. Availability: Only seen on Nazma. Editor's Note: Rather generic and dated for 1983, the print logo is also different from the other logos. The loud audio can freak out a few as well.