List of 20th Century Fox films (1935–1999)
Appearance
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This is a list of films produced by 20th Century Fox (now 20th Century Studios[1]) from 1935—following a merger between the Fox Film Corporation and Twentieth Century Pictures—to 1999.
1930s
[edit]1940s
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 12, 1940 | City of Chance | |
January 15, 1940 | The Blue Bird | |
January 19, 1940 | He Married His Wife | |
January 26, 1940 | High School | |
February 2, 1940 | The Man Who Wouldn't Talk | |
February 9, 1940 | Little Old New York | |
February 16, 1940 | Young as You Feel | |
February 23, 1940 | They Came by Night | |
March 1, 1940 | Charlie Chan in Panama | |
March 15, 1940 | The Grapes of Wrath | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1989. |
March 29, 1940 | Free, Blonde and 21 | |
April 5, 1940 | Star Dust | |
April 12, 1940 | Viva Cisco Kid | |
April 19, 1940 | Johnny Apollo | |
April 26, 1940 | Shooting High | distribution only |
May 3, 1940 | So This Is London | |
May 10, 1940 | I Was an Adventuress | |
May 17, 1940 | On Their Own | |
May 24, 1940 | Lillian Russell | |
May 31, 1940 | Girl in 313 | |
June 7, 1940 | Earthbound | |
June 14, 1940 | Four Sons | |
June 21, 1940 | Charlie Chan's Murder Cruise | |
June 28, 1940 | Lucky Cisco Kid | |
July 5, 1940 | Sailor's Lady | |
July 12, 1940 | Manhattan Heartbeat | |
July 19, 1940 | Maryland | |
August 2, 1940 | The Man I Married | |
August 9, 1940 | Girl from Avenue A | |
August 16, 1940 | The Return of Frank James | |
August 23, 1940 | Pier 13 | |
August 30, 1940 | Young People | |
September 6, 1940 | Charlie Chan at the Wax Museum | |
September 13, 1940 | Public Deb No. 1 | |
September 20, 1940 | Yesterday's Heroes | |
September 27, 1940 | Brigham Young | |
October 4, 1940 | The Gay Caballero | |
October 11, 1940 | Down Argentine Way | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2014. |
October 18, 1940 | Night Train to Munich | Made in the UK by 20th Century Fox |
October 25, 1940 | The Great Profile | |
November 8, 1940 | The Mark of Zorro | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2009. |
November 15, 1940 | Street of Memories | |
November 22, 1940 | Youth Will Be Served | |
November 29, 1940 | Tin Pan Alley | |
December 6, 1940 | Charter Pilot | |
December 13, 1940 | Murder Over New York | |
December 20, 1940 | Jennie | |
December 25, 1940 | Chad Hanna | |
January 3, 1941 | Hudson's Bay | |
January 10, 1941 | Michael Shayne, Private Detective | |
January 17, 1941 | Romance of the Rio Grande | |
January 24, 1941 | Tall, Dark and Handsome | |
January 31, 1941 | The Girl in the News | |
February 7, 1941 | Ride, Kelly, Ride | |
February 14, 1941 | Golden Hoofs | |
February 21, 1941 | Western Union | |
February 28, 1941 | Murder Among Friends | |
March 7, 1941 | Tobacco Road | |
March 14, 1941 | Sleepers West | |
March 28, 1941 | Dead Men Tell | |
April 4, 1941 | Scotland Yard | |
April 11, 1941 | That Night in Rio | |
April 18, 1941 | Ride on Vaquero | |
May 9, 1941 | The Great American Broadcast | |
May 16, 1941 | The Cowboy and the Blonde | |
May 30, 1941 | Blood and Sand | |
June 6, 1941 | For Beauty's Sake | |
June 13, 1941 | The Great Commandment | |
June 20, 1941 | Man Hunt | |
June 27, 1941 | A Very Young Lady | |
The Bride Wore Crutches | ||
July 4, 1941 | Moon Over Miami | |
July 11, 1941 | Accent on Love | |
July 18, 1941 | Dance Hall | |
July 1941 | Mail Train | |
August 1, 1941 | Charley's Aunt | |
August 8, 1941 | Dressed to Kill | |
August 15, 1941 | Wild Geese Calling | |
August 22, 1941 | Private Nurse | |
August 29, 1941 | Sun Valley Serenade | |
September 5, 1941 | Charlie Chan in Rio | |
September 12, 1941 | Belle Starr | |
September 19, 1941 | We Go Fast | |
September 26, 1941 | Man at Large | |
Last of the Duanes | ||
October 3, 1941 | A Yank in the R.A.F. | |
October 10, 1941 | Great Guns | |
Riders of the Purple Sage | ||
October 17, 1941 | Week-End in Havana | |
October 23, 1941 | Swamp Water | |
October 24, 1941 | Moon Over Her Shoulder | |
October 31, 1941 | I Wake Up Screaming | |
November 7, 1941 | Small Town Deb | |
November 21, 1941 | Rise and Shine | |
November 28, 1941 | Cadet Girl | |
Marry the Boss's Daughter | ||
December 12, 1941 | Confirm or Deny | |
December 19, 1941 | The Perfect Snob | |
December 26, 1941 | How Green Was My Valley | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1990. |
January 2, 1942 | Remember the Day | |
January 9, 1942 | Blue, White and Perfect | |
January 16, 1942 | A Gentleman at Heart | |
January 23, 1942 | Right to the Heart | |
January 29, 1942 | Son of Fury: The Story of Benjamin Blake | |
February 6, 1942 | Young America | |
February 13, 1942 | On the Sunny Side | |
February 20, 1942 | Roxie Hart | |
February 27, 1942 | Castle in the Desert | |
March 6, 1942 | The Night Before the Divorce | |
March 13, 1942 | Song of the Islands | |
March 20, 1942 | Lone Star Ranger | |
Rings on Her Fingers | ||
March 24, 1942 | To the Shores of Tripoli | |
March 27, 1942 | Sundown Jim | |
April 3, 1942 | Secret Agent of Japan | |
April 17, 1942 | Who Is Hope Schuyler? | |
April 30, 1942 | My Gal Sal | |
May 1, 1942 | The Man Who Wouldn't Die | |
May 15, 1942 | The Mad Martindales | |
May 22, 1942 | Whispering Ghosts | |
May 24, 1942 | Kipps | The Remarkable Mr. Kipps |
May 27, 1942 | Prelude to War | |
May 28, 1942 | It Happened in Flatbush | |
May 29, 1942 | Moontide | |
June 12, 1942 | The Magnificent Dope | |
June 19, 1942 | Thru Different Eyes | |
June 26, 1942 | Ten Gentlemen from West Point | |
July 3, 1942 | The Postman Didn't Ring | |
July 10, 1942 | United We Stand | |
July 24, 1942 | This Above All | |
August 1, 1942 | Footlight Serenade | |
August 7, 1942 | A-Haunting We Will Go | |
August 14, 1942 | Little Tokyo, U.S.A. | |
August 21, 1942 | The Pied Piper | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
August 28, 1942 | The Loves of Edgar Allan Poe | |
September 4, 1942 | Orchestra Wives | |
September 11, 1942 | Berlin Correspondent | |
September 18, 1942 | Careful, Soft Shoulders | |
The Man in the Trunk | ||
September 21, 1942 | Iceland | |
September 24, 1942 | Tales of Manhattan | |
September 25, 1942 | Just Off Broadway | |
October 9, 1942 | Girl Trouble | |
October 16, 1942 | Manila Calling | |
October 19, 1942 | Dr. Renault's Secret | |
November 6, 1942 | Springtime in the Rockies | |
November 13, 1942 | That Other Woman | |
November 20, 1942 | Thunder Birds | |
November 27, 1942 | The Undying Monster | |
December 4, 1942 | The Black Swan | |
December 9, 1942 | China Girl | |
December 13, 1942 | We Are the Marines | |
December 25, 1942 | Life Begins at Eight-Thirty | |
January 11, 1943 | Immortal Sergeant | |
January 15, 1943 | Over My Dead Body | |
January 22, 1943 | Time to Kill | |
February 5, 1943 | Chetniks! The Fighting Guerrillas | |
February 12, 1943 | The Meanest Man in the World | |
February 19, 1943 | Margin for Error | |
February 26, 1943 | The Young Mr. Pitt | Made in the UK |
March 12, 1943 | Dixie Dugan | |
March 19, 1943 | Quiet Please, Murder | |
March 26, 1943 | Hello, Frisco, Hello | |
April 2, 1943 | He Hired the Boss | |
April 9, 1943 | The Moon Is Down | |
April 13, 1943 | Desert Victory | |
April 23, 1943 | My Friend Flicka | |
April 28, 1943 | Crash Dive | |
April 30, 1943 | Tonight We Raid Calais | |
May 7, 1943 | They Came to Blow Up America | |
May 21, 1943 | The Ox-Bow Incident | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1998. |
June 11, 1943 | Jitterbugs | |
June 18, 1943 | Coney Island | |
July 21, 1943 | Stormy Weather | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2001. |
August 6, 1943 | Bomber's Moon | |
August 13, 1943 | Heaven Can Wait | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
August 27, 1943 | Holy Matrimony | |
September 17, 1943 | Wintertime | |
October 1, 1943 | Sweet Rosie O'Grady | |
October 15, 1943 | Paris After Dark | |
October 27, 1943 | Guadalcanal Diary | |
November 4, 1943 | Claudia | |
November 11, 1943 | The Battle of Russia | |
November 19, 1943 | The Dancing Masters | |
December 3, 1943 | Happy Land | |
December 21, 1943 | The Song of Bernadette | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
December 24, 1943 | The Gang's All Here | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2014. |
Jane Eyre | ||
January 7, 1944 | The Lodger | |
January 28, 1944 | Lifeboat | |
February 3, 1944 | The Fighting Sullivans | |
February 23, 1944 | The Purple Heart | |
March 17, 1944 | Four Jills in a Jeep | |
April 10, 1944 | Tampico | |
April 25, 1944 | Pin Up Girl | |
April 1944 | Buffalo Bill | |
May 1, 1944 | Bermuda Mystery | |
May 22, 1944 | The Eve of St. Mark | |
May 25, 1944 | Ladies of Washington | |
June 3, 1944 | Roger Touhy, Gangster | |
June 15, 1944 | Home in Indiana | |
July 17, 1944 | Take It or Leave It | |
July 28, 1944 | Wing and a Prayer | |
July 30, 1944 | Candlelight in Algeria | |
August 1, 1944 | Wilson | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
September 21, 1944 | Sweet and Low-Down | |
September 22, 1944 | The Big Noise | |
In the Meantime, Darling | ||
September 27, 1944 | Greenwich Village | |
October 11, 1944 | Laura | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1999. |
November 1, 1944 | Something for the Boys | |
November 7, 1944 | Irish Eyes Are Smiling | |
December 8, 1944 | Sunday Dinner for a Soldier | |
December 15, 1944 | The Keys of the Kingdom | |
December 21, 1944 | The Fighting Lady | |
December 22, 1944 | Winged Victory | |
February 7, 1945 | Hangover Square | |
February 28, 1945 | A Tree Grows in Brooklyn | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2010. |
March 15, 1945 | Thunderhead, Son of Flicka | |
April 11, 1945 | A Royal Scandal | |
April 22, 1945 | Circumstantial Evidence | |
May 2, 1945 | Diamond Horseshoe | |
May 11, 1945 | The Bullfighters | |
May 23, 1945 | Where Do We Go from Here? | |
May 25, 1945 | Molly and Me | |
June 1, 1945 | Don Juan Quilligan | |
June 3, 1945 | The Way Ahead | USA distribution only; a Two Cities Films production (UK) |
June 13, 1945 | Nob Hill | |
June 16, 1945 | Junior Miss | |
June 19, 1945 | Captain Eddie | |
June 21, 1945 | A Bell for Adano | |
June 1945 | The Caribbean Mystery | |
July 13, 1945 | Within These Walls | |
August 30, 1945 | State Fair | |
October 18, 1945 | The House on 92nd Street | |
October 31, 1945 | And Then There Were None | |
November 14, 1945 | The Dolly Sisters | |
December 14, 1945 | Fallen Angel | |
December 25, 1945 | A Walk in the Sun | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2016. |
December 31, 1945 | Doll Face | |
December 1945 | The Spider | |
January 1946 | Leave Her to Heaven | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2018. |
January 24, 1946 | Colonel Effingham's Raid | |
February 1, 1946 | Shock | |
February 15, 1946 | Behind Green Lights | |
February 25, 1946 | Claudia and David | |
March 3, 1946 | I Live in Grosvenor Square | distribution only |
March 1946 | Sentimental Journey | |
April 5, 1946 | Johnny Comes Flying Home | |
April 19, 1946 | Dragonwyck | |
May 6, 1946 | Rendezvous 24 | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
May 8, 1946 | The Dark Corner | |
May 17, 1946 | Do You Love Me? | |
Strange Triangle | ||
June 3, 1946 | Cluny Brown | |
June 12, 1946 | Somewhere in the Night | |
June 20, 1946 | Anna and the King of Siam | |
June 26, 1946 | Smoky | |
July 1946 | It Shouldn't Happen to a Dog | |
August 1, 1946 | Deadline for Murder | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
August 29, 1946 | Black Beauty | |
August 1946 | Centennial Summer | |
September 2, 1946 | If I'm Lucky | |
September 25, 1946 | Three Little Girls in Blue | |
October 2, 1946 | Home Sweet Homicide | |
October 3, 1946 | Strange Journey | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
October 16, 1946 | Margie | |
November 2, 1946 | Wanted for Murder | |
November 27, 1946 | Dangerous Millions | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
December 2, 1946 | Wake Up and Dream | |
December 3, 1946 | My Darling Clementine | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1991. |
December 25, 1946 | The Razor's Edge | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Remade in 1984. |
January 4, 1947 | The Shocking Miss Pilgrim | |
January 15, 1947 | 13 Rue Madeleine | |
February 6, 1947 | The Brasher Doubloon | |
March 1, 1947 | Backlash | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
March 5, 1947 | Boomerang | |
March 20, 1947 | The Late George Apley | |
March 28, 1947 | Carnival in Costa Rica | |
May 4, 1947 | The Homestretch | |
May 27, 1947 | Jewels of Brandenburg | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
May 30, 1947 | Moss Rose | |
June 11, 1947 | Miracle on 34th Street | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2005. Remade in 1994. |
June 26, 1947 | The Ghost and Mrs. Muir | |
July 2, 1947 | The Crimson Key | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
July 18, 1947 | Second Chance | |
August 1947 | I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now | |
September 24, 1947 | The Foxes of Harrow | |
September 1947 | Kiss of Death | Remade of 1995 |
Mother Wore Tights | ||
October 15, 1947 | The Invisible Wall | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
October 22, 1947 | Forever Amber | |
October 28, 1947 | Nightmare Alley | |
November 1, 1947 | Thunder in the Valley | |
November 10, 1947 | Roses Are Red | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
November 11, 1947 | Gentleman's Agreement | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2017. |
December 7, 1947 | Dangerous Years | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
December 25, 1947 | Captain from Castile | |
Daisy Kenyon | ||
January 3, 1948 | The Tender Years[N 2][N 3] | distribution only |
January 14, 1948 | An Ideal Husband | U.S. distribution only; produced by London Films in the UK |
February 1, 1948 | You Were Meant for Me | |
February 27, 1948 | Let's Live Again | |
March 10, 1948 | Sitting Pretty | |
March 1948 | Call Northside 777 | |
Half Past Midnight | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions | |
April 2, 1948 | The Challenge | |
April 7, 1948 | Arthur Takes Over | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
April 14, 1948 | Scudda Hoo! Scudda Hay! | |
April 27, 1948 | Anna Karenina | USA distribution; produced by British Lion and London Films |
April 30, 1948 | Fury at Furnace Creek | |
13 Lead Soldiers | Distribution only, produced by Reliance Pictures | |
May 12, 1948 | The Iron Curtain | |
May 17, 1948 | Meet Me at Dawn | |
May 28, 1948 | The Counterfeiters[N 2][N 3] | distribution only |
June 3, 1948 | Green Grass of Wyoming | |
June 8, 1948 | The Winner's Circle | |
June 22, 1948 | Give My Regards to Broadway | |
July 14, 1948 | The Street with No Name | |
July 16, 1948 | The Checkered Coat | Distribution only, produced by Belsam Productions |
July 22, 1948 | Deep Waters | |
July 30, 1948 | Escape | |
Fighting Back | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions | |
August 4, 1948 | The Walls of Jericho | |
August 24, 1948 | That Lady in Ermine | |
September 1, 1948 | The Creeper[N 2][N 3] | distribution only; produced by Reliance Pictures |
Night Wind | Distribution only, produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions | |
September 2, 1948 | The Gay Intruders | |
September 15, 1948 | The Luck of the Irish | |
September 24, 1948 | Jungle Patrol | |
September 29, 1948 | Cry of the City | |
October 1, 1948 | Apartment for Peggy | |
November 4, 1948 | Road House | |
November 13, 1948 | The Snake Pit | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
November 15, 1948 | Belle Starr's Daughter | distribution only; produced by Edward Alperson Productions |
November 17, 1948 | Bungalow 13 | distribution only; produced by Belsam Productions |
November 23, 1948 | When My Baby Smiles at Me | |
December 10, 1948 | Unfaithfully Yours | |
December 24, 1948 | Yellow Sky | |
December 25, 1948 | That Wonderful Urge | |
December 31, 1948 | Trouble Preferred | distribution only; produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
January 4, 1949 | This Was a Woman | USA distribution only; produced in United Kingdom by Excelsior Films Ltd. |
January 18, 1949 | Chicken Every Sunday | |
Mine Own Executioner | USA distribution only; produced in United Kingdom by London Films | |
February 3, 1949 | A Letter to Three Wives | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
February 11, 1949 | Miss Mink of 1949 | distribution only; produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
February 22, 1949 | Down to the Sea in Ships | |
March 4, 1949 | I Cheated the Law | distribution only; produced by Belsam Productions |
March 8, 1949 | A Man About the House | |
March 12, 1949 | Mother Is a Freshman | |
April 1, 1949 | The Fan | |
April 15, 1949 | Mr. Belvedere Goes to College | |
April 27, 1949 | Tucson | distribution only; produced by Sol M. Wurtzel Productions |
May 3, 1949 | The Forbidden Street | |
May 19, 1949 | Canadian Pacific[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Nat Holt Productions |
June 1949 | The Beautiful Blonde from Bashful Bend | |
It Happens Every Spring | ||
July 1, 1949 | House of Strangers | |
August 1949 | You're My Everything | |
August 4, 1949 | Sand | |
August 11, 1949 | Slattery's Hurricane | |
August 26, 1949 | I Was a Male War Bride | |
September 1949 | Come to the Stable | |
October 10, 1949 | Thieves' Highway | |
October 12, 1949 | Father Was a Fullback | |
October 25, 1949 | Everybody Does It | |
November 11, 1949 | Oh, You Beautiful Doll | |
November 16, 1949 | Fighting Man of the Plains[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Nat Holt Productions |
November 1949 | Pinky | |
December 2, 1949 | Dancing in the Dark | |
December 21, 1949 | Twelve O'Clock High | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1998. |
December 23, 1949 | Prince of Foxes | Made at Cinecittà, Rome and on location in Italy |
1950s
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 13, 1950 | Whirlpool | |
February 17, 1950 | When Willie Comes Marching Home | |
Dakota Lil | distribution only; produced by Alson Productions | |
February 20, 1950 | Three Came Home | |
March 1, 1950 | The Great Rupert | |
March 3, 1950 | Mother Didn't Tell Me | |
March 17, 1950 | Under My Skin | |
March 31, 1950 | Wabash Avenue | |
April 26, 1950 | The Big Lift | |
April 1950 | Cheaper by the Dozen | |
May 19, 1950 | A Ticket to Tomahawk | |
June 6, 1950 | Love That Brute | |
June 9, 1950 | Night and the City | Made in the UK |
June 23, 1950 | The Gunfighter | |
August 1, 1950 | The Cariboo Trail[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Nat Holt Productions |
August 1950 | Stella | |
Broken Arrow | ||
Where the Sidewalk Ends | ||
September 1950 | No Way Out | |
September 1, 1950 | The Black Rose | |
September 2, 1950 | Farewell to Yesterday | |
September 15, 1950 | My Blue Heaven | |
Panic in the Streets | ||
September 29, 1950 | Mister 880 | |
October 2, 1950 | I'll Get By | |
October 7, 1950 | The Fireball[N 5] | distribution only, produced by Bert E. Friedlob Productions and Thor Productions |
October 12, 1950 | Two Flags West | |
October 27, 1950 | All About Eve | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1990. |
November 1, 1950 | The Jackpot | |
November 8, 1950 | American Guerrilla in the Philippines | |
November 28, 1950 | The Mudlark | |
December 15, 1950 | For Heaven's Sake | |
December 26, 1950 | The Man Who Cheated Himself | distribution only, produced by Jack M. Warner for Phoenix Films |
January 4, 1951 | Halls of Montezuma | |
January 31, 1951 | Call Me Mister | |
February 14, 1951 | Of Men and Music | |
February 17, 1951 | I'd Climb the Highest Mountain | |
February 21, 1951 | The 13th Letter | |
February 23, 1951 | You're in the Navy Now | |
March 3, 1951 | Lucky Nick Cain | USA distribution only, made in United Kingdom by Kaydor Productions |
The Sword of Monte Cristo | distribution only, produced by Edward L. Alperson Productions | |
March 6, 1951 | Fourteen Hours | |
March 14, 1951 | Bird of Paradise | |
March 25, 1951 | Rawhide | |
April 5, 1951 | I Can Get It for You Wholesale | |
April 25, 1951 | Follow the Sun | |
May 5, 1951 | Half Angel | |
May 12, 1951 | The House on Telegraph Hill | |
May 1951 | On the Riviera | |
June 15, 1951 | As Young as You Feel | |
June 29, 1951 | The Frogmen | |
July 18, 1951 | Take Care of My Little Girl | |
August 1, 1951 | Mr. Belvedere Rings the Bell | |
August 3, 1951 | The Secret of Convict Lake | |
August 10, 1951 | David and Bathsheba | |
August 15, 1951 | Meet Me After the Show | |
August 16, 1951 | The Guy Who Came Back | |
August 29, 1951 | People Will Talk | |
September 2, 1951 | A Millionaire for Christy[N 6] | distribution only, produced by Thor Productions |
September 21, 1951 | No Highway in the Sky | |
September 28, 1951 | Journey into Light[N 1] | distribution only; produced by Joseph Bernhard Productions |
The Day the Earth Stood Still | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1995. | |
October 10, 1951 | Love Nest | |
October 17, 1951 | The Desert Fox: The Story of Rommel | |
October 18, 1951 | Anne of the Indies | |
November 1951 | The Model and the Marriage Broker | |
November 1, 1951 | Golden Girl | |
November 6, 1951 | Let's Make It Legal | |
November 23, 1951 | Elopement | |
December 1951 | The Girl on the Bridge | distribution only, produced by Hugo Haas Productions |
December 6, 1951 | Fixed Bayonets! | |
December 7, 1951 | I'll Never Forget You | |
December 21, 1951 | Decision Before Dawn | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
January 23, 1952 | Red Skies of Montana | |
January 28, 1952 | Rose of Cimarron | distribution only, produced by Edward L. Alperson Productions |
January 29, 1952 | Japanese War Bride[N 1] | distribution only, produced by Joseph Bernhard Productions |
February 13, 1952 | Return of the Texan | |
Viva Zapata! | ||
February 15, 1952 | Phone Call from a Stranger | |
February 22, 1952 | 5 Fingers | |
March 14, 1952 | Deadline – U.S.A. | |
April 4, 1952 | With a Song in My Heart | Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
May 2, 1952 | The Pride of St. Louis | |
Belles on Their Toes | ||
May 16, 1952 | The Outcasts of Poker Flat | |
June 2, 1952 | Lydia Bailey | |
June 13, 1952 | Diplomatic Courier | |
June 1952 | Kangaroo | |
July 4, 1952 | Lady in the Iron Mask[N 6] | distribution only, produced by Walter Wanger Productions |
July 11, 1952 | We're Not Married! | |
July 18, 1952 | Don't Bother to Knock | |
July 25, 1952 | What Price Glory | |
July 26, 1952 | Dreamboat | |
July 1952 | Wait till the Sun Shines, Nellie | |
August 14, 1952 | Les Misérables | |
September 5, 1952 | Monkey Business | |
September 26, 1952 | Night Without Sleep | |
October 3, 1952 | Lure of the Wilderness | |
October 10, 1952 | My Wife's Best Friend | |
October 16, 1952 | Way of a Gaucho | |
O. Henry's Full House | ||
October 23, 1952 | The Snows of Kilimanjaro | In the public domain |
November 12, 1952 | The Steel Trap[N 6] | distribution only, produced by Thor Productions |
November 14, 1952 | Bloodhounds of Broadway | |
Something for the Birds | ||
November 27, 1952 | The Thief of Venice | USA distribution only, produced in Italy by Robert Haggiag for Sparta Films |
December 1, 1952 | My Pal Gus | |
December 11, 1952 | The Star[N 5] | distribution only, produced by Thor Productions |
December 19, 1952 | Pony Soldier | |
December 22, 1952 | Stars and Stripes Forever | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
December 25, 1952 | My Cousin Rachel | |
Ruby Gentry[N 7] | ||
January 14, 1953 | The I Don't Care Girl | |
January 26, 1953 | Tonight We Sing | |
February 4, 1953 | The Silver Whip | |
Treasure of the Golden Condor | ||
February 1953 | Niagara | |
March 1, 1953 | Down Among the Sheltering Palms | |
March 4, 1953 | Taxi | |
March 20, 1953 | Destination Gobi | |
April 1953 | Call Me Madam | |
April 18, 1953 | Titanic | |
April 22, 1953 | Invaders from Mars | distribution only, produced by Edward L. Alperson Productions |
May 13, 1953 | The Girl Next Door | not to be confused with the unrelated 2004 film of the same name, which was also released by 20th Century Fox. |
May 20, 1953 | The Desert Rats | |
The Glory Brigade | ||
May 21, 1953 | The President's Lady | |
May 27, 1953 | Pickup on South Street | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2018. |
June 4, 1953 | Man on a Tightrope | |
June 12, 1953 | The Farmer Takes a Wife | |
June 17, 1953 | Powder River | |
June 29, 1953 | The Kid from Left Field | |
July 1, 1953 | White Witch Doctor | |
July 25, 1953 | Sailor of the King | |
August 7, 1953 | Dangerous Crossing | |
August 12, 1953 | Inferno | |
August 1953 | Gentlemen Prefer Blondes | First released film in an open matte process. Also, the first film shot using open matte. |
September 2, 1953 | Mister Scoutmaster | |
September 16, 1953 | The Robe | First released film in Cinemascope process. |
September 23, 1953 | Thy Neighbor's Wife | distribution only, produced by Hugo Haas Productions |
September 1953 | A Blueprint for Murder | |
October 5, 1953 | Vicki | |
October 20, 1953 | City of Bad Men | |
November 20, 1953 | How to Marry a Millionaire | The first film shot using Cinemascope |
November 1953 | Miss Robin Crusoe | |
December 2, 1953 | Beneath the 12-Mile Reef | |
Man Crazy | ||
December 22, 1953 | King of the Khyber Rifles | |
December 31, 1953 | Man in the Attic | distribution only, produced by Panoramic Productions |
January 16, 1954 | Three Young Texans | |
February 6, 1954 | Hell and High Water | |
March 3, 1954 | Racing Blood | |
March 6, 1954 | New Faces | distribution only, produced by Edward L. Alperson Productions |
March 12, 1954 | Night People | |
April 5, 1954 | Prince Valiant | |
April 30, 1954 | River of No Return | |
April 1954 | The Rocket Man | distribution only, produced by Panoramic Productions |
May 1, 1954 | Siege at Red River | |
May 1954 | Gorilla at Large | |
Three Coins in the Fountain | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. | |
June 18, 1954 | Demetrius and the Gladiators | |
July 7, 1954 | The Royal Tour of Queen Elizabeth and Philip | |
July 9, 1954 | Garden of Evil | |
July 1954 | Princess of the Nile | distribution only, produced by Panoramic Productions |
August 4, 1954 | The Gambler from Natchez | |
The Raid | ||
August 24, 1954 | The Egyptian | |
September 25, 1954 | Broken Lance | |
September 30, 1954 | Woman's World | |
October 1, 1954 | The Adventures of Hajji Baba | co-production with Walter Wanger Productions |
October 28, 1954 | Carmen Jones | Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1992. |
Black Widow | Remade in 1987 | |
November 1, 1954 | The Outlaw's Daughter | distribution only, produced by Alplee Productions |
November 7, 1954 | Black 13 | USA distribution only, made in United Kingdom by Vandyke Pictures |
November 17, 1954 | Désirée | |
December 2, 1954 | The Other Woman | distribution only, produced by Hugo Haas Productions |
December 7, 1954 | Devil's Harbor | |
December 16, 1954 | There's No Business Like Show Business | |
January 11, 1955 | Prince of Players | |
February 4, 1955 | The Racers | |
February 16, 1955 | White Feather | |
March 1, 1955 | Untamed | |
April 20, 1955 | Violent Saturday | |
April 1955 | A Man Called Peter | |
May 5, 1955 | Daddy Long Legs | |
May 11, 1955 | That Lady | |
May 16, 1955 | Green Magic | |
May 17, 1955 | The Adventures of Sadie | USA distribution only, made in United Kingdom by Renown Pictures |
May 24, 1955 | The Magnificent Matador | distribution only, produced by Edward L. Alperson Productions |
May 27, 1955 | Soldier of Fortune | |
June 3, 1955 | Angela | |
The Seven Year Itch | ||
July 1, 1955 | House of Bamboo | |
A Life in the Balance | ||
July 22, 1955 | The Virgin Queen | |
How to Be Very, Very Popular | ||
August 18, 1955 | Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
September 21, 1955 | The Left Hand of God | |
Seven Cities of Gold | ||
September 22, 1955 | The Tall Men | |
October 1, 1955 | The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing | |
October 11, 1955 | Oklahoma![N 8] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2007. |
October 13, 1955 | The Deep Blue Sea | Produced in the UK by London Films; distribution only |
November 4, 1955 | The View from Pompey's Head | |
November 23, 1955 | Good Morning, Miss Dove | |
December 14, 1955 | The Rains of Ranchipur | |
January 11, 1956 | The Lieutenant Wore Skirts | |
February 1, 1956 | The Bottom of the Bottle | |
February 16, 1956 | Carousel | |
March 29, 1956 | On the Threshold of Space | |
April 1, 1956 | Mohawk | distribution only, produced by Edward L. Alperson Productions |
April 3, 1956 | The Man Who Never Was | Produced in the UK by Sumar Productions; distribution only |
May 1956 | The Proud Ones | |
May 4, 1956 | The Revolt of Mamie Stover | |
May 8, 1956 | The Man in the Gray Flannel Suit | |
Hilda Crane | ||
May 18, 1956 | 23 Paces to Baker Street | |
May 29, 1956 | D-Day the Sixth of June | |
June 1, 1956 | Massacre | co-production with Lippert Pictures |
June 18, 1956 | Abdullah's Harem | distribution only |
June 28, 1956 | The King and I | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
August 2, 1956 | Bigger Than Life | |
August 10, 1956 | The Queen of Babylon | |
August 31, 1956 | Bus Stop | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
September 21, 1956 | The Last Wagon | |
September 28, 1956 | The Best Things in Life Are Free | |
October 11, 1956 | Between Heaven and Hell | |
November 1956 | The Desperados Are in Town[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
November 1, 1956 | Teenage Rebel | |
November 15, 1956 | Love Me Tender | |
December 1956 | Three Brave Men | |
The Women of Pitcairn Island[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films | |
The Black Whip[N 9] | ||
December 1, 1956 | The Girl Can't Help It | |
December 13, 1956 | Stagecoach to Fury[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
Anastasia | Made in Copenhagen, Paris and Borehamwood, UK. Remade in 1997. | |
January 1957 | The Quiet Gun[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
February 22, 1957 | Oh, Men! Oh, Women! | |
March 1957 | The Storm Rider[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
March 13, 1957 | Heaven Knows, Mr. Allison | |
April 1957 | She Devil[N 9] | Distribution only, produced by Regal Films |
Kronos | ||
April 11, 1957 | The River's Edge | Distribution only; produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
April 17, 1957 | Oasis | |
April 19, 1957 | Boy on a Dolphin | |
May 1957 | The Restless Breed | Distribution only, produced by Edward L. Alperson Productions |
Lure of the Swamp[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films | |
May 1, 1957 | Desk Set | |
Badlands of Montana[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films | |
May 10, 1957 | The Way to the Gold | |
May 22, 1957 | The True Story of Jesse James | |
China Gate[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Globe Enterprises | |
May 27, 1957 | The Wayward Bus | |
June 1957 | Two Grooms for a Bride | |
June 12, 1957 | Smiley | |
Island in the Sun | ||
July 1957 | The Abductors[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films and The Griffin Company |
God Is My Partner[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films | |
Apache Warrior[N 9] | ||
July 17, 1957 | A Hatful of Rain | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
July 19, 1957 | An Affair to Remember | co-production with Jerry Wald Productions |
July 24, 1957 | Bernardine | |
July 29, 1957 | Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2000. |
August 1957 | Hell on Devil's Island[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
August 12, 1957 | The Unknown Terror[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films and Emirau Productions |
Back from the Dead[N 9] | ||
August 23, 1957 | The Sun Also Rises | |
September 1957 | Copper Sky[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films and Emirau Productions |
September 10, 1957 | Forty Guns | co-production with Globe Enterprises |
The Deerslayer[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films | |
September 23, 1957 | Under Fire[N 9] | |
The Three Faces of Eve | ||
October 1957 | Ghost Diver[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
October 16, 1957 | Sea Wife | |
October 30, 1957 | Young and Dangerous[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
Rockabilly Baby[N 9] | ||
No Down Payment | ||
October 31, 1957 | The Abominable Snowman of the Himalayas | USA distribution, produced by Hammer Film Productions |
November 24, 1957 | Ride a Violent Mile[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films and Emirau Productions |
November 27, 1957 | April Love | |
December 1957 | Escape from Red Rock[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
December 5, 1957 | Plunder Road[N 9] | |
December 10, 1957 | Kiss Them for Me | co-production with Jerry Wald Productions |
December 13, 1957 | Peyton Place | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
December 14, 1957 | A Farewell to Arms | |
December 25, 1957 | The Enemy Below | |
December 26, 1957 | Stopover Tokyo | |
February 5, 1958 | Beautiful But Dangerous | |
February 11, 1958 | The Gift of Love | |
February 21, 1958 | Sing, Boy, Sing | |
Diamond Safari | co-production Regal Films and Schlesinger Organization | |
March 1958 | Count Five and Die | |
Ambush at Cimarron Pass[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films | |
March 19, 1958 | South Pacific[N 8] | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical. |
April 1, 1958 | Blood Arrow[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films and Emirau Productions |
April 2, 1958 | The Young Lions | |
April 3, 1958 | The Long, Hot Summer | |
May 1, 1958 | Showdown at Boot Hill[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
May 22, 1958 | Ten North Frederick | |
May 1958 | Thundering Jets[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
June 1958 | The Naked Earth | |
Space Master X-7[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films | |
June 1, 1958 | From Hell to Texas | |
June 8, 1958 | Fraulein | |
June 25, 1958 | The Bravados | |
Desert Hell[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films and Emirau Productions | |
July 1958 | Wolf Dog[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
Gang War[N 9] | ||
Sierra Baron | ||
July 16, 1958 | The Fly | |
July 23, 1958 | Rx Murder | |
July 31, 1958 | A Certain Smile | |
August 1, 1958 | The Fiend Who Walked the West | |
Flaming Frontier | ||
September 18, 1958 | Harry Black and the Tiger | |
September 30, 1958 | The Barbarian and the Geisha | |
September 1958 | The Hunters | |
October 15, 1958 | The Roots of Heaven | |
October 31, 1958 | In Love and War | |
October 1958 | Villa | |
November 18, 1958 | Mardi Gras | |
December 1, 1958 | Frontier Gun[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
A Nice Little Bank That Should Be Robbed | ||
December 11, 1958 | The Inn of the Sixth Happiness | Made in the UK |
December 23, 1958 | Rally Round the Flag, Boys! | |
January 1959 | I Mobster[N 2][N 3] | distribution only, produced by Alco Productions |
February 11, 1959 | Alaska Passage | |
February 20, 1959 | The Remarkable Mr. Pennypacker | |
March 1959 | The Sad Horse | |
The Little Savage | ||
March 1, 1959 | Lone Texan[N 9] | Distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
March 14, 1959 | The Sheriff of Fractured Jaw | |
March 18, 1959 | The Diary of Anne Frank | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
March 27, 1959 | The Sound and the Fury | |
March 31, 1959 | Intent to Kill | |
April 1, 1959 | Compulsion | |
April 15, 1959 | Warlock | |
April 30, 1959 | Smiley Gets a Gun | |
May 6, 1959 | These Thousand Hills | |
May 27, 1959 | Woman Obsessed | |
June 1959 | Here Come the Jets | |
June 19, 1959 | Say One for Me | |
July 1959 | The Son of Robin Hood | |
The Alligator People | ||
Return of the Fly | ||
July 24, 1959 | Holiday for Lovers | |
July 27, 1959 | The Miracle of the Hills | |
July 30, 1959 | Blue Denim | |
August 14, 1959 | A Private's Affair | |
September 1959 | The Oregon Trail | |
September 4, 1959 | The Blue Angel | |
September 23, 1959 | Five Gates to Hell | |
October 2, 1959 | The Man Who Understood Women | |
October 9, 1959 | The Best of Everything | |
November 1959 | Hound-Dog Man | |
November 17, 1959 | Beloved Infidel | |
December 16, 1959 | Journey to the Center of the Earth | |
December 30, 1959 | Blood and Steel |
1960s
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 11, 1960 | Sink the Bismarck! | Shot in the UK |
February 28, 1960 | Bobbikins | |
March 5, 1960 | The 3rd Voice | |
March 9, 1960 | Can-Can | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical. |
The Wind Cannot Read | ||
March 12, 1960 | Seven Thieves | |
March 16, 1960 | The Rookie | |
March 17, 1960 | A Dog of Flanders | |
March 29, 1960 | When Comedy Was King | |
April 1960 | 13 Fighting Men | |
April 2, 1960 | Twelve Hours to Kill | |
April 8, 1960 | Wake Me When It's Over | |
May 8, 1960 | Valley of the Redwoods | |
May 19, 1960 | Crack in the Mirror | |
May 25, 1960 | Wild River | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2002. |
June 17, 1960 | The Story of Ruth | |
June 28, 1960 | Murder, Inc. | |
July 1, 1960 | One Foot in Hell | |
July 13, 1960 | The Lost World | |
July 15, 1960 | From the Terrace | |
July 21, 1960 | The Idiot | |
August 2, 1960 | Sons and Lovers | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Shot in the UK. |
Young Jesse James | ||
August 28, 1960 | For the Love of Mike | |
September 1960 | The High Powered Rifle | |
Squad Car | ||
September 1, 1960 | Walk Tall | |
September 8, 1960 | Let's Make Love | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical. |
September 9, 1960 | September Storm[N 2][N 3] | |
September 16, 1960 | High Time | |
October 11, 1960 | Desire in the Dust | |
November 10, 1960 | North to Alaska | |
December 1960 | The Wizard of Baghdad | co-production with Clover Productions |
December 8, 1960 | Tess of the Storm Country | |
December 11, 1960 | The Secret of the Purple Reef | |
December 14, 1960 | Esther and the King | |
December 16, 1960 | Flaming Star | |
January 1961 | Swingin' Along | |
January 6, 1961 | The Marriage-Go-Round | |
February 1961 | The Long Rope | |
Sniper's Ridge | ||
February 9, 1961 | The Millionairess | |
February 17, 1961 | A Circle of Deception | |
February 21, 1961 | Sanctuary | |
March 11, 1961 | The Canadians | |
March 21, 1961 | Days of Thrills and Laughter | |
March 22, 1961 | Desert Attack | |
March 30, 1961 | All Hands on Deck | |
April 19, 1961 | The Trapp Family | |
April 26, 1961 | Ferry to Hong Kong | |
April 30, 1961 | The Fiercest Heart | |
May 1961 | The Silent Call | |
May 5, 1961 | Return to Peyton Place | |
May 10, 1961 | The Big Show | |
May 17, 1961 | The Right Approach | |
May 26, 1961 | Snow White and the Three Stooges | |
June 1961 | The Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come | |
June 1, 1961 | Battle at Bloody Beach | |
June 4, 1961 | Misty | |
June 14, 1961 | 20,000 Eyes | |
June 15, 1961 | Wild in the Country | |
July 12, 1961 | Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea | |
Francis of Assisi | ||
August 15, 1961 | Marines, Let's Go | |
September 1, 1961 | The Big Gamble | |
September 25, 1961 | The Hustler | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
October 1961 | Seven Women from Hell | |
Pirates of Tortuga | ||
November 1961 | The Purple Hills | |
November 1, 1961 | The Two Little Bears | |
The Comancheros | ||
December 8, 1961 | Home Alone with Mad Friends | |
December 22, 1961 | The Second Time Around | co-production with Cummings-Harman Productions |
December 25, 1961 | The Innocents | Shot in the UK |
January 7, 1962 | Madison Avenue | |
January 12, 1962 | Bachelor Flat | |
January 19, 1962 | Tender Is the Night | |
February 22, 1962 | Satan Never Sleeps | |
March 1962 | Hand of Death | |
March 9, 1962 | State Fair | |
April 1, 1962 | The Broken Land | |
May 18, 1962 | Mr. Topaze/I Like Money | |
May 24, 1962 | Lisa | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
May 25, 1962 | The Cabinet of Caligari | |
June 1, 1962 | Something's Got to Give | |
June 3, 1962 | Womanhunt | |
June 15, 1962 | Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation | |
June 1962 | It Happened in Athens | |
July 17, 1962 | Air Patrol | |
July 25, 1962 | Hemingway's Adventures of a Young Man | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
August 7, 1962 | The Firebrand | |
August 22, 1962 | Five Weeks in a Balloon | |
August 29, 1962 | The 300 Spartans | |
October 4, 1962 | The Longest Day | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
November 1962 | Gigot | co-production with Seven Arts Productions |
Young Guns of Texas | ||
December 21, 1962 | The Lion | |
January 18, 1963 | The Queen's Guards | |
January 23, 1963 | The Last Days of Sodom and Gomorrah | |
February 10, 1963 | Thirty Years of Fun | |
February 14, 1963 | The Day Mars Invaded Earth | |
March 1963 | House of the Damned | |
April 3, 1963 | Nine Hours to Rama | |
April 18, 1963 | Marilyn | |
May 20, 1963 | Police Nurse | |
May 15, 1963 | The Yellow Canary | |
June 12, 1963 | Cleopatra | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
June 19, 1963 | The Stripper | |
July 1963 | Harbor Lights | |
July 15, 1963 | The Leopard | |
August 3, 1963 | Lassie's Great Adventure | |
September 2, 1963 | The Young Swingers | |
September 11, 1963 | Of Love and Desire | |
October 23, 1963 | Thunder Island | |
October 30, 1963 | The Condemned of Altona | |
November 13, 1963 | Take Her, She's Mine | |
December 25, 1963 | Move Over, Darling | |
January 30, 1964 | Surf Party | |
February 5, 1964 | The Winston Affair | |
March 18, 1964 | The Last Man on Earth | International distribution only; co-production with Associated Producers and Produzioni La Regina |
April 28, 1964 | The Third Secret | co-production with Hubris Productions |
April 29, 1964 | The Curse of the Living Corpse | co-production with Deal Productions and Iselin-Tenney Productions |
May 13, 1964 | The Eyes of Annie Jones | co-production with Jack Parsons-Neil McCallum Productions and Associated Producers |
What a Way to Go! | Premiere only; co-production with Apjac-Productions | |
June 1, 1964 | The Horror of Party Beach | co-production with Iselin-Tenney Productions |
July 22, 1964 | Shock Treatment | co-production with Arcola Pictures |
August 19, 1964 | The Horror of It All | co-production with Lippert Pictures |
September 1964 | Witchcraft | |
September 23, 1964 | Night Train to Paris | co-production with Jack Parsons Productions and Lippert Pictures |
October 4, 1964 | The Visit | U.S. distribution only; co-production with Les Films du Siècle and Productions et Éditions Cinématographique Français |
October 14, 1964 | The Earth Dies Screaming | co-production with Lippert Pictures |
October 28, 1964 | Rio Conchos | |
November 6, 1964 | Moro Witch Doctor | |
November 8, 1964 | Fate Is the Hunter | |
November 16, 1964 | Guns at Batasi | |
November 18, 1964 | Goodbye Charlie | |
November 26, 1964 | Apache Rifles | |
November 1964 | Back Door to Hell | |
December 12, 1964 | Raiders from Beneath the Sea | |
December 17, 1964 | Zorba the Greek | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
December 25, 1964 | The Pleasure Seekers | |
January 8, 1965 | Dear Brigitte | |
January 20, 1965 | Hush...Hush, Sweet Charlotte | co-production with The Associates & Aldrich Company |
March 1, 1965 | War Party | |
March 2, 1965 | The Sound of Music | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2001. |
March 24, 1965 | John Goldfarb, Please Come Home | |
May 1965 | Curse of the Fly | co-production with Lippert Pictures |
May 1, 1965 | Fort Courageous | |
June 9, 1965 | Up from the Beach | |
June 16, 1965 | Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
A High Wind in Jamaica | ||
June 17, 1965 | Convict Stage | |
June 23, 1965 | Von Ryan's Express | |
August 23, 1965 | Rapture | |
August 25, 1965 | Wild on the Beach | |
Morituri | ||
September 15, 1965 | The Reward | |
October 1965 | Spaceflight IC-1 | co-production with Lippert Pictures |
October 7, 1965 | The Agony and the Ecstasy | |
October 27, 1965 | The Nanny | |
December 1, 1965 | The Return of Mr. Moto | co-production with Lippert Pictures |
December 15, 1965 | The Flight of the Phoenix | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
December 22, 1965 | Do Not Disturb | |
December 24, 1965 | The Cavern | |
December 1965 | The Murder Game | |
1966 | Daniel Boone: Frontier Trail Rider | |
January 12, 1966 | The Plague of the Zombies | |
Dracula: Prince of Darkness | ||
January 16, 1966 | Our Man Flint | |
April 6, 1966 | The Reptile | |
Rasputin, the Mad Monk | ||
April 18, 1966 | Cloportes | |
May 18, 1966 | Weekend at Dunkirk | |
June 15, 1966 | Stagecoach | |
June 21, 1966 | The Blue Max | |
July 13, 1966 | How to Steal a Million | |
July 20, 1966 | Batman: The Movie[N 6] | distribution only; produced by DC Comics and Greenlawn Productions |
August 3, 1966 | Smoky | |
August 10, 1966 | Modesty Blaise | |
August 24, 1966 | Fantastic Voyage | |
September 7, 1966 | Blues for Lovers | |
September 28, 1966 | The Bible: In the Beginning | |
October 1966 | That Tennessee Beat | |
October 26, 1966 | Way...Way Out | |
December 1966 | I Deal in Danger | |
December 20, 1966 | The Sand Pebbles | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
1967 | The Jackals | |
January 18, 1967 | Come Spy with Me | |
January 25, 1967 | Prehistoric Women | U.S. distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions and Seven Arts |
February 8, 1967 | The Devil's Own | distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions |
February 21, 1967 | One Million Years BC | distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions and Seven Arts |
March 15, 1967 | The Mummy's Shroud | U.S. distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions |
In Like Flint | ||
Frankenstein Created Woman | U.S. distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions | |
March 21, 1967 | Hombre | |
April 27, 1967 | Two for the Road | |
May 23, 1967 | El Greco | |
May 25, 1967 | A Guide for the Married Man | |
June 7, 1967 | Caprice | |
June 30, 1967 | The St. Valentine's Day Massacre | |
August 16, 1967 | The Viking Queen | |
August 22, 1967 | The Flim-Flam Man | |
September 19, 1967 | The Cape Town Affair | |
October 2, 1967 | The Day the Fish Came Out | |
The Incident | ||
November 10, 1967 | Tony Rome | |
December 10, 1967 | Bedazzled | |
December 13, 1967 | Fathom | |
December 15, 1967 | Valley of the Dolls | |
December 19, 1967 | Doctor Dolittle | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
January 16, 1968 | The Legend of Custer | |
February 7, 1968 | The Anniversary | |
February 8, 1968 | Planet of the Apes | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2001. |
February 16, 1968 | Five Million Years to Earth[N 6] | U.S. distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions and Seven Arts |
March 31, 1968 | The Further Perils of Laurel and Hardy | |
May 23, 1968 | Prudence and the Pill | |
May 28, 1968 | The Detective | |
June 1, 1968 | Bandolero! | |
June 12, 1968 | The Sweet Ride | |
June 19, 1968 | The Lost Continent | U.S. distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions and Seven Arts |
June 25, 1968 | The Secret Life of an American Wife | |
August 5, 1968 | A Challenge for Robin Hood | distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions and Seven Arts Productions; Distributed by Warner-Pathé Distributors |
September 11, 1968 | Deadfall | |
October 16, 1968 | The Boston Strangler | |
October 22, 1968 | Star! | |
October 23, 1968 | Pretty Poison | |
November 20, 1968 | The Touchables | |
Lady in Cement | ||
November 24, 1968 | Joanna | |
November 27, 1968 | A Flea in Her Ear | |
December 10, 1968 | The Magus | |
December 18, 1968 | The Devil's Bride | |
January 26, 1969 | Decline and Fall... of a Birdwatcher | |
February 10, 1969 | The Guru | |
March 2, 1969 | The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
March 26, 1969 | 100 Rifles | |
April 7, 1969 | Doctor Glas | |
April 30, 1969 | Hard Contract | |
May 14, 1969 | The Last Shot You Hear | |
June 23, 1969 | The Boys of Paul Street | |
June 25, 1969 | The Chairman | |
June 27, 1969 | Che! | |
July 9, 1969 | Secret World | |
August 6, 1969 | Justine | |
August 20, 1969 | Staircase | |
September 23, 1969 | Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2003. |
October 5, 1969 | A Walk with Love and Death | |
October 12, 1969 | The Archangel | |
November 5, 1969 | The Girl Who Couldn't Say No | |
November 27, 1969 | The Undefeated | |
December 14, 1969 | John and Mary | |
December 16, 1969 | Hello, Dolly! | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
1970s
[edit]1970
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 21, 1970 | The Only Game in Town | |
January 25, 1970 | M*A*S*H | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1996. |
February 1, 1970 | The Kremlin Letter | |
March 29, 1970 | The Sicilian Clan | |
April 2, 1970 | Patton | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2003. |
May 26, 1970 | Beneath the Planet of the Apes | |
June 17, 1970 | Beyond the Valley of the Dolls | |
June 24, 1970 | Myra Breckinridge | |
July 12, 1970 | Hello-Goodbye | |
July 31, 1970 | Move | |
August 7, 1970 | The Games | |
September 23, 1970 | Tora! Tora! Tora! | |
September 1970 | 4 Clowns | |
October 1, 1970 | Cover Me Babe | |
October 11, 1970 | The Great White Hope | The Great White Hype |
December 6, 1970 | Gimme Shelter | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Maysles Films |
1971
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 31, 1971 | Countess Dracula[N 10] | USA distribution only; co-production with The Rank Organization |
February 9, 1971 | Little Murders | |
March 13, 1971 | Vanishing Point | |
March 21, 1971 | Making It | |
March 31, 1971 | B.S. I Love You | |
April 9, 1971 | The Mephisto Waltz | |
Celebration at Big Sur | USA distribution only; co-production with Mann Theatres | |
May 9, 1971 | The Panic in Needle Park | |
May 21, 1971 | Escape from the Planet of the Apes | |
July 1, 1971 | Walkabout[N 11] | Theatrical distribution |
July 23, 1971 | The Seven Minutes | |
August 19, 1971 | The Marriage of a Young Stockbroker | |
October 9, 1971 | The French Connection | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2005. |
October 31, 1971 | Journey to Midnight | |
December 10, 1971 | Welcome Home Soldier Boys | |
December 12, 1971 | Made for Each Other |
1972
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 12, 1972 | Blindman | USA distribution only; produced by Abkco Films |
January 26, 1972 | The Hot Rock | |
February 13, 1972 | Cabaret | international theatrical distribution only; produced by Allied Artists & ABC Pictures |
February 19, 1972 | Without Apparent Motive | |
March 23, 1972 | The Concert for Bangladesh | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Apple Corps |
April 16, 1972 | The Culpepper Cattle Co. | |
May 26, 1972 | The Other | |
June 14, 1972 | Fillmore[N 12] | US theatrical distribution only |
June 16, 1972 | What Became of Jack and Jill?[N 13] | distribution only; produced by Palomar Pictures |
The Strange Vengeance of Rosalie[N 13] | distribution only; produced by Palomar Pictures | |
June 30, 1972 | Conquest of the Planet of the Apes | |
August 23, 1972 | To Kill a Clown[N 13] | distribution only; produced by Palomar Pictures |
August 30, 1972 | The Salzburg Connection | |
September 24, 1972 | Sounder[N 14] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Robert B. Radnitz. Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2021. |
September 27, 1972 | The Darwin Adventure[N 13] | distribution only; produced by Palomar Pictures |
October 11, 1972 | Vampire Circus[N 10] | USA distribution only; co-production with The Rank Organization |
October 19, 1972 | When the Legends Die | |
October 22, 1972 | The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoisie[N 15] | US theatrical distribution only |
November 1, 1972 | Trouble Man | |
November 29, 1972 | And Hope to Die[N 16] | distribution only |
December 13, 1972 | The Poseidon Adventure | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
December 17, 1972 | The Heartbreak Kid[N 13] | distribution only; produced by Palomar Pictures |
December 20, 1972 | The Effect of Gamma Rays on the Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds | |
Sleuth[N 13] | distribution only; produced by Palomar Pictures Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
1973
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
March 31, 1973 | Gospel Road: A Story of Jesus | |
April 1, 1973 | Ace Eli and Rodger of the Skies | |
May 1973 | Kid Blue | |
May 24, 1973 | Emperor of the North Pole | |
June 15, 1973 | The Legend of Hell House | |
June 15, 1973 | Battle for the Planet of the Apes | |
July 27, 1973 | The Last American Hero | |
August 3, 1973 | The Neptune Factor | |
August 9, 1973 | Gordon's War | co-production with Palomar Pictures |
October 1973 | Hex | |
October 16, 1973 | The Paper Chase | |
December 14, 1973 | The Seven-Ups | |
December 18, 1973 | Cinderella Liberty | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
December 20, 1973 | The Laughing Policeman |
1974
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 6, 1974 | Zardoz | |
March 27, 1974 | Conrack | |
March 29, 1974 | The Three Musketeers[N 15] | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. USA and Japan theatrical distribution only |
April 22, 1974 | Claudine | |
May 17, 1974 | Dirty Mary Crazy Larry | |
June 28, 1974 | S*P*Y*S | |
July 17, 1974 | The Mad Adventures of Rabbi Jacob | |
August 7, 1974 | Together Brothers | |
August 12, 1974 | Harry and Tonto | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
August 29, 1974 | 99 and 44/100% Dead | |
September 26, 1974 | 11 Harrowhouse | |
October 1974 | The House on Skull Mountain | |
October 18, 1974 | The Crazy World of Julius Vrooder | |
October 27, 1974 | The Phantom of Liberty[N 15] | US theatrical distribution; re-released by Rialto Pictures in USA |
October 31, 1974 | Phantom of the Paradise | |
December 14, 1974 | The Towering Inferno | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. USA & Canada distribution only; co-production with Warner Bros. and Irwin Allen Productions |
December 15, 1974 | Young Frankenstein | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2003. |
1975
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 15, 1975 | The Nickel Ride | |
February 26, 1975 | The Four Musketeers[N 15] | USA and Japan theatrical distribution only |
March 1, 1975 | At Long Last Love | |
April 16, 1975 | Capone | |
Ransom | distribution only | |
May 21, 1975 | French Connection II | |
W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings | ||
June 27, 1975 | Race with the Devil | |
August 1975 | The Man from Hong Kong[N 17] | USA distribution only; produced by Golden Harvest |
September 4, 1975 | Tarzoon, la honte de la jungle | distribution in France only |
September 26, 1975 | The Rocky Horror Picture Show | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2005. |
September 30, 1975 | Black Moon[N 18] | US theatrical distribution only |
October 10, 1975 | Royal Flash | |
October 15, 1975 | Whiffs[N 5] | distribution only; produced by Brut Productions |
October 17, 1975 | Down the Ancient Staircase | |
October 29, 1975 | Take a Hard Ride | |
December 3, 1975 | Peeper | |
December 14, 1975 | The Adventure of Sherlock Holmes' Smarter Brother | |
December 25, 1975 | Lucky Lady |
1976
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1976 | Survival | filmed in December 1969 |
January 23, 1976 | Hugo the Hippo[N 5] | distribution only; produced by Brut Productions; First animated film distributed by the 20th Century-Fox in the USA |
January 25, 1976 | Scent of a Woman | |
February 4, 1976 | Next Stop, Greenwich Village | |
February 18, 1976 | I Will, I Will... for Now[N 5] | distribution only; produced by Brut Productions |
March 26, 1976 | Sky Riders | |
April 1, 1976 | The Duchess and the Dirtwater Fox | |
April 5, 1976 | The Blue Bird | Fifth adaptation of novel by Maurice Maeterlinck co-production with Lenfilm American-Soviet co-production |
May 12, 1976 | End of the Game | |
May 26, 1976 | Mother, Jugs & Speed | |
June 1, 1976 | The Last Hard Men | |
June 2, 1976 | Breaking Point | |
June 16, 1976 | Silent Movie | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
June 25, 1976 | The Omen | co-production with Mace Neufeld Productions |
July 1976 | Moving Violation | |
September 1976 | High Velocity | |
September 3, 1976 | 1900 | Italy and UK distribution only; produced by Produzioni Europee Associati |
September 26, 1976 | The Sunday Woman | |
October 3, 1976 | Alex & the Gypsy | |
October 8, 1976 | Fighting Mad | |
November 1976 | Kenny & Company | |
November 12, 1976 | All This and World War II | |
December 3, 1976 | Silver Streak |
1977
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 9, 1977 | Wizards | co-production with Bakshi Productions |
March 3, 1977 | Mr. Billion | |
April 1977 | Lovers Like Us | |
April 1, 1977 | Raggedy Ann & Andy: A Musical Adventure[N 19] | distribution only; produced by the Bobbs-Merrill Company and Richard Williams Productions |
April 3, 1977 | 3 Women | |
May 25, 1977 | Star Wars | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Nominated for BAFTA Award for Best Film. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1989. Retitled Star Wars: Episode IV – A New Hope in 1981. distribution only; produced by Lucasfilm |
June 8, 1977 | The Other Side of Midnight | |
June 9, 1977 | Fire Sale | |
August 1977 | The Black Pearl | |
August 24, 1977 | Thunder and Lightning | |
October 2, 1977 | Julia | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
October 21, 1977 | Damnation Alley | |
November 14, 1977 | The Turning Point | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
December 18, 1977 | The World's Greatest Lover | |
December 25, 1977 | High Anxiety | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
1978
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
March 5, 1978 | An Unmarried Woman | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
March 18, 1978 | Candy Candy: The Call of Spring/The May Festival | international distribution only; co-production with Toei Animation |
March 10, 1978 | The Fury | |
June 9, 1978 | Damien - Omen II | co-production with Mace Neufeld Productions |
June 28, 1978 | The Driver | distribution only; produced by EMI Films |
July 22, 1978 | Candy Candy's Summer Vacation | international distribution only; co-production with Toei Animation |
August 29, 1978 | A Wedding | |
October 4, 1978 | The Boys from Brazil[N 20] | USA distribution only; produced by ITC Entertainment |
November 8, 1978 | Magic[N 21] | USA distribution only; produced by Joseph E. Levine |
1979
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 9, 1979 | Quintet | |
March 2, 1979 | Norma Rae | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
April 6, 1979 | A Perfect Couple | |
April 27, 1979 | Dreamer | |
May 25, 1979 | Alien | co-production with Brandywine Productions Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2002. |
June 15, 1979 | Butch and Sundance: The Early Days | |
July 20, 1979 | Breaking Away | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
September 1979 | The Strange Case of Alice Cooper | distribution only; produced by Jaybar Industries Direct-to-video release |
September 30, 1979 | La Luna | |
October 1, 1979 | Nosferatu the Vampyre[N 22] | distribution only |
October 19, 1979 | Avalanche Express[N 6] | distribution only; produced by Lorimar Productions |
November 7, 1979 | The Rose | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
November 16, 1979 | The Runner Stumbles | co-production with Melvin Simon Productions |
December 20, 1979 | All That Jazz | North American theatrical and worldwide home video distribution only; co-production with Columbia Pictures Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2001. |
December 21, 1979 | Scavenger Hunt | co-production with Melvin Simon Productions |
1980s
[edit]1980
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 1, 1980 | Fatso | co-production with Brooksfilms |
April 2, 1980 | Inferno | distribution only; produced by Produzioni Intersound |
May 1980 | Headin' for Broadway | |
May 21, 1980 | The Empire Strikes Back | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2010. distribution only; produced by Lucasfilm |
June 20, 1980 | Brubaker | |
June 27, 1980 | The Stunt Man[N 3][N 23] | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. distribution only; produced by Melvin Simon Productions |
July 11, 1980 | Oh Heavenly Dog | co-production with Mulberry Square Productions |
July 25, 1980 | Middle Age Crazy | U.S. distribution only; produced by Canadian Film Development Corporation, Guardian Trust Company, Krofft Entertainment and Tormont Films |
August 15, 1980 | Willie & Phil | |
September 12, 1980 | Health | co-production with Lion's Gate Films |
September 26, 1980 | My Bodyguard | distribution only; produced by Melvin Simon Productions |
October 3, 1980 | The Man with Bogart's Face | |
Terror Train | North American and U.K. distribution only; produced by Astral Bellevue Pathé and Sandy Howard Productions | |
October 6, 1980 | Kagemusha | distribution outside Japan only; co-production with Toho |
October 24, 1980 | Loving Couples[N 24] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Time-Life Films |
December 1, 1980 | A Change of Seasons | North American distribution only; produced by Film Finance Group |
December 14, 1980 | Tribute | North American and U.K. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Turman-Foster Company |
December 19, 1980 | Nine to Five | co-production with IPC Films |
1981
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 6, 1981 | Fort Apache, The Bronx[N 24] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Time-Life Films |
February 13, 1981 | Eyewitness | |
March 6, 1981 | On the Right Track | North American distribution only; produced by Zephyr Productions |
March 20, 1981 | Omen III: The Final Conflict | co-production with Mace Neufeld Productions |
April 3, 1981 | Hardly Working | North American distribution only |
May 1, 1981 | Savage Harvest | |
May 21, 1981 | Death Hunt[N 17] | distribution only; produced by Golden Harvest Company |
June 12, 1981 | History of the World, Part I | co-production with Brooksfilms |
June 19, 1981 | The Cannonball Run[N 25] | North American and U.K. theatrical distribution only Golden Harvest |
July 17, 1981 | Zorro, The Gay Blade | distribution only; produced by Melvin Simon Productions |
August 28, 1981 | Chu Chu and the Philly Flash | |
September 1981 | The Woman Inside | |
September 25, 1981 | Southern Comfort[N 26] | U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by Cinema Group Ventures |
October 9, 1981 | Tattoo | U.S. distribution only |
October 31, 1981 | Shock Treatment | |
December 25, 1981 | Taps | |
Modern Problems |
1982
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 12, 1982 | The Amateur | U.S. and select international distribution only; produced by Anabasis Investments |
Quest for Fire | North and Latin American and U.K. distribution only; produced by International Cinema Corporation and Famous Players | |
March 5, 1982 | Making Love | co-production with The IndieProd Company |
March 19, 1982 | Porky's | distribution only; produced by Melvin Simon Productions and Astral Bellevue Pathé |
March 24, 1982 | Eating Raoul[N 27] | North American theatrical distribution under International Classics only; produced by Quartet/Films Incorporated |
March 26, 1982 | I Ought to Be in Pictures | |
April 9, 1982 | Chariots of Fire | international distribution only; co-production with Allied Stars Ltd and Enigma Productions; distributed in North America by The Ladd Company (through Warner Bros.) |
May 14, 1982 | Conan the Barbarian | international distribution outside Germany only; produced by Dino De Laurentiis Company; distributed in North America by Universal Pictures |
May 28, 1982 | Visiting Hours | Canadian film; distribution only; produced by Filmplan International and Canadian Film Development Corporation |
June 18, 1982 | Author! Author! | |
June 25, 1982 | Megaforce[N 17] | North American and U.K. distribution only; produced by Golden Harvest |
July 16, 1982 | Young Doctors in Love[N 7] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by ABC Motion Pictures |
July 16, 1982 | Six Pack | co-production with Lion Share Productions |
August 6, 1982 | The Pirate Movie | |
October 9, 1982 | I, the Jury | North American distribution only; produced by American Cinema Productions |
October 22, 1982 | Monsignor | |
October 29, 1982 | National Lampoon's Class Reunion[N 7] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by ABC Motion Pictures |
November 5, 1982 | The Man from Snowy River | distribution outside Australia only; produced by Edgley International and Cambridge Productions |
December 8, 1982 | The Verdict | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. co-production with Zanuck/Brown Productions |
December 10, 1982 | The Hot Touch | U.S. distribution only |
December 17, 1982 | The Who Rocks America | distribution only; produced by Curbishley-Baird Productions in association with Schlitz Pay per view premiere release |
December 22, 1982 | Kiss Me Goodbye |
1983
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 4, 1983 | The Entity | distribution only; produced by American Cinema Productions |
Without a Trace | ||
February 18, 1983 | The King of Comedy[N 28] | theatrical distribution in English-speaking territories only; produced by Embassy International Pictures |
February 19, 1983 | Betrayal | British film; U.S. distribution under International Classics only; produced by Horizon Pictures |
March 25, 1983 | Max Dugan Returns | |
April 1, 1983 | Heart Like a Wheel | co-production with Aurora Productions |
May 20, 1983 | Tough Enough | distribution only; produced by American Cinema Productions |
Bill Cosby: Himself | co-production with SAH Enterprises | |
May 25, 1983 | Return of the Jedi | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2021. distribution only; produced by Lucasfilm |
June 24, 1983 | Porky's II: The Next Day | distribution only; produced by Simon/Reeves/Landsburg Productions and Astral Bellevue Pathé |
July 22, 1983 | Mr. Mom[N 29] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Sherwood Productions |
August 5, 1983 | The Star Chamber | |
August 10, 1983 | Phar Lap | North American and U.K. distribution only |
August 27, 1983 | Fire and Ice[N 30] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Producers Sales Organization |
October 14, 1983 | The Osterman Weekend | North American, U.K. and Japanese theatrical distribution only; produced by Davis-Panzer Productions |
October 21, 1983 | All the Right Moves | |
November 18, 1983 | A Night in Heaven | co-production with SLM Production Group and Koch/Kirkwood Productions |
December 14, 1983 | Silkwood[N 7] | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. North American theatrical distribution only; produced by ABC Motion Pictures |
December 16, 1983 | Two of a Kind | |
To Be or Not to Be | co-production with Brooksfilms |
1984
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1984 | The Secret Diary of Sigmund Freud | U.S. distribution under Film Classics only; produced by Dalyn International |
January 1, 1984 | Careful, He Might Hear You | U.S. distribution only; produced by Syme International |
January 20, 1984 | The Buddy System | |
February 10, 1984 | Unfaithfully Yours | co-production with Wizan/Worth Productions |
February 17, 1984 | Blame It on Rio[N 29] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Sherwood Productions |
March 30, 1984 | Antarctica | U.S. distribution only; produced by Toho |
Romancing the Stone | co-production with SLM Production Group | |
April 4, 1984 | The Stone Boy | |
April 13, 1984 | Kidco | |
June 22, 1984 | Rhinestone | co-production with SLM Production Group |
June 29, 1984 | Bachelor Party | co-production with Aspect Ratio Productions and Twin Continental Productions |
July 9, 1984 | The Gods Must Be Crazy | theatrical distribution only; produced by C.A.T. Films |
July 20, 1984 | Revenge of the Nerds | co-production with Interscope Communications and SLM Production Group |
August 10, 1984 | The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension![N 29] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Sherwood Productions |
Dreamscape[N 3] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Zupnik-Curtis Enterprises | |
September 28, 1984 | Impulse[N 7] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by ABC Motion Pictures; not to be confused with the unrelated 1990 film of the same name |
October 23, 1984 | Give My Regards to Broad Street | British film; co-production with MPL Communications |
November 2, 1984 | Paris, Texas[N 31] | North American distribution only; produced by Road Movies Filmproduktion and Argos Films |
November 16, 1984 | Gimme an 'F' | |
December 21, 1984 | The Flamingo Kid[N 7] | North American distribution only; produced by ABC Motion Pictures and Mercury Entertainment |
Johnny Dangerously | co-production with SLM Production Group |
1985
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 8, 1985 | Mischief | co-production with Henshaw/Nolin Productions and SLM Production Group |
February 15, 1985 | Turk 182 | co-production with Interscope Communications and SLM Production Group |
March 22, 1985 | Porky's Revenge | distribution only; produced by Melvin Simon Productions, Astral Bellevue Pathé and SLM Production Group |
March 29, 1985 | Almost You | U.S. distribution only; co-production with Wescom Productions |
April 12, 1985 | Ladyhawke | international distribution only; co-production with Warner Bros. |
April 19, 1985 | Moving Violations | co-production with SLM Production Group |
May 10, 1985 | Secret Places | U.S. distribution only; produced by Skreba Films and Virgin Films |
June 13, 1985 | Prizzi's Honor[N 7] | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. North American theatrical distribution only; produced by ABC Motion Pictures |
June 21, 1985 | Cocoon | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. co-production with Zanuck/Brown Company |
July 19, 1985 | The Man with One Red Shoe | co-production with SLM Production Group and Victor Drai Productions |
August 14, 1985 | Key Exchange | U.S. distribution only; co-production with M-Square Entertainment |
August 23, 1985 | Warning Sign | co-production with Barwood/Robbins Productions and SLM Production Group |
September 20, 1985 | Joshua Then and Now | North American distribution only |
Plenty[N 32] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by RKO Pictures and Edward R. Pressman Film Corporation | |
October 4, 1985 | The Doctor and the Devils | distribution only; produced by Brooksfilms |
Commando | co-production with Silver Pictures and SLM Production Group | |
October 6, 1985 | The Park Is Mine | distribution only; produced by Astral Films and HBO |
November 22, 1985 | Bad Medicine | co-production with Lantana Productions and SLM Production Group |
December 11, 1985 | The Jewel of the Nile | co-production with SLM Production Group |
December 18, 1985 | Brazil[N 33] | international theatrical distribution only; produced by Embassy International Pictures; distributed in North America by Universal Pictures |
December 20, 1985 | Enemy Mine | co-production with Kings Road Entertainment and SLM Production Group |
1986
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 17, 1986 | The Boy in Blue | co-production with International Cinema Corporation and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |
January 31, 1986 | Stripper | U.S. distribution only; produced by Embassy International Pictures |
Power[N 6] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Lorimar Motion Pictures and Polar Film | |
February 14, 1986 | The Vindicator | U.S. distribution only; produced by Michael Levy Enterprises |
March 7, 1986 | Death of an Angel | U.S. distribution only |
Highlander[N 34] | North American and German theatrical distribution only; produced by Thorn EMI Screen Entertainment and Davis-Panzer Productions | |
March 28, 1986 | Lucas | co-production with Lawrence Gordon Productions and SLM Production Group |
April 18, 1986 | Legend[N 33] | international theatrical distribution only; produced by Embassy International Pictures; distributed in North America by Universal Pictures |
June 6, 1986 | SpaceCamp[N 7] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by ABC Motion Pictures |
June 13, 1986 | The Manhattan Project[N 29] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Gladden Entertainment |
July 2, 1986 | Big Trouble in Little China | co-production with Taft/Barish/Monash Productions and SLM Production Group |
July 18, 1986 | Aliens | co-production with Brandywine Productions and SLM Production Group |
August 14, 1986 | The Boy Who Could Fly[N 6] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Lorimar Motion Pictures |
August 15, 1986 | The Fly | co-production with Brooksfilms and SLM Production Group |
September 19, 1986 | The Name of the Rose[N 35] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Neue Constantin Film |
September 24, 1986 | Half Moon Street[N 36] | U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by RKO Pictures, Edward R. Pressman Film Corporation, Showtime/The Movie Channel and Geoff Reeve Enterprise |
October 10, 1986 | Jumpin' Jack Flash | co-production with Lawrence Gordon Productions and Silver Pictures |
November 14, 1986 | Streets of Gold | U.S. theatrical distribution only |
December 12, 1986 | Crocodile Dundee[N 37] | international distribution outside Australia only; produced by Rimfire Films; distributed in North America by Paramount Pictures |
December 25, 1986 | The Morning After[N 6] | North American and U.K. theatrical distribution only; produced by Lorimar Motion Pictures |
December 31, 1986 | Wisdom[N 38] | U.S. theatrical distribution only, produced by Gladden Entertainment |
1987
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 6, 1987 | Black Widow | co-production with Laurence Mark Productions, Amercent Films and American Entertainment Partners |
February 13, 1987 | Mannequin[N 29] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Gladden Entertainment |
March 6, 1987 | Raising Arizona | distribution only; produced by Circle Films |
April 17, 1987 | Project X | co-production with Lasker/Parkes Productions |
June 12, 1987 | Predator | co-production with Gordon Company, Silver Pictures, Davis Entertainment, Amercent Films and American Entertainment Partners |
July 10, 1987 | Revenge of the Nerds II: Nerds in Paradise | co-production with Interscope Communications, Amercent Films and American Entertainment Partners |
September 18, 1987 | The Pick-up Artist | co-production with Amercent Films and American Entertainment Partners |
September 25, 1987 | The Princess Bride[N 39] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Act III Communications Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2016. |
October 2, 1987 | Big Shots[N 6] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Lorimar Motion Pictures |
October 23, 1987 | The Sicilian[N 29] | North American theatrical and U.K. distribution only; produced by Gladden Entertainment |
November 6, 1987 | Less than Zero | co-production with Avnet/Kerner Productions, Amercent Films and American Entertainment Partners |
December 11, 1987 | Wall Street | co-production with Edward R. Pressman Film Corporation, Amercent Films and American Entertainment Partners |
December 16, 1987 | Broadcast News | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2018. co-production with Gracie Films, Amercent Films and American Entertainment Partners |
1988
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 12, 1988 | Satisfaction | distribution only; produced by NBC Productions and Spelling/Greisman Productions |
February 27, 1988 | A Night in the Life of Jimmy Reardon | North American distribution only; produced by Island Pictures |
March 11, 1988 | Off Limits | co-production with American Entertainment Partners |
April 8, 1988 | Bad Dreams | co-production with No Frills Film Productions and American Entertainment Partners II |
June 3, 1988 | Big | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. co-production with Gracie Films and American Entertainment Partners II |
July 6, 1988 | License to Drive | co-production with Davis Entertainment and Licht/Mueller Productions |
July 15, 1988 | Die Hard | co-production with Gordon Company and Silver Pictures Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2017. |
August 12, 1988 | Young Guns[N 40] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
September 23, 1988 | Dead Ringers[N 41] | U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Telefilm Canada |
October 7, 1988 | Alien Nation | co-production with American Entertainment Partners II |
November 23, 1988 | Cocoon: The Return | co-production with Zanuck/Brown Company |
December 21, 1988 | Working Girl | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
1989
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 13, 1989 | Gleaming the Cube[N 42] | North American theatrical distribution only, produced by Gladden Entertainment and The Turman-Foster Company |
February 10, 1989 | The Fly II | co-production with Brooksfilms |
March 10, 1989 | Skin Deep[N 40] | North American and select international theatrical distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Beco Films |
April 14, 1989 | Say Anything... | co-production with Gracie Films |
May 19, 1989 | How I Got into College | |
July 5, 1989 | Weekend at Bernie's[N 42] | North American and French theatrical distribution only; produced by Gladden Entertainment and Victor Drai Productions |
August 9, 1989 | The Favorite | U.S. distribution only |
The Abyss | ||
August 25, 1989 | Millennium[N 42] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Gladden Entertainment |
October 13, 1989 | The Fabulous Baker Boys[N 42] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Gladden Entertainment and Mirage Enterprises |
October 20, 1989 | When the Whales Came | British film; distribution only; produced by Golden Swan Films |
October 27, 1989 | Worth Winning | co-production with A&M Films |
December 8, 1989 | The War of the Roses | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. co-production with Gracie Films and Regency International Pictures (uncredited) |
December 13, 1989 | Enemies, A Love Story[N 40] | North American and select international theatrical distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
1990s
[edit]1990
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 12, 1990 | Downtown | |
January 22, 1990 | A Matter of Degrees | U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by Backbeat Productions and Fox Lorber Features |
February 16, 1990 | Nightbreed[N 40] | North American theatrical and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
March 16, 1990 | Nuns on the Run | North American and German theatrical distribution only; produced by HandMade Films |
April 13, 1990 | Vital Signs | |
The Gods Must Be Crazy II[N 43] | international theatrical distribution only; produced by Weintraub Entertainment Group; distributed in North America by Columbia Pictures | |
May 4, 1990 | Short Time[N 42] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Gladden Entertainment |
July 4, 1990 | Die Hard 2 | co-production with Gordon Company and Silver Pictures |
July 11, 1990 | The Adventures of Ford Fairlane | co-production with Silver Pictures |
August 3, 1990 | Young Guns II[N 40] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
August 17, 1990 | The Exorcist III[N 40] | |
September 21, 1990 | Miller's Crossing | distribution only; produced by Circle Films |
September 28, 1990 | Pacific Heights[N 40] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
October 5, 1990 | Marked for Death | co-production with Steamroller Productions |
November 2, 1990 | Frankenstein Unbound | North American distribution only; produced by The Mount Company |
November 16, 1990 | Home Alone | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. co-production with Hughes Entertainment Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2023. |
November 21, 1990 | Predator 2 | co-production with Gordon Company, Silver Pictures and Davis Entertainment |
December 7, 1990 | Edward Scissorhands | |
December 23, 1990 | Come See the Paradise |
1991
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 8, 1991 | Sleeping with the Enemy | |
March 15, 1991 | Class Action | co-production with Interscope Communications |
March 22, 1991 | Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret of the Ooze[N 17] | international distribution outside Hong Kong only; produced by Mirage Studios and Golden Harvest; distributed in North America by New Line Cinema |
March 29, 1991 | The Five Heartbeats | |
May 17, 1991 | Mannequin Two: On the Move[N 42] | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by Gladden Entertainment |
May 24, 1991 | Only the Lonely | co-production with Hughes Entertainment |
June 21, 1991 | Dying Young | co-production with Fogwood Films |
July 12, 1991 | Point Break[N 44] | distribution outside Italy and Japan only; produced by Largo Entertainment and Tapestry Films |
July 19, 1991 | Dutch | co-production with Hughes Entertainment |
July 26, 1991 | Life Stinks | international distribution only; produced by Brooksfilms; distributed in North America by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
July 31, 1991 | Hot Shots! | co-production with Peter V. Miller Investment Corp. |
August 14, 1991 | The Commitments[N 45] | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy North American, U.K. and German theatrical distribution only; produced by Beacon Communications, First Film Company and Dirty Hands Productions |
August 21, 1991 | Barton Fink | Winner of the Palme d'Or. North American distribution only; produced by Circle Films |
October 4, 1991 | The Super[N 44] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Largo Entertainment |
November 1, 1991 | 29th Street[N 44] | North American distribution only; produced by Permut Productions |
November 22, 1991 | For the Boys | co-production with All Girl Productions |
December 22, 1991 | Grand Canyon | |
December 27, 1991 | Naked Lunch | U.S. distribution only; produced by Recorded Picture Company |
1992
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 31, 1992 | Shining Through | co-production with Peter V. Miller Investment Corp. and Sandollar Productions |
February 7, 1992 | Back in the USSR[N 44] | North American distribution only; produced by Largo Entertainment |
February 21, 1992 | This Is My Life | co-production with Lynda Obst Productions |
March 13, 1992 | My Cousin Vinny | co-production with Peter V. Miller Investment Corp. |
March 27, 1992 | White Men Can't Jump | |
April 10, 1992 | FernGully: The Last Rainforest[N 46] | distribution only; produced by FAI Films, Youngheart Productions and Kroyer Films |
May 1, 1992 | Folks! | North American distribution only; produced by Penta Pictures |
May 22, 1992 | Alien 3 | co-production with Brandywine Productions |
June 26, 1992 | Unlawful Entry[N 44] | distribution outside Italy and Japan only; produced by Largo Entertainment and JVC Entertainment |
July 10, 1992 | Prelude to a Kiss | co-production with Gruskoff/Levy Company |
July 17, 1992 | Man Trouble | North American distribution only; produced by Penta Pictures, American Filmworks and Budding Grove Productions |
July 31, 1992 | Buffy the Vampire Slayer | co-production with Sandollar Productions and Kazui Enterprises |
August 21, 1992 | Rapid Fire | |
August 26, 1992 | Storyville[N 47] | U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by Davis Entertainment and Edward R. Pressman Film Corporation |
September 18, 1992 | Jumpin' at the Boneyard | co-production with Kasdan Pictures |
September 25, 1992 | The Last of the Mohicans | North American distribution only |
October 16, 1992 | Night and the City | North American distribution only; co-production with Penta Entertainment and Tribeca Films |
November 13, 1992 | Love Potion No. 9 | North American distribution only; co-production with Penta Pictures (uncredited) |
November 20, 1992 | Home Alone 2: Lost in New York | co-production with Hughes Entertainment |
December 16, 1992 | Used People[N 44] | distribution outside Italy and Japan only; produced by Largo Entertainment and JVC Entertainment |
December 18, 1992 | Toys | co-production with Baltimore Pictures |
December 25, 1992 | Hoffa | co-production with Jersey Films and Edward R. Pressman Film Corporation |
1993
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 5, 1993 | The Vanishing | |
March 5, 1993 | Best of the Best 2 | U.S. distribution only; produced by The Movie Group |
March 17, 1993 | Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III[N 17] | international distribution outside Hong Kong only; produced by Mirage Studios and Golden Harvest; distributed in North America by New Line Cinema |
March 26, 1993 | Hear No Evil | North American and Spanish distribution only |
April 2, 1993 | Jack the Bear | co-production with American Filmworks and Lucky Dog Productions |
April 7, 1993 | The Sandlot[N 48] | co-production with Island World |
May 21, 1993 | Hot Shots! Part Deux | |
June 18, 1993 | Once Upon a Forest | distribution only; produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions and HTV Television |
July 7, 1993 | Rookie of the Year | co-production with Robert Harper Productions |
July 28, 1993 | Robin Hood: Men in Tights | North American distribution only; co-production with Brooksfilms and Gaumont |
July 30, 1993 | Rising Sun | co-production with Walrus & Associates |
August 27, 1993 | Only the Strong | North American distribution only; co-production with Freestone Pictures and Davis Films |
September 24, 1993 | The Good Son | |
October 1, 1993 | Freaked | co-production with Tommy Productions |
October 15, 1993 | The Beverly Hillbillies | |
November 24, 1993 | Mrs. Doubtfire | co-production with Blue Wolf Productions |
December 29, 1993 | Ghost in the Machine |
1994
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 25, 1994 | Sugar Hill | North American distribution only; produced by Beacon Communications and South Street Entertainment Group |
March 4, 1994 | The Chase | North American and U.K. distribution only; produced by Capitol Films and Elwes/Wyman Productions |
April 22, 1994 | Bad Girls | co-production with Ruddy/Morgan Productions |
April 29, 1994 | PCU | |
June 10, 1994 | Speed | co-production with The Mark Gordon Company |
July 1, 1994 | Baby's Day Out | co-production with Hughes Entertainment |
July 15, 1994 | True Lies[N 49] | North American, French and Italian distribution only; co-production with Lightstorm Entertainment |
August 5, 1994 | Airheads | co-production with Island World and Robert Simonds Productions |
August 6, 1994 | Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie | international distribution only in countries outside Japan, the U.K., France and Spain |
September 30, 1994 | The Scout | co-production with Ruddy/Morgan Productions |
November 18, 1994 | Miracle on 34th Street | co-production with Hughes Entertainment |
November 23, 1994 | The Pagemaster | North American and select international theatrical distribution only; co-production with Turner Pictures and David Kirschner Productions |
December 2, 1994 | Trapped in Paradise | co-production with Davison/Gallo Productions |
December 23, 1994 | Nell | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. North and Latin American distribution only; produced by PolyGram Filmed Entertainment and Egg Pictures |
1995
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 13, 1995 | Far from Home: The Adventures of Yellow Dog | |
March 17, 1995 | Bye Bye Love | co-production with Ubu Productions |
April 21, 1995 | Kiss of Death | |
May 5, 1995 | French Kiss | North American distribution only; produced by PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Working Title Films and Prufrock Pictures |
May 19, 1995 | Die Hard with a Vengeance[N 50] | North American and Japanese distribution only; co-production with Cinergi Pictures |
May 24, 1995 | Braveheart | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture. international distribution only; co-production with Icon Productions, Paramount Pictures and The Ladd Company; distributed in North America by Paramount Pictures |
June 30, 1995 | Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: The Movie | distribution outside Japan only; co-production with Fox Family Films, Saban Entertainment and Toei Company |
July 14, 1995 | Nine Months | co-production with 1492 Pictures |
August 4, 1995 | Bushwhacked | co-production with Wessler/Schiff Productions |
August 11, 1995 | A Walk in the Clouds | co-production with Zucker Brothers Productions |
October 13, 1995 | Strange Days[N 51] | North American, French and Italian distribution only; co-production with Lightstorm Entertainment |
December 22, 1995 | Waiting to Exhale | co-production with Schindler/Swerdlow Productions |
1996
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 12, 1996 | Dunston Checks In | co-production with Fox Family Films |
February 9, 1996 | Broken Arrow | co-production with The Mark Gordon Company and WCG Entertainment |
March 1, 1996 | Down Periscope | co-production with Robert Lawrence Productions |
April 26, 1996 | The Truth About Cats and Dogs | co-production with Noon Attack |
May 3, 1996 | The Great White Hype | co-production with Atman Entertainment and Fred Berner Films |
July 3, 1996 | Independence Day | co-production with Centropolis Entertainment; not to be confused with the unrelated 1983 film of the same name |
July 12, 1996 | Courage Under Fire | co-production with Fox 2000 Pictures, Davis Entertainment, Joseph M. Singer Entertainment and Friendly Films |
August 2, 1996 | Chain Reaction | co-production with The Zanuck Company and Chicago Pacific Entertainment |
October 4, 1996 | That Thing You Do! | co-production with Clinica Estetico and Clavius Base |
November 1, 1996 | Romeo + Juliet | co-production with Bazmark Productions |
November 22, 1996 | Jingle All the Way | co-production with Fox Family Films and 1492 Pictures |
November 27, 1996 | The Crucible | |
December 20, 1996 | One Fine Day | co-production with Fox 2000 Pictures, Lynda Obst Productions and Via Rosa Productions |
1997
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
March 28, 1997 | Turbo: A Power Rangers Movie | distribution outside Japan only; co-production with Fox Family Films, Saban Entertainment and Toei Company |
April 4, 1997 | Inventing the Abbotts | co-production with Fox 2000 Pictures and Imagine Entertainment |
April 25, 1997 | Volcano | co-production with Fox 2000 Pictures, Shuler Donner/Donner Productions and Moritz Original |
June 13, 1997 | Speed 2: Cruise Control | co-production with Blue Tulip Productions |
July 2, 1997 | Out to Sea | co-production with Davis Entertainment and Friendly Films |
August 1, 1997 | Picture Perfect | co-production with 3 Arts Entertainment |
September 26, 1997 | The Edge | co-production with Art Linson Productions |
Soul Food | distribution only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures and Edmonds Entertainment | |
October 24, 1997 | A Life Less Ordinary | North American and select international distribution only; co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Figment Films and Channel Four Films |
November 7, 1997 | Cold Around the Heart | co-production with Illusion Entertainment and Baumgarten-Prophet Entertainment |
November 14, 1997 | Anastasia | co-production with Fox Family Films and Fox Animation Studios |
November 26, 1997 | Alien Resurrection | co-production with Brandywine Productions |
December 12, 1997 | Home Alone 3 | co-production with Fox Family Films and Hughes Entertainment |
December 18, 1997 | The Wiggles Movie | Australian distribution only; co-production with Gladusaurus Productions |
December 19, 1997 | Titanic | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2017. international distribution only; co-production with Paramount Pictures and Lightstorm Entertainment |
1998
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 9, 1998 | Firestorm | co-production with Loeb/Weisman Productions |
January 30, 1998 | Great Expectations | co-production with Art Linson Productions |
February 20, 1998 | Dangerous Beauty | Renamed as The Greatest Courtesan in the United Kingdom and A Destiny of Her Own in some regions. international distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises, Bedford Falls Productions and Taurus Film; distributed in North America by Warner Bros. |
March 27, 1998 | The Newton Boys | co-production with Detour Filmproduction |
April 17, 1998 | The Object of My Affection | co-production with Laurence Mark Productions |
May 15, 1998 | Bulworth | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. co-production with Mulholland Productions |
May 29, 1998 | Hope Floats | co-production with Lynda Obst Productions and Fortis Films |
June 19, 1998 | The X-Files | co-production with Ten Thirteen Productions |
June 26, 1998 | Dr. Dolittle | co-production with Davis Entertainment, Joseph M. Singer Entertainment and Friendly Films |
July 15, 1998 | There's Something About Mary | Nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. co-production with Conundrum Entertainment |
July 29, 1998 | Ever After: A Cinderella Story | co-production with Fox Family Films (uncredited), Mireille Soria Production and Flower Films |
August 14, 1998 | How Stella Got Her Groove Back | NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Motion Picture |
November 6, 1998 | The Siege | co-production with Lynda Obst Productions |
A Cool, Dry Place | distribution only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures and Jacobs/Mutrux Productions | |
December 25, 1998 | The Thin Red Line | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. Nominated for Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Picture. distribution outside Japan only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures, Phoenix Pictures and Geisler-Roberdau |
1999
[edit]Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 5, 1999 | Simply Irresistible | distribution outside Italy only; produced by Regency Enterprises, Polar Entertainment and Taurus Film |
February 19, 1999 | Office Space | co-production with Judgemental Films |
March 12, 1999 | Wing Commander | distribution in English-speaking territories, France, Germany theatrical, Benelux and Latin America only; produced by No Prisoners Productions, Digital Anvil, Origin Systems and The Carousel Picture Company |
March 19, 1999 | Ravenous | distribution only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures, Adam Fields Productions and Heyday Films |
April 9, 1999 | Never Been Kissed | distribution only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures, Flower Films and Bushwood Pictures |
April 23, 1999 | Pushing Tin | distribution outside Italy only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures, Regency Enterprises and Linson Films |
April 30, 1999 | Entrapment | distribution outside Italy only; co-production with Regency Enterprises and Fountainbridge Films |
May 19, 1999 | Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace | distribution only; produced by Lucasfilm |
July 16, 1999 | Lake Placid[N 52] | distribution in English-speaking territories, Latin America and Asia excluding Japan only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures, Phoenix Pictures and Rocking Chair Productions |
August 13, 1999 | Brokedown Palace | distribution only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures and Adam Fields Productions |
October 1, 1999 | Sex, Shame and Tears | US distribution only |
Drive Me Crazy | ||
October 15, 1999 | Fight Club | distribution outside Italy only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures, Regency Enterprises, Linson Films and Taurus Film |
November 10, 1999 | Light it Up | distribution only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures and Edmonds Entertainment |
November 12, 1999 | Anywhere but Here | distribution only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures and Laurence Mark Productions |
December 17, 1999 | Anna and the King | distribution only; produced by Fox 2000 Pictures and Lawrence Bender Productions |
Xuxa Requebra | Brazilian film; co-production with Xuxa Produções and Diler & Associados |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ a b c d Owned by Paramount Pictures (via CBS)
- ^ a b c d e Owned by Universal Pictures (via DreamWorks Classics)
- ^ a b c d e f g Owned by Shout! Studios (via Westchester Films)
- ^ a b c Owned by Video-Cinema Films, Inc., with U.S. distribution rights currently licensed to Ignite Films, Corinth Films and Samuel Goldwyn Films
- ^ a b c d e Owned by Warner Bros. (via Turner Entertainment Co.)
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Owned by Warner Bros.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Owned by Disney (via ABC)
- ^ a b Owned by Concord Originals and the estates of Rodgers and Hammerstein, with distribution rights currently licensed to Samuel Goldwyn Films
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Owned by Paramount Pictures (via Melange Pictures)
- ^ a b Owned by ITV Studios, with North American distribution rights licensed to MGM
- ^ Owned by Janus Films and The Criterion Collection
- ^ Owned by Rhino Entertainment
- ^ a b c d e f Owned by Bristol Myers Squibb
- ^ Owned by the Rainbow Group Ltd, with U.S. distribution rights presumably owned by Lionsgate as of 2024
- ^ a b c d Owned by StudioCanal, with U.S. distribution shared by Rialto Pictures and Lionsgate
- ^ Owned by StudioCanal
- ^ a b c d e Owned by Fortune Star
- ^ Owned by Nouvelles Éditions de Films, with U.S. distribution rights currently licensed to Janus Films and The Criterion Collection
- ^ Owned by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts through Simon & Schuster; currently unavailable for distribution
- ^ Owned by ITV Studios
- ^ Owned by Dark Sky Films
- ^ Owned by Werner Herzog Film, with U.S. distribution rights currently licensed to Shout! Studios
- ^ Owned by Severin Films
- ^ a b Owned by Warner Bros. Discovery through HBO
- ^ Owned by Fortune Star, with Warner Bros. (via HBO) handling U.S. home video rights
- ^ Owned by FilmRise
- ^ Owned by Mercury Film, Inc., with select distribution rights licensed to Sony Pictures (under Destination Films) and Janus Films
- ^ Fox reclaimed full distribution rights since 1999
- ^ a b c d e f Owned by MGM
- ^ Owned by AMBI Group (via Exclusive Media), with home video distribution licensed to Blue Underground; Disney retains U.S. theatrical and TV rights
- ^ Owned by the Wim Wenders Foundation; commercial rights owned by HanWay Films, with U.S. distribution rights currently licensed to Janus Films and The Criterion Collection
- ^ Owned by StudioCanal, with U.S. distribution handled by Lionsgate
- ^ a b Fox reclaimed full international rights since 1999
- ^ Owned by StudioCanal, with U.S. home video and digital distribution rights handled by Lionsgate; Disney retains U.S. theatrical, TV and streaming rights
- ^ Owned by Constantin Film, with U.S. distribution handled by Samuel Goldwyn Films
- ^ Home video and digital distribution rights owned by MGM
- ^ Paramount reclaimed international rights from Fox since late 1990s
- ^ Owned by Warner Bros. in the U.S. and MGM internationally
- ^ U.S. home video and digital distribution rights owned by MGM; Disney retains U.S. theatrical and TV rights
- ^ a b c d e f g Owned by Revolution Studios
- ^ Owned by Revolution Studios in the U.S. and ITV Studios internationally
- ^ a b c d e f Owned by MGM in the U.S., and ITV Studios internationally
- ^ Owned by Sony Pictures (under Columbia Pictures)
- ^ a b c d e f Owned by Library Rights Company (UK), Ltd. and Zelus Film Holding Company, LLC, with distribution rights licensed to Resurgence Media Group, which has sub-licensed U.S. rights to Shout! Studios and U.K. rights to Icon Film Distribution
- ^ Owned by Beacon Pictures, with distribution rights currently licensed to Resurgence Media Group, which has sub-licensed U.S. rights to Shout! Studios and U.K. rights to Icon Film Distribution
- ^ Owned by Machine Media Advisors, with distribution handled by Shout! Studios
- ^ Owned by Sony Pictures
- ^ Co-owned by MGM
- ^ Disney currently owns worldwide rights to True Lies, Fox having subsequently reclaimed international rights from Universal Pictures by 2010
- ^ Disney currently owns worldwide rights to Die Hard with a Vengeance: Fox reclaimed select international rights from Summit Entertainment for territories not covered by Buena Vista International in 2002, with BVI's rights expiring on June 1, 2020; the latter would be acquired following Disney's acquisition of 20th Century Fox on March 20, 2019 instead
- ^ Owned by Universal Pictures
- ^ Co-owned by Sony Pictures
References
[edit]- ^ Vary, Adam (January 17, 2020). "Disney Drops Fox Name, Will Rebrand as 20th Century Studios, Searchlight Pictures". Variety. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
External links
[edit]- Media related to 20th Century Fox films at Wikimedia Commons