It retains the same swirling effect for the titlecard, but with the words "Dark Fantasy" added underneath, the title also remains black and white.
fantasy | Dark Horse Comics | Final Fantasy | Ultra high frequency | Fantasy Island | Dark Shadows | Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark | The Dark Knight Rises | Dark Avengers | The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction | The Dark Side of the Moon | Poker After Dark | Ultra | Warhammer Fantasy (setting) | Transformers: Dark of the Moon | Warhammer Fantasy | Dark Victory | World Fantasy Award | Warhammer Fantasy Battle | Fantasy Records | Dark Funeral | Ultra Naté | Final Fantasy XII | Final Fantasy VII | Final Fantasy IV | dark energy | Ultra Series | The Ultra Zone | The Old Dark House | The Dark Tower (series) |
In 1966 alone, this company aired the first 'Ultra' series for television, Ultra Q beginning in January, followed it with the highly popular Ultraman in July, and premiered a comedy-monster series, Booska, the Friendly Beast in November.
Reportedly, Eiji Tsuburaya considered this series his masterwork because the focus was on the people rather than on the vehicles and special effects (the show never had any monsters or aliens, as his more famous shows Ultra Q, Ultraman and Ultra Seven did.) This focus on the people was similar to the works of Gerry Anderson, of which Eiji was a big fan.