For over 80 years, the sight of those massive searchlights cutting through a dark, art-deco sky has signaled one thing: the start of a cinematic event. But before the drumroll fades and the screen cuts to black, there is a moment of pure graphic design magic—the appearance of the bold, geometric letters spelling 20th Century Fox .

Cue the fanfare.

It represents an era when studios treated their name as a monument, not just a watermark. It is the last great Art Deco movie logo still standing.

During this era, the "0" in 20th became a literal circle —a window looking through the tower. This is the version most millennials and Gen Xers remember from the VHS era. The geometric purity of the font was crucial here; a traditional serif font would have looked muddy and baroque when rendered in 3D. In 1994, following the massive success of Speed and True Lies , Fox commissioned a digital recreation of the logo. Designer Robert Dawson was tasked with cleaning up the rough edges of the old painted mattes.

Let’s pull back the curtain on the typeface behind the tower. If you search online for "20th Century Fox font," you’ll immediately be pointed toward a typeface called "Century Gothic." On the surface, this makes perfect sense. Century Gothic is clean, geometric, and shares a similar skeletal structure. But a side-by-side comparison reveals the truth: They aren't the same.

So the next time you hear that brass fanfare, ignore the searchlights for a second. Look at the letters. Notice the circle of the "O" and the square of the "C." You aren't just watching a movie; you are looking at a hand-drawn masterpiece from 1935.

While the fanfare (composed by Alfred Newman in 1933) is legendary, the typography is just as iconic. Yet, here’s a secret that surprises most movie buffs: