United Artists (UA) is an American film and television entertainment studio founded in 1919 by D. W. Griffith, Charlie Chaplin, Mary Pickford, and Douglas Fairbanks. This is a list of feature films originally produced or distributed by United Artists, including those made overseas.
Note: The MGM films that United Artists distributed are now owned by Warner Bros. through Turner Entertainment Co.
This list also includes films that received the United Artists copyright.
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
May 13, 1919 | Broken Blossoms[N 1] | originally made for Famous Players–Lasky; bought by United Artists Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1996 |
September 1, 1919 | His Majesty, the American[N 1] | first United Artists-distributed production |
December 28, 1919 | When the Clouds Roll By |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 18, 1920 | Pollyanna | |
January 27, 1920 | Suds | |
April 25, 1920 | Down on the Farm | |
May 16, 1920 | Romance | film is considered lost |
June 13, 1920 | The Mollycoddle[N 1] | |
August 22, 1920 | The Love Flower[N 1] | |
September 3, 1920 | Way Down East[N 1] | |
December 5, 1920 | The Mark of Zorro[N 1] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2015 |
January 9, 1921 | The Love Light | |
March 6, 1921 | The Nut | |
April 12, 1921 | Dream Street[N 1] | |
May 5, 1921 | Through the Back Door | |
August 21, 1921 | Disraeli | |
August 28, 1921 | The Three Musketeers[N 1] | |
September 15, 1921 | Little Lord Fauntleroy | |
October 9, 1921 | J'accuse | |
October 30, 1921 | The Iron Trail | |
December 28, 1921 | Orphans of the Storm[N 1] | |
January 22, 1922 | The Ruling Passion | |
February 12, 1922 | A Doll's House | film is considered lost |
March 19, 1922 | Fair Lady | film is considered lost |
April 23, 1922 | The Glorious Adventure | |
August 5, 1922 | A Tailor-Made Man | |
August 27, 1922 | The Three Must-Get-Theres | |
October 1, 1922 | The Man Who Played God | |
October 2, 1922 | One Exciting Night[N 1] | |
October 18, 1922 | Robin Hood[N 1] | |
November 12, 1922 | Tess of the Storm Country | |
February 15, 1923 | The Girl I Loved | |
March 5, 1923 | The Shriek of Araby | |
May 21, 1923 | The White Rose[N 1] | |
September 3, 1923 | Rosita | |
October 1, 1923 | A Woman of Paris[N 2] | |
February 21, 1924 | America | produced by D. W. Griffith, Inc. |
March 23, 1924 | The Thief of Bagdad[N 1] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1996 |
May 25, 1924 | Dorothy Vernon of Haddon Hall | |
December 5, 1924 | Isn't Life Wonderful[N 1] | |
February 15, 1925 | The Salvation Hunters[N 1] | |
April 14, 1925 | Waking Up the Town | |
June 15, 1925 | Don Q, Son of Zorro[N 1] | |
June 26, 1925 | The Gold Rush[N 2] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1992 |
July 6, 1925 | Wild Justice | film is considered lost |
August 2, 1925 | Sally of the Sawdust[N 1] | |
October 18, 1925 | Little Annie Rooney | |
November 8, 1925 | The Eagle[N 1] | |
November 16, 1925 | Stella Dallas[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
December 27, 1925 | Tumbleweeds | |
1926 | A Woman of the Sea | film is considered lost |
February 15, 1926 | Partners Again[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
March 8, 1926 | The Black Pirate[N 1] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1993 |
March 14, 1926 | The Bat | |
September 5, 1926 | The Son of the Sheik[N 1] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2006 |
September 19, 1926 | Sparrows | |
October 14, 1926 | The Winning of Barbara Worth[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
January 27, 1927 | The Night of Love[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
February 5, 1927 | The General[N 1] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1989 |
March 11, 1927 | The Love of Sunya | |
March 12, 1927 | The Beloved Rogue | |
March 19, 1927 | Resurrection | |
July 24, 1927 | Topsy and Eva | |
September 10, 1927 | College[N 1] | |
September 18, 1927 | The Magic Flame[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
September 23, 1927 | Two Arabian Knights | |
October 31, 1927 | My Best Girl | |
November 3, 1927 | The Devil Dancer[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions; film is considered lost |
November 21, 1927 | The Gaucho[N 1] | |
December 2, 1927 | Sorrell and Son | |
December 31, 1927 | The Dove | |
January 6, 1928 | The Circus[N 2] | |
January 7, 1928 | Sadie Thompson | |
January 24, 1928 | Drums of Love | |
February 4, 1928 | The Garden of Eden | |
March 23, 1928 | Two Lovers[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
May 14, 1928 | Ramona | |
May 20, 1928 | Steamboat Bill, Jr.[N 1] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2016 |
May 27, 1928 | Tempest | |
September 1928 | The Woman Disputed | |
October 1928 | Revenge | |
October 12, 1928 | The Battle of the Sexes[N 1] | |
November 17, 1928 | The Awakening[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions; film is considered lost |
January 12, 1929 | The Rescue[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
January 22, 1929 | Lady of the Pavements | |
February 21, 1929 | The Iron Mask[N 1] | |
April 6, 1929 | Coquette[N 4] | |
April 20, 1929 | Alibi[N 1] | distribution only; produced by Feature Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 2, 1929 | Bulldog Drummond[N 3] | |
May 11, 1929 | Eternal Love | |
June 1, 1929 | The Three Passions | |
June 8, 1929 | She Goes to War | |
June 22, 1929 | This Is Heaven[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions; film is considered lost |
August 24, 1929 | Evangeline | |
September 15, 1929 | Three Live Ghosts | |
October 12, 1929 | Venus | film is considered lost |
November 3, 1929 | Condemned[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
November 11, 1929 | The Trespasser | |
November 16, 1929 | The Locked Door | |
November 30, 1929 | The Taming of the Shrew[N 1] | |
December 28, 1929 | New York Nights |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 18, 1930 | Lummox | |
February 8, 1930 | Be Yourself[N 1] | |
March 1, 1930 | Puttin' On the Ritz[N 1] | |
March 15, 1930 | Hell Harbor | |
May 3, 1930 | The Bad One | |
One Romantic Night[N 4] | ||
July 24, 1930 | Raffles[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
August 30, 1930 | The Eyes of the World | |
September 13, 1930 | What a Widow! | film is considered lost |
October 5, 1930 | Whoopee![N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
October 11, 1930 | Du Barry, Woman of Passion | |
November 8, 1930 | Abraham Lincoln[N 1] | distribution only; produced by Feature Productions; directed by D. W. Griffith |
November 13, 1930 | The Bat Whispers | |
November 15, 1930 | Hell's Angels[N 5] | distribution only |
November 28, 1930 | The Lottery Bride[N 1] | |
December 20, 1930 | The Devil to Pay![N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
January 14, 1931 | One Heavenly Night[N 3] | |
January 30, 1931 | City Lights[N 2] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1991 |
February 21, 1931 | Reaching for the Moon[N 1] | |
March 14, 1931 | Kiki | |
April 4, 1931 | The Front Page | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2010 |
May 16, 1931 | Indiscreet | |
September 5, 1931 | Street Scene[N 6] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
October 3, 1931 | Palmy Days[N 3] | |
October 17, 1931 | The Age for Love | distribution only; produced by The Caddo Company |
October 28, 1931 | The Unholy Garden[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
November 28, 1931 | Corsair | |
December 10, 1931 | The Struggle[N 1] | directed by D. W. Griffith, his last film |
December 12, 1931 | Around the World in 80 Minutes with Douglas Fairbanks | |
December 17, 1931 | Tonight or Never[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
December 26, 1931 | Arrowsmith[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
January 23, 1932 | Cock of the Air | |
February 13, 1932 | The Greeks Had a Word for Them[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
March 12, 1932 | Sky Devils | |
April 9, 1932 | Scarface[N 5] | distribution only Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1994 |
April 16, 1932 | The Silver Lining | |
April 25, 1932 | Der Kongress tanzt | |
May 11, 1932 | Congress Dances | |
August 4, 1932 | White Zombie[N 1] | |
August 19, 1932 | Mr. Robinson Crusoe[N 1] | |
October 12, 1932 | Rain | |
November 2, 1932 | Magic Night | |
November 17, 1932 | The Kid from Spain[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
December 24, 1932 | Cynara[N 3] | |
February 3, 1933 | Hallelujah, I'm a Bum | |
March 11, 1933 | Perfect Understanding[N 1] | |
March 16, 1933 | Secrets[N 3] | |
May 19, 1933 | I Cover the Waterfront | produced by Edward Small |
June 28, 1933 | Samarang | |
August 25, 1933 | Bitter Sweet[N 1] | |
September 3, 1933 | The Masquerade[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
September 21, 1933 | The Private Life of Henry VIII | distribution only; produced by London Films Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
September 29, 1933 | The Emperor Jones[N 1] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1999 |
October 7, 1933 | The Bowery[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures |
November 2, 1933 | Broadway Through a Keyhole[N 7] | |
November 17, 1933 | Blood Money[N 7] | |
December 1, 1933 | Advice to the Lovelorn[N 7] | |
December 29, 1933 | Roman Scandals[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
January 5, 1934 | Gallant Lady | |
January 19, 1934 | Moulin Rouge | |
January 26, 1934 | Palooka | produced by Edward Small |
February 1, 1934 | Nana[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
February 9, 1934 | The Rise of Catherine the Great | produced by London Films Productions |
March 29, 1934 | Looking for Trouble[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures |
April 7, 1934 | The House of Rothschild[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 28, 1934 | The Last Gentleman[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures |
May 18, 1934 | Born to Be Bad[N 7] | |
May 29, 1934 | Sorrell and Son | |
August 15, 1934 | Bulldog Drummond Strikes Back[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures |
August 24, 1934 | The Affairs of Cellini[N 7] | |
September 7, 1934 | The Count of Monte Cristo[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
October 2, 1934 | Our Daily Bread | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2015 |
November 1, 1934 | We Live Again[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
November 2, 1934 | Transatlantic Merry-Go-Round[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
November 10, 1934 | Kid Millions[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
November 30, 1934 | The Private Life of Don Juan | distribution only; produced by London Films Productions |
December 21, 1934 | The Queen's Affair | |
December 23, 1934 | Don Quixote | |
The Mighty Barnum[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures | |
January 25, 1935 | Clive of India[N 7] | |
February 7, 1935 | The Scarlet Pimpernel | produced by London Films Productions |
February 22, 1935 | Folies Bergère de Paris[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures |
March 8, 1935 | The Wedding Night[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
April 20, 1935 | Les Misérables[N 7] | distribution only, produced by Twentieth Century Pictures Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 28, 1935 | Cardinal Richelieu[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures |
May 17, 1935 | Let 'Em Have It[N 8][N 9] | |
May 24, 1935 | Escape Me Never | |
June 19, 1935 | Nell Gwyn[N 1] | distribution only; Herbert Wilcox Productions (for) British & Dominions |
June 26, 1935 | Sanders of the River | produced by London Films Productions |
August 9, 1935 | The Call of the Wild[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Twentieth Century Pictures |
September 8, 1935 | The Dark Angel[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
September 12, 1935 | Red Salute[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
October 13, 1935 | Barbary Coast[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
November 7, 1935 | The Melody Lingers On | produced by Edward Small |
November 22, 1935 | Splendor[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
January 9, 1936 | Mimi | |
January 24, 1936 | Strike Me Pink[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
February 7, 1936 | The Ghost Goes West | produced by London Films Productions |
February 25, 1936 | Modern Times[N 2] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1989 |
March 18, 1936 | These Three[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
April 2, 1936 | Little Lord Fauntleroy[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures |
April 17, 1936 | Things to Come | produced by London Films Productions |
April 27, 1936 | The Amateur Gentleman | distribution only; produced by Criterion Film Productions |
May 13, 1936 | One Rainy Afternoon | |
July 1, 1936 | Moscow Nights | produced by London Films Productions |
September 4, 1936 | The Last of the Mohicans[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
September 23, 1936 | Dodsworth[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1990 |
October 2, 1936 | The Gay Desperado | |
November 6, 1936 | Come and Get It[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
November 19, 1936 | The Garden of Allah[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures |
December 17, 1936 | Accused[N 1] | distribution only; produced by Criterion Film Productions |
December 25, 1936 | Rembrandt | produced by London Films Productions |
December 25, 1936 | Beloved Enemy[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
January 18, 1937 | Men Are Not Gods | produced by London Films Productions |
January 29, 1937 | You Only Live Once[N 9] | |
February 19, 1937 | The Man Who Could Work Miracles | produced by London Films Productions |
February 25, 1937 | Storm in a Teacup | |
March 5, 1937 | Fire Over England | |
History Is Made at Night[N 9] | produced by Walter Wanger Productions | |
April 5, 1937 | Elephant Boy | produced by London Films Productions |
April 18, 1937 | A Night of Terror | |
April 27, 1937 | A Star Is Born[N 11] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 7, 1937 | Woman Chases Man[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
May 19, 1937 | Dreaming Lips | |
June 14, 1937 | When Thief Meets Thief | |
July 2, 1937 | Dark Journey[N 1] | |
July 23, 1937 | Knight Without Armor | produced by London Films Productions |
August 6, 1937 | Stella Dallas[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
August 27, 1937 | Dead End[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
September 3, 1937 | The Prisoner of Zenda[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1997 |
October 29, 1937 | Stand-In[N 9] | |
November 9, 1937 | The Hurricane[N 12] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
November 11, 1937 | Murder on Diamond Row | produced by London Films Productions |
November 19, 1937 | 52nd Street[N 9] | |
November 25, 1937 | Nothing Sacred[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures |
January 14, 1938 | Action for Slander | distribution only; produced by London Film Productions |
I Met My Love Again[N 9] | ||
January 15, 1938 | The Divorce of Lady X | produced by London Films Productions |
February 4, 1938 | The Goldwyn Follies[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
February 11, 1938 | The Adventures of Tom Sawyer[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures |
March 18, 1938 | Gaiety Girls | produced by London Films Productions |
April 10, 1938 | Return of the Scarlet Pimpernel | |
April 15, 1938 | The Adventures of Marco Polo[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
April 25, 1938 | Troopship | produced by London Films Productions |
May 9, 1938 | Moonlight Sonata[N 1] | |
June 17, 1938 | Blockade[N 9] | |
August 1, 1938 | South Riding | distribution only; Victor Saville Productions/London Film Productions |
August 5, 1938 | Algiers | distribution only; produced by Walter Wanger Productions |
August 7, 1938 | Vogues of 1938[N 9] | |
September 9, 1938 | Dreamers of Glory | |
September 29, 1938 | The Drum | distribution only; produced by London Film Productions |
October 14, 1938 | There Goes My Heart[N 13] | |
November 3, 1938 | The Young in Heart[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures |
November 17, 1938 | The Cowboy and the Lady[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
December 28, 1938 | Trade Winds[N 9] | |
December 29, 1938 | The Duke of West Point[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
January 12, 1939 | Topper Takes a Trip[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
February 10, 1939 | Made for Each Other[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures |
February 17, 1939 | King of the Turf[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
March 2, 1939 | Stagecoach[N 9] | distribution only; produced by Walter Wanger Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1995 |
April 7, 1939 | Wuthering Heights[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2007 |
April 9, 1939 | Prison Without Bars | produced by London Films Productions |
April 21, 1939 | Zenobia[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
May 26, 1939 | Captain Fury[N 13] | |
July 13, 1939 | The Man in the Iron Mask[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
July 28, 1939 | Winter Carnival[N 9] | |
August 3, 1939 | The Four Feathers | produced by London Films Productions |
August 18, 1939 | They Shall Have Music[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
September 22, 1939 | Intermezzo[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures |
September 29, 1939 | The Real Glory[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
October 7, 1939 | Eternally Yours[N 9] | |
October 26, 1939 | The Housekeeper's Daughter[N 13] | |
December 22, 1939 | Slightly Honorable[N 9] | |
December 29, 1939 | Raffles[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
December 30, 1939 | Of Mice and Men | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 19, 1940 | The Lion Has Wings | produced by London Films Productions |
February 16, 1940 | A Chump at Oxford[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
March 1, 1940 | The House Across the Bay[N 9] | |
March 22, 1940 | My Son, My Son![N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
March 29, 1940 | Over the Moon | produced by London Films Productions |
April 5, 1940 | One Million B.C.[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
April 12, 1940 | Rebecca[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2018 |
May 3, 1940 | Saps at Sea[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
May 17, 1940 | Turnabout[N 13] | |
May 20, 1940 | Conquest of the Air | produced by London Films Productions |
May 24, 1940 | Our Town | distribution only; produced by Sol Lesser |
July 19, 1940 | South of Pago Pago[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
August 9, 1940 | Captain Caution[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
August 16, 1940 | Foreign Correspondent[N 9] | distribution only; produced by Walter Wanger Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
August 30, 1940 | Kit Carson[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
September 13, 1940 | Pastor Hall | |
September 20, 1940 | The Westerner[N 3] | distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions |
November 11, 1940 | The Long Voyage Home[N 9] | distribution only; produced by Argosy Pictures Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 29, 1940 | Contraband | distribution only; produced by British National Films Company |
December 25, 1940 | The Thief of Bagdad | distribution only; produced by London Films Productions |
January 10, 1941 | The Son of Monte Cristo[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
February 18, 1941 | Road Show[N 14] | |
February 21, 1941 | Cheers for Miss Bishop[N 14] | |
February 27, 1941 | So Ends Our Night | |
March 7, 1941 | The Great Dictator[N 2] | produced by Charles Chaplin Film Corporation Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1997 |
March 21, 1941 | Topper Returns[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
April 3, 1941 | Pot o' Gold[N 14] | distribution only |
April 20, 1941 | That Uncertain Feeling | distribution only; produced by Ernst Lubitsch/Sol Lesser Productions |
April 30, 1941 | That Hamilton Woman | produced by Alexander Korda Films, Inc[1] |
May 14, 1941 | Major Barbara | distribution only; produced by Gabriel Pascal Productions |
June 13, 1941 | Broadway Limited[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
June 23, 1941 | Kukan | |
July 4, 1941 | Sailors Three | |
September 10, 1941 | New Wine | |
September 12, 1941 | Tanks a Million[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
September 25, 1941 | Lydia | distribution only; produced by London Films Productions |
October 16, 1941 | International Lady[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
October 17, 1941 | Niagara Falls[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
October 31, 1941 | Sundown[N 9] | distribution only |
All-American Co-Ed | ||
November 14, 1941 | Miss Polly[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
November 28, 1941 | The Corsican Brothers[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
Fiesta[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach | |
December 25, 1941 | The Shanghai Gesture | |
January 2, 1942 | Hay Foot[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
January 31, 1942 | Brooklyn Orchid[N 13] | |
February 12, 1942 | Pimpernel Smith[N 14] | U.S. distribution only; produced by British National Films |
March 6, 1942 | To Be or Not to Be[N 9] | distribution only; produced by Romaine Film Corp[2] Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1996 |
March 13, 1942 | Dudes Are Pretty People[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
April 3, 1942 | Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book | distribution only; produced by Alexander Korda Films, Inc.[3] |
April 16, 1942 | About Face[N 13] | distribution only; produced by Hal Roach Studios |
A Gentleman After Dark[N 8][N 9] | ||
April 30, 1942 | Twin Beds[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
May 22, 1942 | Flying with Music | |
May 23, 1942 | Ships with Wings | |
May 29, 1942 | Miss Annie Rooney[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
June 21, 1942 | Friendly Enemies[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
October 16, 1942 | One of Our Aircraft Is Missing | U.S. distribution only;[4] produced by British National Films |
October 22, 1942 | The Devil with Hitler[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
October 23, 1942 | Undercover Man | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
October 27, 1942 | The Moon and Sixpence | distribution only; produced by David L. Loew-Albert Lewin, Inc[5] |
October 30, 1942 | I Married a Witch[N 9] | sold to UA for release; co-produced by Paramount Pictures and Cinema Guild Productions[6] |
November 13, 1942 | Silver Queen | |
November 20, 1942 | Fall In[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
November 27, 1942 | Jacare | |
December 11, 1942 | American Empire | |
December 18, 1942 | Lost Canyon | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
December 23, 1942 | In Which We Serve | U.S. distribution only; produced by Two Cities Films[7] Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 31, 1942 | The McGuerins from Brooklyn[N 13] | |
January 15, 1943 | The Powers Girl[N 14] | |
January 22, 1943 | The Crystal Ball[N 9] | co-produced by Paramount Pictures and Cinema Guild Productions[8] |
January 29, 1943 | Calaboose[N 13] | |
February 5, 1943 | Young and Willing[N 9] | distribution only; produced by Paramount Pictures and Cinema Guild Productions[9] |
The Outlaw | distribution only; produced by Howard Hughes Productions | |
March 12, 1943 | Hoppy Serves a Writ | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
April 2, 1943 | Border Patrol | |
April 15, 1943 | Hangmen Also Die![N 6] | |
April 16, 1943 | Taxi, Mister[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
May 1, 1943 | Lady of Burlesque | distribution only; produced by RKO Pictures |
May 14, 1943 | Buckskin Frontier | |
May 21, 1943 | Prairie Chickens[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
May 28, 1943 | The Leather Burners | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
May 28, 1943 | Nazty Nuisance[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
June 18, 1943 | Colt Comrades | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
June 24, 1943 | Stage Door Canteen | distribution only; produced by Principal Artists Productions |
June 29, 1943 | Yanks Ahoy[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
July 11, 1943 | The Foreman Went to France | |
July 17, 1943 | Victory Through Air Power[N 15] | distribution only; produced by Walt Disney Productions |
August 2, 1943 | Hi Diddle Diddle | |
September 3, 1943 | Johnny Come Lately[N 14] | distribution only; produced by William Cagney Productions |
September 10, 1943 | The Kansan | |
October 1, 1943 | Bar 20 | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
November 5, 1943 | False Colors | |
December 3, 1943 | Riders of the Deadline | |
December 24, 1943 | Jack London | |
December 30, 1943 | Three Russian Girls | |
December 31, 1943 | The Woman of the Town | |
February 8, 1944 | Texas Masquerade | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
February 11, 1944 | The Bridge of San Luis Rey | produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
March 3, 1944 | Voice in the Wind[N 6] | |
March 17, 1944 | Knickerbocker Holiday | |
April 7, 1944 | Up in Mabel's Room[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
April 28, 1944 | Lumberjack | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
May 28, 1944 | It Happened Tomorrow[N 1][N 6] | distribution only |
May 31, 1944 | Mystery Man | distribution only; Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
June 21, 1944 | Song of the Open Road[N 14] | |
June 23, 1944 | Forty Thieves | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by Harry Sherman |
June 30, 1944 | Sensations of 1945[N 14] | |
July 2, 1944 | The Hairy Ape | |
July 14, 1944 | Summer Storm | distribution only |
July 20, 1944 | Since You Went Away[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
August 4, 1944 | Abroad with Two Yanks[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small Productions |
November 21, 1944 | Dark Waters | produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
November 23, 1944 | Three Is a Family | |
December 8, 1944 | Guest in the House | distribution only; produced by Hunt Stromberg Productions |
December 29, 1944 | Tomorrow, the World![N 6] | |
January 5, 1945 | I'll Be Seeing You[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures |
January 6, 1945 | Mr. Emmanuel | |
March 31, 1945 | Delightfully Dangerous | |
April 7, 1945 | Brewster's Millions[N 8][N 9] | produced by Edward Small |
April 21, 1945 | It's in the Bag![N 14] | distribution only; produced by Manhattan Productions |
April 30, 1945 | The Southerner | |
May 4, 1945 | The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp[N 16] | distribution only; produced by The Archers |
May 25, 1945 | The Great John L. | |
June 22, 1945 | Bedside Manner | |
June 28, 1945 | Blood on the Sun[N 14] | distribution only; produced by William Cagney Productions |
July 13, 1945 | The Story of G.I. Joe[N 6] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2009 |
July 27, 1945 | Guest Wife[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Greentree Productions |
October 3, 1945 | Blithe Spirit | distribution only; produced by Two Cities Films |
October 12, 1945 | Love on the Dole | distribution only; produced by British National Films |
October 17, 1945 | Paris Underground | |
November 15, 1945 | The Way to the Stars | distribution only; produced by Two Cities Films |
November 22, 1945 | Captain Kidd | distribution only; produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
November 30, 1945 | Getting Gertie's Garter[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small Productions |
December 28, 1945 | Spellbound[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
January 11, 1946 | Abilene Town | distribution only; produced by Guild Productions |
January 25, 1946 | Whistle Stop | distribution only; produced by Nero Films |
February 15, 1946 | The Diary of a Chambermaid | distribution only; produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
February 26, 1946 | Breakfast in Hollywood | |
March 1, 1946 | Young Widow[N 6] | |
May 10, 1946 | A Night in Casablanca[N 9] | Produced by Loma Vista Films, Inc. |
June 17, 1946 | Henry V | distribution only; produced by Two Cities Films Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
July 19, 1946 | A Scandal in Paris[N 1][N 6] | distribution only; produced by Arnold Pressburger Films |
August 2, 1946 | Mr. Ace | produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
September 6, 1946 | The Bachelor's Daughters | |
Caesar and Cleopatra | U.S. distribution only; produced by Eagle-Lion Films | |
September 20, 1946 | Angel on My Shoulder | |
October 20, 1946 | Little Iodine | |
October 25, 1946 | The Strange Woman | distribution only; co-produced by Hunt Stromberg Productions and Mars Film Corporation |
November 15, 1946 | The Devil's Playground | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
November 17, 1946 | The Chase | distribution only; produced by Nero Films |
December 13, 1946 | Susie Steps Out[N 14] | |
December 27, 1946 | Abie's Irish Rose | distribution only; produced by Bing Crosby Producers |
January 31, 1947 | Fool's Gold | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
February 21, 1947 | The Fabulous Dorseys[N 14] | |
February 28, 1947 | Carnegie Hall[N 6] | |
March 16, 1947 | The Red House | distribution only; produced by Sol Lesser Productions |
March 28, 1947 | Unexpected Guest | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
April 4, 1947 | The Sin of Harold Diddlebock | |
April 11, 1947 | Monsieur Verdoux[N 2] | |
April 18, 1947 | New Orleans | |
April 20, 1947 | The Macomber Affair | produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
April 25, 1947 | The Private Affairs of Bel Ami[N 14] | |
May 2, 1947 | Ramrod[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Enterprise Productions |
May 9, 1947 | The Adventures of Don Coyote | produced by Comet Productions |
May 14, 1947 | The Other Love[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Enterprise Productions |
May 15, 1947 | Fun on a Weekend[N 6] | |
May 16, 1947 | Dishonored Lady | distribution only; produced by Hunt Stromberg Productions |
May 23, 1947 | Dangerous Venture | |
May 30, 1947 | Copacabana[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Beacon Productions |
June 21, 1947 | Stork Bites Man[N 14] | |
July 1, 1947 | The Marauders | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
July 18, 1947 | Hoppy's Holiday | |
August 23, 1947 | Curley[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
August 29, 1947 | The Hal Roach Comedy Carnival | |
The Fabulous Joe[N 13] | ||
August 30, 1947 | The Roosevelt Story | |
September 5, 1947 | Lured[N 1][N 6] | distribution only; produced by Hunt Stromberg Productions |
September 12, 1947 | Heaven Only Knows[N 6] | |
October 15, 1947 | Intrigue[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Star Films Inc. |
October 31, 1947 | Christmas Eve[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
November 9, 1947 | Body and Soul[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Enterprise Productions |
December 31, 1947 | The Paradine Case[N 10] | distribution only; produced by Vanguard Films (Selznick) |
January 1948 | Fanny by Gaslight | produced by Gainsborough Pictures |
February 3, 1948 | On Our Merry Way[N 6] | distribution only; produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
March 6, 1948 | Arch of Triumph[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Enterprise Productions |
March 14, 1948 | The Angry God | |
March 15, 1948 | Here Comes Trouble | |
March 16, 1948 | Sleep, My Love[N 14] | |
March 19, 1948 | Silent Conflict | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
April 9, 1948 | Who Killed Doc Robbin[N 13] | produced by Hal Roach |
April 30, 1948 | The Dead Don't Dream | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
June 11, 1948 | Sinister Journey | |
June 1948 | So This Is New York[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Enterprise Productions |
July 16, 1948 | Texas, Brooklyn & Heaven | |
July 21, 1948 | The Vicious Circle | |
July 23, 1948 | Borrowed Trouble | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
August 3, 1948 | Four Faces West[N 14] | distribution only; produced by The Enterprise Studios |
August 24, 1948 | Pitfall | distribution only; produced Regal Films |
September 3, 1948 | The Time of Your Life | |
September 10, 1948 | False Paradise | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
September 17, 1948 | Red River | distribution only; produced by Monterey Productions Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1990 |
September 24, 1948 | Urubu[N 14] | |
October 8, 1948 | Strange Gamble | Hopalong Cassidy film; produced by William Boyd |
October 15, 1948 | An Innocent Affair | |
November 5, 1948 | My Dear Secretary | |
November 19, 1948 | High Fury | |
December 15, 1948 | The Valiant Hombre | |
January 1949 | Siren of Atlantis | |
February 25, 1949 | Cover Up | distribution only |
March 11, 1949 | Jigsaw | |
April 1, 1949 | Impact | |
April 22, 1949 | The Crooked Way | distribution only; produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
May 2, 1949 | Outpost in Morocco | |
May 12, 1949 | Home of the Brave[N 14] | produced by Stanley Kramer |
May 13, 1949 | The Gay Amigo | |
May 20, 1949 | Champion[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Stanley Kramer |
May 26, 1949 | The Lucky Stiff[N 14] | |
May 27, 1949 | Africa Screams[N 8][N 9] | distribution only |
June 14, 1949 | The Daring Caballero | |
August 13, 1949 | Too Late for Tears | distribution only; produced by Hunt Stromberg Productions |
August 19, 1949 | Black Magic[N 8][N 9] | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
September 30, 1949 | Red Light[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Roy Del Ruth Productions |
October 5, 1949 | Under the Sun of Rome | |
October 7, 1949 | Satan's Cradle | |
October 26, 1949 | Without Honor | |
Just a Big Simple Life | ||
November 4, 1949 | The Big Wheel | |
November 8, 1949 | The Great Dan Patch | |
November 25, 1949 | A Kiss for Corliss | |
December 23, 1949 | Mrs. Mike[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Regal Films |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 6, 1950 | Davy Crockett, Indian Scout | produced by Edward Small |
January 20, 1950 | Gun Crazy[N 11] | distribution only; produced by King Brothers Productions Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1998 |
February 17, 1950 | Johnny Holiday[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Alcorn Productions |
February 24, 1950 | The Girl from San Lorenzo | |
March 3, 1950 | Love Happy[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Artists Alliance, Inc. |
March 10, 1950 | Tehran | |
The Great Plane Robbery | ||
March 24, 1950 | Quicksand | distribution only |
April 21, 1950 | D.O.A. | distribution only Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2004 |
May 5, 1950 | Johnny One-Eye | distribution only; produced by Benedict Bogeaus |
May 11, 1950 | Champagne for Caesar | |
May 20, 1950 | So Young, So Bad | |
June 16, 1950 | The Iroquois Trail | produced by Edward Small |
June 30, 1950 | If This Be Sin | U.S. distribution only;[10] produced by London Films |
July 7, 1950 | The Second Woman | distribution only |
Once a Thief | ||
July 20, 1950 | The Men[N 14] | produced by Stanley Kramer |
July 26, 1950 | The Underworld Story[N 11] | distribution only; produced by FilmCraft Productions |
August 4, 1950 | The Admiral Was a Lady | distribution only; produced by Roxbury Productions |
October 22, 1950 | The Kangaroo Kid | |
November 16, 1950 | Cyrano de Bergerac[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Stanley Kramer Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2022 |
December 12, 1950 | The Sound of Fury[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Robert Stillman Productions |
1951 | Cloudburst | |
February 8, 1951 | They Were Not Divided | |
March 8, 1951 | Three Husbands | |
March 29, 1951 | So Long at the Fair | |
April 6, 1951 | The Scarf | |
April 17, 1951 | Circle of Danger | |
April 20, 1951 | When I Grow Up | |
April 27, 1951 | The First Legion | |
The Man from Planet X | ||
April 30, 1951 | Skipalong Rosenbloom | |
May 18, 1951 | New Mexico | |
June 11, 1951 | Four in a Jeep | |
June 14, 1951 | The Man with My Face | distribution only |
June 28, 1951 | Three Steps North | |
July 1, 1951 | The Prowler | distribution only |
July 7, 1951 | Queen for a Day | Robert Stillman Productions |
July 13, 1951 | He Ran All the Way | distribution only |
July 30, 1951 | Oliver Twist[N 16] | distribution only; produced by Cineguild; first released in the UK in 1948 |
July 1951 | Two Gals and a Guy | Produced by Weisner Brothers for Eagle-Lion Films |
August 10, 1951 | Pardon My French | |
August 24, 1951 | St. Benny the Dip | distribution only |
September 5, 1951 | Wicked City | |
September 9, 1951 | Gold Raiders | |
September 18, 1951 | Mr. Peek-a-Boo | |
September 21, 1951 | Mister Drake's Duck | Angel Productions/Douglas Fairbanks Productions |
September 24, 1951 | The Well | |
October 9, 1951 | Fort Defiance | |
October 16, 1951 | The River | distribution only; produced by Oriental International Films |
November 2, 1951 | Tom Brown's Schooldays | distribution only; produced by Talisman Productions |
November 13, 1951 | The Big Night | |
December 2, 1951 | Scrooge | U.S. distribution only; produced by George Minter Productions |
December 31, 1951 | Hotel Sahara[N 1] | |
January 6, 1952 | Another Man's Poison | |
The Lady Says No[N 14] | ||
January 11, 1952 | Chicago Calling[N 11] | theatrical distribution only |
January 15, 1952 | A Tale of Five Cities | |
January 31, 1952 | The Green Glove | distribution only |
February 5, 1952 | Obsessed | distribution only; produced by Romulus Films |
February 8, 1952 | Buffalo Bill in Tomahawk Territory | |
February 20, 1952 | The African Queen[N 17] | U.S. distribution only; produced by Horizon Pictures and Romulus Films Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1994 |
February 22, 1952 | One Big Affair | First film in the post-February 1952 library owned by MGM |
February 28, 1952 | Royal Journey | |
March 19, 1952 | Mutiny | distribution only |
March 26, 1952 | The Captive City | |
March 28, 1952 | Strange World | |
May 8, 1952 | Without Warning! | distribution only |
May 15, 1952 | Red Planet Mars | |
May 19, 1952 | The Singing Princess | distribution only |
May 23, 1952 | The Fighter | |
May 29, 1952 | Actor's and Sin | |
June 20, 1952 | Confidence Girl | distribution only |
July 24, 1952 | High Noon[N 14] | distribution only; produced by Stanley Kramer Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1989 |
August 4, 1952 | Saturday Island | distribution only; produced by Coronado Productions |
August 12, 1952 | Park Row | |
September 12, 1952 | Untamed Women | |
September 26, 1952 | The Ring | |
October 15, 1952 | The Thief | |
October 23, 1952 | Limelight[N 2] | distribution only; produced by Celebrated Productions |
November 11, 1952 | Kansas City Confidential | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
November 30, 1952 | Bwana Devil | first 3-D feature film |
December 4, 1952 | Outpost in Malaya | |
December 7, 1952 | Babes in Bagdad | |
December 14, 1952 | Monsoon | |
December 23, 1952 | Moulin Rouge | distribution only; produced by Romulus Films |
1953 | Genghis Khan | |
January 1, 1953 | The Gay Adventure | |
January 23, 1953 | Guerrilla Girl | |
January 30, 1953 | Luxury Girls | |
February 18, 1953 | The Magnetic Monster | produced by Ivan Tors |
February 27, 1953 | The Bandits of Corsica | produced by Edward Small |
March 27, 1953 | Son of the Renegade | |
April 22, 1953 | Venetian Bird | |
April 28, 1953 | Mahatma Gandhi: 20th Century Prophet | |
May 8, 1953 | That Man from Tangier | |
May 15, 1953 | Rough Shoot | |
Phantom from Space | ||
May 27, 1953 | Raiders of the Seven Seas | produced by Edward Small |
June 10, 1953 | The Twonky | |
June 19, 1953 | The Neanderthal Man | produced by Edward Small |
June 26, 1953 | The Marshal's Daughter | |
July 8, 1953 | The Moon Is Blue[N 18] | |
July 10, 1953 | Return to Paradise | |
July 15, 1953 | Fort Algiers | |
July 20, 1953 | Volcano | |
July 22, 1953 | My Heart Goes Crazy | |
July 24, 1953 | Gun Belt | produced by Edward Small |
July 31, 1953 | No Escape | |
Vice Squad | ||
August 7, 1953 | Melba | |
August 14, 1953 | I, the Jury[N 19] | distribution only; produced by Parklane Pictures Inc. |
August 28, 1953 | War Paint | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
September 4, 1953 | Sabre Jet | produced by Edward Small |
September 12, 1953 | Captain Scarlett | |
September 18, 1953 | The Joe Louis Story | distribution only |
September 25, 1953 | The Fake | |
September 30, 1953 | Donovan's Brain | |
October 2, 1953 | Mantrap | |
October 3, 1953 | 99 River Street | distribution only; produced by Edward Small |
October 9, 1953 | The Steel Lady | produced by Edward Small |
October 23, 1953 | The Village | |
October 27, 1953 | The Story of Gilbert and Sullivan | distribution only; produced by London Films |
November 9, 1953 | Stranger on the Prowl | |
November 13, 1953 | Shark River | |
November 18, 1953 | The Man Between | U.S. distribution only; produced by London Films |
November 20, 1953 | Captain John Smith and Pocahontas | produced by Edward Small |
November 27, 1953 | Song of the Land | |
December 2, 1953 | Yesterday and Today | |
December 9, 1953 | The Conquest of Everest | U.S. distribution only; produced by Group 3/British Lion |
Wicked Woman | Produced by Edward Small | |
December 16, 1953 | Die Jungfrau auf dem Dach | German language version of The Moon Is Blue |
December 17, 1953 | Act of Love | distribution only; produced by Benagoss Productions |
January 14, 1954 | Riders to the Stars | produced by Ivan Tors |
January 15, 1954 | Personal Affair | |
January 27, 1954 | Go, Man, Go! | |
February 5, 1954 | Beachhead | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
February 10, 1954 | Dragon's Gold | |
February 22, 1954 | Top Banana | |
February 27, 1954 | Overland Pacific | produced by Edward Small |
March 1, 1954 | The Scarlet Spear | |
South of Algiers | ||
March 2, 1954 | A Queen's World Tour | |
March 3, 1954 | Heidi | |
March 12, 1954 | Beat the Devil[N 20] | U.S. distribution only; produced by Romulus Films, Dear Film, and Santana Pictures Corporation |
April 1, 1954 | Southwest Passage | produced by Edward Small |
April 15, 1954 | Witness to Murder | |
April 25, 1954 | The Lone Gun | |
May 20, 1954 | Captain Kidd and the Slave Girl | produced by Edward Small |
May 26, 1954 | The Long Wait | |
May 1954 | The Yellow Tomahawk | |
June 4, 1954 | Challenge the Wild | |
June 5, 1954 | Gog | distribution only; produced by Ivan Tors |
June 14, 1954 | Hobson's Choice | U.S. distribution only; produced by London Film Productions/British Lion |
June 18, 1954 | The Million Pound Note | U.S. distribution only; produced by Group Film Productions (UK) |
June 30, 1954 | Return to Treasure Island | |
July 1, 1954 | The Lawless Rider | |
July 9, 1954 | Apache | produced by Hecht-Lancaster Productions and Linden Productions |
July 28, 1954 | The Diamond Wizard | |
Crossed Swords | ||
August 2, 1954 | Victory at Sea | |
August 5, 1954 | Adventures of Robinson Crusoe | distribution only; produced in Mexico by Producciones Tepeyac |
Malta Story | U.S. distribution only; produced by Theta Film Productions | |
September 1, 1954 | The Little Kidnappers | U.S. distribution only; produced by Group Film Productions |
September 3, 1954 | Down Three Dark Streets | produced by Edward Small and Levy-Gardner-Laven |
September 4, 1954 | Khyber Patrol | produced by Edward Small |
Jesse James' Women | ||
September 17, 1954 | Suddenly | distribution only |
September 29, 1954 | The Barefoot Contessa | distribution only; produced by Figaro; filmed in Italy |
September 1954 | Shield for Murder | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
October 4, 1954 | Operation Manhunt | |
October 6, 1954 | Sitting Bull | |
October 29, 1954 | The Golden Mistress | |
November 4, 1954 | You Know What Sailors Are | |
November 5, 1954 | Beautiful Stranger | |
November 1954 | The White Orchid | |
The Snow Creature | ||
December 21, 1954 | Romeo and Juliet | U.S. distribution only; produced by Universalcine, Verona Produzione (Italy) |
December 25, 1954 | Vera Cruz | produced by Hecht-Lancaster Productions and Flora Productions |
December 31, 1954 | Black Tuesday | |
December 1954 | The Steel Cage | |
January 15, 1955 | The Beachcomber | U.S. distribution only; produced by London Independent Producers |
January 26, 1955 | Battle Taxi | produced by Ivan Tors |
February 2, 1955 | Sabaka | |
March 3, 1955 | Big House, U.S.A. | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
March 23, 1955 | Stranger on Horseback | |
April 10, 1955 | The Purple Plain | |
April 11, 1955 | Canyon Crossroads | |
Marty | produced by Hecht-Lancaster Productions and Steven Productions Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1994 | |
April 15, 1955 | A Bullet for Joey | |
April 28, 1955 | Kiss Me Deadly | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1999 |
May 30, 1955 | Robbers' Roost | |
May 1955 | Top of the World | |
June 5, 1955 | The Big Bluff | distribution only |
June 21, 1955 | Summertime | distribution only; produced by London Films |
June 28, 1955 | Not as a Stranger | Produced by Stanley Kramer |
June 1955 | The Sea Shall Not Have Them | distribution only[11] |
Break to Freedom | U.S. distribution only;[12] produced by Angel Productions | |
July 22, 1955 | The Kentuckian | produced by Hecht-Lancaster Productions and James Productions |
July 25, 1955 | The Man Who Loved Redheads | U.S. distribution only;[13] produced by London Films |
July 26, 1955 | The Night of the Hunter | produced by Paul Gregory Productions Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1992 |
August 1955 | The Naked Street | produced by Edward Small |
September 12, 1955 | Othello[N 9] | distribution only; produced by Marceau Films |
October 1, 1955 | Killer's Kiss | |
October 4, 1955 | Fort Yuma | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
October 25, 1955 | The Big Knife | |
October 29, 1955 | Gentlemen Marry Brunettes | |
November 5, 1955 | Man with the Gun | |
November 18, 1955 | Desert Sands | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
November 29, 1955 | The Good Die Young | |
December 12, 1955 | Heidi and Peter | |
December 14, 1955 | The Man with the Golden Arm[N 18] | produced by Otto Preminger Films Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2020 |
December 16, 1955 | Storm Fear | |
December 21, 1955 | The Indian Fighter | produced by Bryna Productions |
Top Gun | produced by Edward Small | |
1956 | Aan | |
The Tiger and the Flame | produced by Minerva Movietone; dubbed Indian film originally released as Jhansi Ki Rani | |
The Extra Day | ||
January 1956 | Three Bad Sisters | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
February 1, 1956 | Let's Make Up | |
February 3, 1956 | The Killer Is Loose | |
February 8, 1956 | Time Table | distribution only |
February 1956 | Manfish | |
March 1956 | Comanche | |
Ghost Town | ||
March 27, 1956 | Patterns | |
March 28, 1956 | Alexander the Great | |
April 26, 1956 | The Quatermass Xperiment | produced by Hammer Film Productions |
April 1956 | The Broken Star | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
May 3, 1956 | Unidentified Flying Objects: The True Story of Flying Saucers | produced by Ivan Tors |
May 9, 1956 | Crime Against Joe | produced by Aubrey Shenck |
May 11, 1956 | Nightmare | produced by Pine-Thomas Productions |
May 28, 1956 | Foreign Intrgue | |
May 30, 1956 | Trapeze | produced by Hecht-Lancaster Productions, Joanna Productions and Susan Productions |
May 1956 | Quincannon, Frontier Scout | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
June 6, 1956 | The Killing | distribution only |
June 12, 1956 | A Kiss Before Dying | produced by Crown Productions |
June 1956 | The Black Sleep | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
Shadow of Fear | ||
July 1956 | Johnny Concho | |
July 26, 1956 | The Ambassador's Daughter | |
July 30, 1956 | Run for the Sun | |
Rebel in Town | produced by Aubrey Schenck | |
August 1956 | The Beast of Hollow Mountain | |
August 9, 1956 | Huk! | |
September 15, 1956 | Gun Brothers | produced by Edward Small |
September 1956 | Bandido | |
October 8, 1956 | Flight to Hong Kong | produced by Harold Hecht Films and Daiei Motion Picture Company |
October 10, 1956 | The Boss | |
October 17, 1956 | Attack | |
Around the World in 80 Days[N 11] | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture | |
October 30, 1956 | Man from Del Rio | |
November 1, 1956 | Running Target | |
November 2, 1956 | Hot Cars | |
Emergency Hospital | ||
November 15, 1956 | Gun the Man Down | |
November 17, 1956 | The Sharkfighters | |
November 1956 | The Peacemaker | |
December 12, 1956 | The Brass Legend | |
December 21, 1956 | The Wild Party | |
The King and Four Queens | ||
December 22, 1956 | Dance With Me, Henry | |
January 1957 | Drango | |
The Halliday Brand | ||
Four Boys and a Gun | ||
January 9, 1957 | Crime of Passion | |
January 26, 1957 | Men in War | |
January 30, 1957 | 5 Steps to Danger | |
February 1, 1957 | Tomahawk Trail | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
February 1957 | Voodoo Island | |
Pharaoh's Curse | ||
March 1957 | Revolt at Fort Laramie | |
March 1, 1957 | The Delinquents | |
March 11, 1957 | The Big Boodle | |
March 15, 1957 | Hit and Run | |
March 21, 1957 | War Drums | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
March 28, 1957 | The Big Caper | produced by Pine-Thomas Productions |
April 1957 | The Iron Sheriff | produced by Edward Small |
April 10, 1957 | The Bachelor Party | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and Norma Productions |
April 13, 1957 | 12 Angry Men | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2007 |
April 19, 1957 | Fury at Showdown | |
April 29, 1957 | The Ride Back | |
May 1, 1957 | Gun Duel in Durango | |
May 4, 1957 | Spring Reunion | produced by Bryna Productions |
May 8, 1957 | Saint Joan[N 18] | |
May 29, 1957 | Monkey on My Back | produced by Edward Small |
May 1957 | Bailout at 43,000 | produced by Pine-Thomas Productions |
June 1957 | The Vampire | |
The Monster That Challenged the World | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven | |
Bayou | ||
July 4, 1957 | Sweet Smell of Success | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions, Norma Productions and Curtleigh Productions Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1993 |
July 10, 1957 | The Pride and the Passion | produced by Stanley Kramer |
July 12, 1957 | Trooper Hook | |
July 22, 1957 | Jungle Heat | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
July 1957 | The Buckskin Lady | |
Outlaw's Son | ||
Hidden Fear | ||
Bop Girl Goes Calypso | Produced by Aubrey Schenck | |
August 1, 1957 | Valerie | |
August 21, 1957 | The Fuzzy Pink Nightgown | |
August 30, 1957 | Chicago Confidential | produced by Edward Small |
August 1957 | My Gun Is Quick | |
Lady of Vengeance | ||
September 2, 1957 | The Careless Years | produced by Bryna Productions and Michael Productions |
September 8, 1957 | Satchmo the Great | |
September 24, 1957 | The Girl in Black Stockings | produced by Edward Small |
September 1957 | Street of Sinners | |
Gunsight Ridge | ||
Quatermass 2 | produced by Hammer Film Productions | |
October 9, 1957 | The Monte Carlo Story | Italian film produced by Titanus; distribution only |
October 23, 1957 | Time Limit | |
October 1957 | Hell Bound | |
November 1, 1957 | Ride Out for Revenge | produced by Bryna Productions |
December 1, 1957 | Man on the Prowl | |
December 11, 1957 | Baby Face Nelson | |
December 17, 1957 | Legend of the Lost | |
December 20, 1957 | The Dalton Girls | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
December 25, 1957 | Paths of Glory | produced by Bryna Productions and Harris-Kubrick Pictures Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1992 |
1958 | The Betrayal | |
Cross-Up | Produced by Tempean Films, Ltd (UK); US distribution only[14] | |
January 1958 | Gun Fever | |
February 1, 1958 | Fort Bowie | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
February 6, 1958 | Witness for the Prosecution | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
February 8, 1958 | The Quiet American | produced by Figaro |
February 1958 | The Steel Bayonet | |
Lost Lagoon | ||
March 27, 1958 | Run Silent, Run Deep | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and Jeffrey Productions |
April 2, 1958 | The Flame Barrier | |
April 1958 | The Return of Dracula | |
May 9, 1958 | Paris Holiday[N 21][N 20][N 22] | distribution only; produced by Tolda Productions |
May 10, 1958 | Thunder Road | |
May 14, 1958 | Toughest Gun in Tombstone | produced by Edward Small |
May 1958 | Fort Massacre | produced by Mirisch Company |
Edge of Fury | ||
Island Women | ||
June 4, 1958 | The Lone Ranger and the Lost City of Gold | |
June 28, 1958 | The Vikings | produced by Brynaprod and Curtleigh Productions |
Kings Go Forth | ||
June 1958 | Wink of an Eye | |
July 30, 1958 | La Parisienne | produced by Les Films Ariane |
July 1958 | I Bury the Living | |
August 13, 1958 | God's Little Acre | |
August 14, 1958 | It! The Terror from Beyond Space | produced by Edward Small |
Curse of the Faceless Man | ||
August 25, 1958 | Terror in a Texas Town | |
September 27, 1958 | The Defiant Ones | produced by Stanley Kramer Productions, Lomitas Productions and Curtleigh Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
September 1958 | The Gun Runners | |
October 1, 1958 | Man of the West | produced by Mirisch Company |
Cop Hater | ||
October 29, 1958 | Ten Days to Tulara | |
October 1958 | The Fearmakers | |
The Big Country | ||
Hong Kong Confidential | produced by Edward Small | |
Face in the Night | ||
November 11, 1958 | The Horse's Mouth | |
November 18, 1958 | I Want to Live! | |
November 26, 1958 | Anna Lucasta | |
November 1958 | The Mugger | |
December 3, 1958 | China Doll | |
December 25, 1958 | Separate Tables | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and Clifton Productions
Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 1958 | Lonelyhearts | |
The Lost Missile | ||
Machete | ||
1959 | Mark of the Phoenix | |
January 23, 1959 | Escort West | |
January 1959 | Guns Girls and Gangsters | produced by Edward Small |
Operation Murder | ||
February 18, 1959 | The Last Mile | |
March 15, 1959 | Mustang! | |
March 20, 1959 | Alias Jesse James | |
March 29, 1959 | Some Like It Hot | produced by Mirisch Company |
April 1959 | Riot in Juvenile Prison | produced by Edward Small |
May 15, 1959 | Invisible Invaders | |
May 29, 1959 | Pork Chop Hill | |
May 1959 | The Gunfight at Dodge City | produced by Mirisch Company |
June 10, 1959 | The Man in the Net | |
The Naked Maja | US distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Titanus | |
June 12, 1959 | The Horse Soldiers | produced by Mirisch Company |
July 3, 1959 | The Hound of the Baskervilles | distribution only; produced by Hammer Films |
July 15, 1959 | A Hole in the Head | |
July 17, 1959 | Ten Seconds to Hell | |
June 24, 1959 | Shake Hands with the Devil | |
June 1959 | The Rabbit Trap | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions, Canon Productions and Anne Productions |
July 1959 | Day of the Outlaw | |
August 20, 1959 | The Devil's Disciple | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Films and Brynaprod in the UK |
August 1959 | Cry Tough | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions, Canon Productions and Anne Productions |
September 10, 1959 | The Great St. Louis Bank Robbery | |
September 1959 | Cast a Long Shadow | |
Inside the Mafia | produced by Edward Small | |
October 1, 1959 | The Wonderful Country | |
October 15, 1959 | Odds Against Tomorrow | distribution only, Harbel Productions, Inc. |
October 1959 | Pier 5, Havana | produced by Edward Small |
Counterplot | ||
November 10, 1959 | Happy Anniversary | |
November 13, 1959 | The Four Skulls of Jonathan Drake | produced by Edward Small |
November 22, 1959 | Timbuktu | produced by Edward Small but had his name removed |
December 1, 1959 | Take a Giant Step | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and Sheila Productions |
December 17, 1959 | On the Beach | produced by Stanley Kramer |
December 20, 1959 | A Dog's Best Friend | produced by Edward Small |
December 25, 1959 | Solomon and Sheba | |
December 1959 | Vice Raid |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 1, 1960 | And Quiet Flows the Don | |
Gunfighters of Abilene | produced by Edward Small | |
February 1960 | The Pusher | |
March 1960 | Oklahoma Territory | produced by Edward Small |
Three Came to Kill | ||
April 6, 1960 | The Unforgiven | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and James Productions |
April 13, 1960 | The Boy and the Pirates | produced by Bert I. Gordon |
April 14, 1960 | The Fugitive Kind | |
May 1, 1960 | Noose for a Gunman | produced by Edward Small |
June 15, 1960 | The Apartment | produced by Mirisch Company Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1994 |
June 22, 1960 | The Gallant Hours | |
June 27, 1960 | The Trials of Oscar Wilde | produced by Warwick Films in the Uk |
June 29, 1960 | Elmer Gantry | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
June 1960 | The Music Box Kid | produced by Edward Small |
Macumba Love | ||
July 17, 1960 | The Last Days of Pompeii | Italian film |
July 21, 1960 | Inherit the Wind | produced by Stanley Kramer |
July 1960 | Cage of Evil | produced by Edward Small |
September 1960 | Studs Lonigan | |
October 12, 1960 | The Magnificent Seven | produced by Mirisch Company Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2013 |
October 24, 1960 | The Alamo | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
October 1960 | The Walking Target | produced by Edward Small |
November 1, 1960 | Never on Sunday | Greek film |
November 14, 1960 | The Facts of Life | distribution only |
December 14, 1960 | A Terrible Beauty | |
December 15, 1960 | Exodus | Carlyle-Alpina, S.A. |
January 7, 1961 | Five Guns to Tombstone | produced by Edward Small |
February 1, 1961 | The Misfits | produced by Seven Arts Productions |
February 1961 | Police Dog Story | produced by Edward Small |
Frontier Uprising | ||
March 26, 1961 | The Hoodlum Priest | |
April 8, 1961 | Operation Bottleneck | produced by Edward Small |
April 26, 1961 | The Snake Woman | |
April 1961 | Minotaur, the Wild Beast of Crete | |
May 1, 1961 | Gun Fight | produced by Edward Small |
May 5, 1961 | The Gambler Wore a Gun | |
May 24, 1961 | The Young Savages | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and Contemporary Productions |
May 27, 1961 | The Last Time I Saw Archie | |
May 31, 1961 | A Matter of Morals | |
June 10, 1961 | When the Clock Strikes | produced by Edward Small |
June 28, 1961 | The Naked Edge | |
Three on a Spree | produced by Edward Small | |
June 29, 1961 | Goodbye Again | |
June 1961 | The Revolt of the Slaves | Italian film |
July 10, 1961 | Fate of a Man | |
July 19, 1961 | By Love Possessed | produced by Mirisch Company |
July 25, 1961 | Mary Had a Little... | produced by Edward Small |
July 1961 | The Cat Burglar | |
You Have to Run Fast | ||
August 17, 1961 | Teenage Millionaire | |
August 23, 1961 | The Young Doctors | |
September 27, 1961 | Paris Blues | |
September 1961 | The Flight That Disappeared | produced by Edward Small |
Secret of Deep Harbor | ||
October 10, 1961 | Town Without Pity | produced by Mirisch Company |
October 18, 1961 | West Side Story | produced by Mirisch Company Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1997 |
October 1961 | Boy Who Caught a Crook | produced by Edward Small |
The Explosive Generation | ||
November 5, 1961 | Gun Street | |
December 15, 1961 | One, Two, Three | produced by Mirisch Company |
December 16, 1961 | Summer of the Seventeenth Doll | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions |
December 19, 1961 | The Children's Hour | produced by Mirisch Company |
Judgment at Nuremberg | produced by Stanley Kramer Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2013 | |
December 20, 1961 | The Happy Thieves | |
December 22, 1961 | X-15 | |
December 23, 1961 | Something Wild | produced by Prometheus Enterprises Inc. |
December 25, 1961 | Pocketful of Miracles | |
December 27, 1961 | The Clown and the Kid | produced by Edward Small |
1962 | Court Martial | |
January 1962 | The Nun and the Sergeant | |
February 10, 1962 | Sergeants 3 | |
February 22, 1962 | The Magic Sword | co-production with Bert I. Gordon Productions |
February 1962 | Deadly Duo | produced by Edward Small |
Saintly Sinners | ||
April 11, 1962 | Follow That Dream | produced by Mirisch Company |
Ursus | ||
April 19, 1962 | Jessica | |
May 1, 1962 | Geronimo | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
May 15, 1962 | Doctor Blood's Coffin | produced by Edward Small |
May 16, 1962 | Incident in an Alley | |
May 22, 1962 | The Road to Hong Kong | Produced by Melnor Films in the UK |
May 1962 | War Hunt | |
June 13, 1962 | Jack the Giant Killer | produced by Edward Small |
June 13, 1962 | The Valiant | |
June 25, 1962 | Animas Trujano | |
July 3, 1962 | Birdman of Alcatraz | produced by Hecht-Hill-Lancaster Productions and Norma Productions |
July 28, 1962 | The Miracle Worker | produced by Playfilm Productions |
August 29, 1962 | Kid Galahad | produced by Mirisch Company |
September 16, 1962 | Hero's Island | |
September 1962 | Sword of the Conqueror | |
October 24, 1962 | The Manchurian Candidate | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1994 |
Eyes Without a Face | French film | |
Tower of London | ||
October 31, 1962 | The Vampire and the Ballerina | |
November 24, 1962 | Two for the Seesaw | produced by Mirisch Company |
December 1, 1962 | Electra | |
December 2, 1962 | Pressure Point | |
December 8, 1962 | Beauty and the Beast | produced by Edward Small |
December 19, 1962 | Taras Bulba | produced by Harold Hecht Productions, Curtleigh Productions and Avala Film |
1963 | The Great Van Robbery | |
So Evil, So Young | ||
January 11, 1963 | A Child Is Waiting | produced by Stanley Kramer |
March 6, 1963 | Amazons of Rome | |
Diary of a Madman | produced by Robert Kent Productions/Admiral Pictures | |
March 20, 1963 | Five Miles to Midnight | |
April 24, 1963 | Love Is a Ball | |
May 8, 1963 | Dr. No | produced by Eon Productions |
May 15, 1963 | I Could Go On Singing | |
June 5, 1963 | Irma la Douce | produced by Mirisch Company |
June 14, 1963 | Call Me Bwana | produced by Eon Productions |
June 17, 1963 | The Mouse on the Moon | Produced by Walter Shenson Films (UK) |
July 4, 1963 | The Great Escape | produced by Mirisch Company |
July 31, 1963 | Toys in the Attic | produced by Mirisch Company |
August 21, 1963 | The Caretakers | produced by Hall Bartlett Productions, Inc. |
September 18, 1963 | My Son, the Hero | Italian film |
September 1963 | Twice-Told Tales | produced by Edward Small |
October 1, 1963 | Lilies of the Field | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2020 |
October 2, 1963 | Johnny Cool | |
Stolen Hours | produced by Mirisch Company | |
October 6, 1963 | Tom Jones[N 23] | produced by Woodfall Films Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 7, 1963 | It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World | produced by Stanley Kramer in Ultra Panavision |
November 13, 1963 | McLintock![N 24][N 25] | distribution only; produced by Batjac Productions |
December 18, 1963 | The Ceremony | |
Kings of the Sun | produced by Mirisch Company | |
December 23, 1963 | Ladybug Ladybug | produced by Francis Productions Inc. |
March 19, 1964 | The World of Henry Orient | produced by Pan Arts Company |
March 20, 1964 | The Pink Panther | produced by Mirisch Company Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2010 |
February 26, 1964 | One Man's Way | |
March 25, 1964 | Flight from Ashiya | |
April 5, 1964 | The Best Man | |
May 27, 1964 | From Russia with Love | produced by Eon Productions |
June 8, 1964 | That Man from Rio | |
June 23, 1964 | A Shot in the Dark | produced by Mirisch Company |
June 24, 1964 | 633 Squadron | produced by Mirisch Company |
June 1964 | For Those Who Think Young | |
August 11, 1964 | A Hard Day's Night[N 26] | produced by Walter Shenson Films/Proscenium Films |
September 2, 1964 | The 7th Dawn | |
September 16, 1964 | The Secret Invasion | |
September 17, 1964 | Topkapi | |
September 30, 1964 | Woman of Straw | |
October 14, 1964 | Invitation to a Gunfighter | |
November 21, 1964 | Four Days in November | |
December 22, 1964 | Kiss Me, Stupid | produced by Mirisch Company |
January 9, 1965 | Goldfinger | produced by Eon Productions |
January 26, 1965 | How to Murder Your Wife | |
February 15, 1965 | The Greatest Story Ever Told | |
February 19, 1965 | Ferry Cross the Mersey | Produced by Subafilms in the UK |
March 7, 1965 | The Train | Shot in France in English |
April 14, 1965 | The Satan Bug | produced by Mirisch Company |
April 28, 1965 | Masquerade | |
May 12, 1965 | Mister Moses | |
June 18, 1965 | I'll Take Sweden | produced by Edward Small |
June 22, 1965 | What's New Pussycat? | Produced by Famous Artists Productions; shot in France |
June 23, 1965 | The Hallelujah Trail | produced by Mirisch Company |
June 30, 1965 | The Knack ...and How to Get It | Woodfall Film Productions (UK); distribution only |
July 7, 1965 | The Glory Guys | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
August 25, 1965 | Help! | produced by Walter Shenson Films/Subafilms |
September 15, 1965 | Billie | |
October 20, 1965 | A Rage to Live | produced by Mirisch Company |
November 16, 1965 | Return from the Ashes | produced by Mirisch Company |
December 13, 1965 | A Thousand Clowns | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 18, 1965 | Viva Maria! | distribution only |
December 22, 1965 | Thunderball | produced by Eon Productions |
February 21, 1966 | Lord Love a Duck | |
March 4, 1966 | The Group | |
March 15, 1966 | Hamlet | |
March 30, 1966 | Cast a Giant Shadow | produced by Mirisch Company |
March 31, 1966 | Frankie and Johnny | produced by Edward Small |
May 17, 1966 | Up to His Ears | |
May 25, 1966 | The Russians Are Coming, the Russians Are Coming | produced by Mirisch Company Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 1966 | Don't Worry, We'll Think of a Title | |
June 8, 1966 | Boy, Did I Get a Wrong Number! | |
June 15, 1966 | Duel at Diablo | |
June 15, 1966 | Khartoum | distribution only; Julian Blaustein Productions (UK) |
August 1, 1966 | Mademoiselle | distribution only; Woodfall Film Productions (UK) |
August 1, 1966 | Namu, the Killer Whale | |
August 31, 1966 | What Did You Do in the War, Daddy? | produced by Mirisch Company |
September 14, 1966 | Ambush Bay | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
October 10, 1966 | Hawaii | produced by Mirisch Company |
October 16, 1966 | A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum | |
October 19, 1966 | The Fortune Cookie | produced by Mirisch Company |
Return of the Seven | ||
October 24, 1966 | 10:30 P.M. Summer | |
December 15, 1966 | After the Fox | |
January 18, 1967 | A Fistful of Dollars | distribution only |
February 22, 1967 | Marat/Sade | |
March 9, 1967 | How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying | produced by Mirisch Company |
March 16, 1967 | Persona | Swedish film directed by Ingmar Bergman |
March 1967 | Finders Keepers | |
April 24, 1967 | The Sailor from Gibraltar | |
April 26, 1967 | Eight on the Lam | |
May 10, 1967 | For a Few Dollars More | distribution only; produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
May 22, 1967 | The Honey Pot | |
May 24, 1967 | The Way West | produced by Harold Hecht Corporation |
June 13, 1967 | You Only Live Twice | produced by Eon Productions, first use of the United Artists "oviod" logo |
July 31, 1967 | The Whisperers | |
August 2, 1967 | In the Heat of the Night | produced by Mirisch Company Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2002 |
August 3, 1967 | Beach Red | |
September 15, 1967 | Track of Thunder | |
October 23, 1967 | How I Won the War | |
November 1, 1967 | Hour of the Gun | produced by Mirisch Company |
November 10, 1967 | The Hills Run Red | |
Matchless | ||
November 22, 1967 | Operation Kid Brother | |
December 4, 1967 | Clambake | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
December 6, 1967 | Kill a Dragon | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
Navajo Joe | ||
December 18, 1967 | Live for Life | distribution only |
December 20, 1967 | Billion Dollar Brain | produced by Harry Saltzman |
Fitzwilly | co-production with Mirisch Company | |
December 29, 1967 | The Good, the Bad and the Ugly | |
January 3, 1968 | The Wicked Dreams of Paula Schultz | produced by Edward Small |
February 14, 1968 | Danger Route | produced by Amicus Productions |
April 2, 1968 | The Scalphunters | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
April 4, 1968 | The Party | produced by Mirisch Company |
April 24, 1968 | Yours, Mine and Ours | produced by Desilu Productions |
May 8, 1968 | The Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell[N 21][N 20][N 22] | distribution only; produced by John Beck-Naho Productions |
May 15, 1968 | The Devil's Brigade | produced by David L. Wolper |
June 28, 1968 | The World of Hans Christian Andersen | American distribution: produced in Japan by Toei Doga |
June 5, 1968 | Attack on the Iron Coast | produced by Oakmont Productions |
June 19, 1968 | The Thomas Crown Affair | produced by Mirisch Company |
June 25, 1968 | The Bride Wore Black | |
July 19, 1968 | Inspector Clouseau | produced by Mirisch Company |
July 31, 1968 | Hang 'Em High | |
July 1968 | Thunderbirds Are Go | produced by Century 21 Cinema and Associated Television |
September 1968 | Shock Troops | |
The Ugly Ones | ||
September 18, 1968 | Salt and Pepper | |
October 11, 1968 | The Charge of the Light Brigade | |
October 14, 1968 | Paper Lion | |
November 13, 1968 | A Quiet Place in the Country | |
November 15, 1968 | Yellow Submarine | distribution only; produced by King Features Syndicate and Subafilms Ltd |
November 20, 1968 | Thunderbird 6 | produced by Century 21 Cinema and Associated Television |
December 13, 1968 | The Mercenary | |
December 18, 1968 | Chitty Chitty Bang Bang | |
The Night They Raided Minsky's | produced by Tandem Productions | |
December 1968 | Buona Sera, Mrs. Campbell | |
January 15, 1969 | More Dead Than Alive | produced by Aubrey Schenck |
January 17, 1969 | Fellini's Satyricon | co-produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
February 19, 1969 | Play Dirty | produced by Harry Saltzman |
February 21, 1969 | A Twist of Sand | |
February 28, 1969 | Some Girls Do | |
March 26, 1969 | Support Your Local Sheriff! | |
April 1, 1969 | Sam Whiskey | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
April 18, 1969 | Mississippi Mermaid | |
April 25, 1969 | If It's Tuesday, This Must Be Belgium | produced by David L. Wolper |
April 30, 1969 | Hannibal Brooks | |
May 7, 1969 | Impasse | distribution only |
May 7, 1969 | Sinful Davey | produced by Mirisch Company |
May 7, 1969 | Where It's At | |
May 27, 1969 | Popi | |
May 28, 1969 | Guns of the Magnificent Seven | produced by Mirisch Company |
June 11, 1969 | The First Time | |
June 25, 1969 | Death Rides a Horse | |
July 2, 1969 | Sabata | co produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
July 30, 1969 | Midnight Cowboy | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1994 |
July 1969 | The Thousand Plane Raid | produced by Oakmont Productions |
August 20, 1969 | Alice's Restaurant | |
August 21, 1969 | Number One | |
August 27, 1969 | The Bridge at Remagen | produced by David L. Wolper |
August 1969 | Submarine X-1 | produced by Oakmont Productions |
September 28, 1969 | The Bed-Sitting Room | |
October 1, 1969 | Some Kind of a Nut | produced by Mirisch Company |
October 2, 1969 | The File of the Golden Goose | produced by Edward Small |
October 15, 1969 | Young Billy Young | |
October 24, 1969 | Battle of Britain | |
October 29, 1969 | The Secret of Santa Vittoria | produced by Stanley Kramer |
November 25, 1969 | Crossplot | |
December 2, 1969 | The Sex of Angels | |
December 16, 1969 | Gaily, Gaily | |
December 18, 1969 | On Her Majesty's Secret Service | produced by Eon Productions |
December 21, 1969 | The Happy Ending | |
December 23, 1969 | Three | |
December 1969 | Out of It |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 18, 1970 | What Do You Say to a Naked Lady? | |
March 16, 1970 | Love Is a Funny Thing | |
March 20, 1970 | Hell Boats | produced by Oakmont Productions |
March 27, 1970 | Pussycat, Pussycat, I Love You | |
Women in Love | ||
April 29, 1970 | Halls of Anger | produced by Mirisch Company |
May 8, 1970 | The Last Escape | produced by Oakmont Productions |
May 13, 1970 | Leo the Last | |
May 15, 1970 | Let It Be | produced by Apple Films |
May 20, 1970 | The Landlord | produced by Mirisch Company |
May 27, 1970 | Cotton Comes to Harlem | |
The Way We Live Now | ||
May 28, 1970 | The Passion of Anna | |
May 1970 | One More Time | |
June 17, 1970 | The Hawaiians | produced by Mirisch Company |
June 1970 | The Christine Jorgensen Story | produced by Edward Small |
July 1, 1970 | Mosquito Squadron | produced by Oakmont Productions |
July 10, 1970 | They Call Me MISTER Tibbs! | produced by Mirisch Company |
July 15, 1970 | The Revolutionary | |
July 28, 1970 | The Angel Levine | |
August 12, 1970 | Pound | |
August 21, 1970 | Adiós, Sabata | produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
September 2, 1970 | Barquero | |
September 4, 1970 | Hornets' Nest | |
September 9, 1970 | The Wild Child[N 27] | |
September 11, 1970 | Kes | distribution only |
September 23, 1970 | Pieces of Dreams | |
September 30, 1970 | The Crook | |
October 2, 1970 | Give Her the Moon | |
October 7, 1970 | Ned Kelly | |
Underground | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven | |
October 21, 1970 | Burn! | produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
October 28, 1970 | The McKenzie Break | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
October 29, 1970 | The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes | |
October 1970 | Cannon for Cordoba | produced by Mirisch Company |
November 3, 1970 | A.k.a. Cassius Clay | |
November 10, 1970 | Where's Poppa? | |
November 18, 1970 | The Adventures of Gerard | |
1970 | Dougal and the Blue Cat | American distribution only |
January 1971 | The Bridge in the Jungle | |
February 17, 1971 | The Music Lovers | |
February 19, 1971 | Cold Turkey | |
April 9, 1971 | Valdez Is Coming | |
April 28, 1971 | Bananas | |
May 12, 1971 | Mrs. Pollifax-Spy | |
May 26, 1971 | Support Your Local Gunfighter | |
June 30, 1971 | What's the Matter with Helen? | |
July 14, 1971 | The Hunting Party | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
July 21, 1971 | Wake in Fright[N 28] | distribution only, produced by NLT Productions and Group W Films |
July 28, 1971 | Von Richthofen and Brown | |
August 1, 1971 | Doc | |
August 4, 1971 | Lawman | |
September 1, 1971 | Return of Sabata | produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
September 8, 1971 | Sunday Bloody Sunday | |
September 22, 1971 | Lady Liberty | produced by Compagnia Cinematografica Champion and Les Films Concordia |
October 20, 1971 | The Organization | produced by Mirisch Company |
November 3, 1971 | Fiddler on the Roof | produced by Mirisch Company Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 10, 1971 | 200 Motels | |
Jennifer on My Mind | ||
December 1, 1971 | Born to Win | |
December 12, 1971 | The Decameron | co-produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
December 14, 1971 | The Hospital | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1995 |
December 17, 1971 | Diamonds Are Forever | produced by Eon Productions |
February 2, 1972 | The Visitors | |
May 12, 1972 | Chato's Land | |
May 17, 1972 | The Honkers | |
June 30, 1972 | Duck, You Sucker! | |
July 14, 1972 | Fuzz | |
July 21, 1972 | Pulp | |
August 1, 1972 | The Magnificent Seven Ride! | produced by Mirisch Company |
August 4, 1972 | Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex* (*But Were Afraid to Ask) | |
August 30, 1972 | Money Talks | |
September 6, 1972 | The Mechanic | |
September 8, 1972 | Man of the East | produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
September 20, 1972 | Hammer | |
October 4, 1972 | Hickey & Boggs | |
October 15, 1972 | Roma | |
October 20, 1972 | Last Tango in Paris | co-produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
November 1, 1972 | Superbeast | |
November 17, 1972 | Daughters of Satan | |
December 13, 1972 | Man of La Mancha | produced by Alberto Grimaldi |
December 15, 1972 | Avanti! | |
December 20, 1972 | Across 110th Street | |
January 1973 | Adolf Hitler: My Part in His Downfall | |
The Outside Man | ||
February 11, 1973 | Lady Caroline Lamb | |
February 16, 1973 | The Long Goodbye | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2021 |
March 14, 1973 | Tom Sawyer | |
April 20, 1973 | Scorpio | produced by Mirisch Company |
May 10, 1973 | The Offence | |
June 8, 1973 | Theatre of Blood | |
August 3, 1973 | Jeremy | |
August 24, 1973 | Cops and Robbers | |
August 29, 1973 | White Lightning | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
September 14, 1973 | I Escaped from Devil's Island | |
September 21, 1973 | The Spook Who Sat by the Door[N 29] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2012 |
September 26, 1973 | Harry in Your Pocket | |
October 26, 1973 | Five on the Black Hand Side | |
November 14, 1973 | The Heroes | |
February 13, 1974 | Thieves Like Us | |
February 27, 1974 | Busting | |
March 15, 1974 | Visit to a Chief's Son | |
March 20, 1974 | Billy Two Hats | |
March 29, 1974 | Live and Let Die | produced by Eon Productions |
May 1, 1974 | The Spikes Gang | co-produced by Mirisch Company |
May 10, 1974 | Electra Glide in Blue | |
May 17, 1974 | Thunderbolt and Lightfoot | |
May 24, 1974 | Huckleberry Finn | |
June 7, 1974 | Where the Lilies Bloom | |
June 26, 1974 | Sleeper | |
July 17, 1974 | Mr. Majestyk | produced by Mirisch Company |
July 31, 1974 | Bank Shot | |
August 14, 1974 | Bring Me the Head of Alfredo Garcia | |
August 30, 1974 | Amazing Grace | |
September 25, 1974 | Juggernaut | |
October 2, 1974 | The Taking of Pelham 123 | |
October 18, 1974 | Mixed Company | |
October 25, 1974 | The Voyage | |
November 8, 1974 | Lenny | Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 4, 1974 | Soft Beds, Hard Battles | US theatrical distribution only; produced by The Rank Organisation |
December 20, 1974 | The Man with the Golden Gun | produced by Eon Productions |
February 5, 1975 | Report to the Commissioner | |
March 14, 1975 | Rancho Deluxe | |
March 24, 1975 | Rosebud | |
March 26, 1975 | Brannigan | |
The Manchu Eagle Murder Caper Mystery | ||
April 9, 1975 | The Passenger[N 30] | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
April 18, 1975 | Sharks' Treasure | |
May 14, 1975 | Moonrunners | |
May 21, 1975 | The Return of the Pink Panther[N 31] | theatrical distribution only; produced by ITC Entertainment |
May 22, 1975 | The Wind and the Lion | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
June 10, 1975 | Love and Death | |
June 25, 1975 | Rollerball | |
June 1975 | That's the Way of the World[N 9][N 32] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Sig Shore Productions |
July 9, 1975 | Smile | |
July 30, 1975 | The Wilby Conspiracy | |
August 29, 1975 | 92 in the Shade | US theatrical distribution only; produced by ITC Entertainment |
October 10, 1975 | Shhh | |
November 21, 1975 | One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest[N 33] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Fantasy Films Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1993 |
December 19, 1975 | Bugs Bunny: Superstar[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Hare-Raising Films |
The Killer Elite | ||
January 10, 1976 | Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom | distribution in Italy, Japan, Scandinavia and Germany; produced by Produzioni Europee Associati |
February 13, 1976 | Inserts | |
March 10, 1976 | Breakheart Pass | |
April 23, 1976 | Stay Hungry | |
April 1976 | It's Showtime | |
May 16, 1976 | That's Entertainment, Part II | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
May 19, 1976 | The Missouri Breaks | |
May 20, 1976 | Trackdown | |
June 23, 1976 | Logan's Run | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
June 24, 1976 | Buffalo Bill and the Indians, or Sitting Bull's History Lesson | US distribution only; produced by Dino De Laurentiis Company, Lion's Gate Films, and Talent Associates-Norton Simon |
July 30, 1976 | Drum | US distribution only; produced by Dino De Laurentiis Company |
June 1976 | Sweet Revenge | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
August 4, 1976 | The Return of a Man Called Horse | |
August 25, 1976 | Gator | produced by Levy-Gardner-Laven |
August 27, 1976 | From Noon till Three | |
September 1, 1976 | Novecento (1900) | International distribution only; produced by Produzioni Europee Associati |
September 8, 1976 | Vigilante Force | |
September 29, 1976 | Norman... Is That You? | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
October 20, 1976 | Burnt Offerings | produced by Produzioni Europee Associati |
November 5, 1976 | Carrie | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2022 |
November 12, 1976[15] | Karate Bullfighter | |
November 27, 1976 | Network[N 34] | co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2000 |
December 3, 1976 | Rocky | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2006 |
December 5, 1976 | Bound for Glory | Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 17, 1976 | The Pink Panther Strikes Again | |
March 10, 1977 | Welcome to L.A. | |
April 6, 1977 | Audrey Rose | |
April 15, 1977 | Demon Seed | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
April 20, 1977 | Annie Hall | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1992 |
May 5, 1977 | The Solid Gold Show | |
May 6, 1977 | The White Buffalo | |
June 15, 1977 | A Bridge Too Far | |
June 21, 1977 | New York, New York | |
August 3, 1977 | The Spy Who Loved Me | Eon Productions, co-produced with Danjaq S.A. |
October 5, 1977 | Valentino | |
October 14, 1977 | Equus | |
November 18, 1977 | Semi-Tough | |
November 23, 1977 | Another Man, Another Chance | |
December 16, 1977 | Telefon | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
January 6, 1978 | Coma | |
January 13, 1978 | Golden Rendezvous | |
February 9, 1978 | The Betsy | theatrical distribution only; produced by Allied Artists[16] |
February 15, 1978 | Coming Home | Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture |
February 1978 | Three Warriors[N 33] | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Fantasy Films |
March 13, 1978 | The Big Sleep | US theatrical distribution only; produced by ITC Entertainment |
April 26, 1978 | F.I.S.T. | |
The Last Waltz | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2019 | |
May 10, 1978 | The End | |
June 2, 1978 | Corvette Summer | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
June 28, 1978 | Convoy | US distribution only; produced by EMI Films |
July 19, 1978 | Revenge of the Pink Panther | |
International Velvet | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | |
August 2, 1978 | Interiors | |
Who'll Stop the Rain | ||
October 11, 1978 | Piranha | International distribution only; produced by New World Pictures |
October 25, 1978 | Comes a Horseman | |
October 30, 1978 | Message from Space | U.S. distribution only; produced in Japan by Toei Company |
November 8, 1978 | Slow Dancing in the Big City | produced by CIP |
November 15, 1978 | The Lord of the Rings[N 11] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Fantasy Films |
December 17, 1978 | Uncle Joe Shannon | |
December 20, 1978 | Invasion of the Body Snatchers | |
December 22, 1978 | Brass Target | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
January 1, 1979 | Jamaican Gold | |
February 2, 1979 | The First Great Train Robbery | produced by Dino De Laurentiis |
March 9, 1979 | The Passage | US distribution only; produced by Hemdale and Passage Films, Inc. |
March 14, 1979 | Hair | |
Voices | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | |
April 4, 1979 | The Champ | |
April 15, 1979 | Fedora | US theatrical distribution only |
April 25, 1979 | Manhattan | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2001 |
May 4, 1979 | Last Embrace | |
May 13, 1979 | La Cage aux Folles | French film |
May 25, 1979 | Wanda Nevada | |
June 15, 1979 | Rocky II | |
June 29, 1979 | Moonraker | Eon Productions, co-produced with Danjaq S.A. |
June 1979 | Crime Busters | US theatrical distribution only |
August 10, 1979 | Americathon[N 11] | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Lorimar |
August 15, 1979 | Apocalypse Now[N 35] | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Omni Zoetrope (uncredited) Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2000 |
August 17, 1979 | Rich Kids | co-production with Lion's Gate Films |
September 19, 1979 | Yanks | International distribution only, distributed in the U.S. by Universal Pictures; produced by CIP Filmproduktion GmbH |
October 17, 1979 | The Black Stallion | produced by Zoetrope Studios Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2002 |
October 19, 1979 | Chilly Scenes of Winter | also known as Head Over Heels |
November 1, 1979 | Bear Island | Canadian distribution only, distributed in the U.S. by Taft International Pictures and internationally by Columbia Pictures; produced by Selkirk Films |
November 6, 1979 | The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh[N 11] | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Lorimar |
December 18, 1979 | The Human Factor | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
December 19, 1979 | Being There[N 11] | US theatrical distribution only; produced by Lorimar Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2015 |
December 21, 1979 | Cuba | |
Roller Boogie | US distribution only; produced by Compass International Pictures |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 18, 1980 | Windows | co-production with Mike Lobell Productions |
February 15, 1980 | Cruising[N 11] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Lorimar Productions |
February 29, 1980 | Foxes | |
March 12, 1980 | A Small Circle of Friends | |
March 30, 1980 | The Canterbury Tales | Italian film |
April 1980 | Leo and Loree | distribution only |
May 2, 1980 | Happy Birthday, Gemini | |
May 16, 1980 | The Long Riders | |
Fame | Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2023 | |
May 23, 1980 | Carny[N 11] | distribution only; produced by Lorimar Productions |
June 13, 1980 | Roadie | |
July 18, 1980 | The Big Red One[N 11] | distribution only; produced by Lorimar Productions |
July 27, 1980 | Arabian Nights | Italian film |
August 1, 1980 | The Final Countdown | U.S. theatrical distribution; produced by The Bryna Company, Aspen Productions, Polyc International and Film Finance Group |
August 15, 1980 | Those Lips, Those Eyes | |
August 29, 1980 | He Knows You're Alone | Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
September 17, 1980 | The Last Metro | distribution only |
September 26, 1980 | Stardust Memories | |
October 18, 1980 | Motel Hell | co-production with Camp Hill |
November 14, 1980 | The Idolmaker | |
November 19, 1980 | Heaven's Gate | |
December 19, 1980 | Raging Bull | Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1990 |
1981 | Invaders from the Deep | distribution only |
February 13, 1981 | The Dogs of War | |
February 15, 1981 | La Cage aux Folles II | French/Italian film |
March 11, 1981 | Diva[N 19] | distribution under United Artists Classics only |
March 20, 1981 | Cutter's Way | |
March 27, 1981 | Thief | |
April 17, 1981 | Caveman | |
June 12, 1981 | Clash of the Titans | co-production with Charles H. Schneer Productions; distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
June 26, 1981 | For Your Eyes Only | Eon Productions, co-produced with Danjaq S.A. |
July 24, 1981 | Eye of the Needle | |
Tarzan the Ape Man | co-production with Svengali Productions; distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | |
August 14, 1981 | Deadly Blessing[N 36] | distribution only; produced by PolyGram Pictures. last film to be released under Transamerica ownership. |
September 18, 1981 | The French Lieutenant's Woman | |
September 25, 1981 | True Confessions | |
January 1, 1982 | Galaxy of Terror | International distribution only; produced by New World Pictures |
January 15, 1982 | Jaws of Satan | co-production with Bill Wilson Productions |
January 22, 1982 | A Stranger Is Watching | co-production with Heron Communications; distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
February 12, 1982 | The Beast Within | co-production with Katzka |
April 2, 1982 | Penitentiary II | distribution only |
April 23, 1982 | National Lampoon's Movie Madness | |
April 1982 | Pandemonium | |
May 14, 1982 | The House Where Evil Dwells | |
May 28, 1982 | Rocky III | |
May 1982 | Safari 3000 | |
July 2, 1982 | The Secret of NIMH | distribution as MGM/UA Entertainment Co.; produced by Aurora and Don Bluth Productions |
August 4, 1982 | Lola[N 37] | distribution under United Artists Classics only |
September 16, 1982 | The Night of the Shooting Stars[N 1] | distribution only |
October 21, 1982 | The Plague Dogs[N 38] | UK distribution only, produced by Nepenthe Productions |
October 22, 1982 | Jinxed! | |
November 19, 1982 | Still of the Night | |
December 17, 1982 | Trail of the Pink Panther | |
February 13, 1983 | Twilight Time | |
March 25, 1983 | The Black Stallion Returns | |
April 15, 1983 | Rock & Rule | US distribution only; produced in Canada by Nelvana |
April 22, 1983 | Exposed | |
June 3, 1983 | WarGames | |
June 10, 1983 | Octopussy | Eon Productions, co-produced with Danjaq S.A. |
June 12, 1983 | L'Étoile du Nord | distribution only |
June 22, 1983 | The Draughtsman's Contract[N 39] | U.S. distribution only under the United Artists Classics label; produced by British Film Institute and Channel 4 |
August 12, 1983 | Curse of the Pink Panther | |
October 7, 1983 | Romantic Comedy | co-production with Mirisch Company |
October 9, 1983 | Streamers[N 9] | North American distribution only under the United Artists Classics label |
November 18, 1983 | Yentl | |
January 13, 1984 | Hot Dog…The Movie | distribution only |
April 8, 1984 | You Can Do It | co-production with Shari Lewis Enterprises; distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
April 16, 1984 | Have I Got a Story For You | |
April 24, 1984 | Kooky Classics | |
June 22, 1984 | The Pope of Greenwich Village | |
August 10, 1984 | Red Dawn | [17] |
September 21, 1984 | Until September | |
October 5, 1984 | Teachers | |
October 12, 1984 | Garbo Talks | |
February 22, 1985 | Martin's Day | |
March 1, 1985 | The Aviator | |
May 3, 1985 | Movers & Shakers | |
May 24, 1985 | A View to a Kill | Eon Productions, co-produced with Danjaq S.A. |
July 19, 1985 | Wetherby | distribution only |
November 1, 1985 | To Live and Die in L.A. | |
November 27, 1985 | Rocky IV | |
January 31, 1986 | Youngblood | Released by MGM/UA Entertainment Co. |
July 31, 1987 | The Living Daylights | Eon Productions, co-produced with Danjaq S.A. |
September 25, 1987 | Real Men | co-production with Martin Bregman Productions |
You Talkin' to Me? | ||
October 7, 1987 | Baby Boom | |
January 29, 1988 | Born to Race | distribution only |
April 1, 1988 | Bright Lights, Big City | |
May 13, 1988 | Illegally Yours | co-production with DeLaurentiis Entertainment Group |
May 20, 1988 | Rikki and Pete | |
July 13, 1988 | It Takes Two | |
August 26, 1988 | Betrayed | |
October 14, 1988 | Pumpkinhead | US distribution only[18] |
November 9, 1988 | Child's Play | [19] |
December 14, 1988 | I'm Gonna Git You Sucka | |
December 16, 1988 | Rain Man | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 28, 1989 | The Horror Show | US distribution only; produced by Sean S. Cunningham Films |
April 1989 | Buying Time | distribution only |
May 12, 1989 | Night Visitor | US distribution only; produced by Premiere Pictures Corporation |
The Rachel Papers | US distribution only | |
Season of Fear | distribution only | |
May 19, 1989 | Road House | co-production with Silver Pictures[20] |
July 14, 1989 | Licence to Kill | distribution only; produced by Eon Productions[21] |
August 25, 1989 | Little Monsters[N 40] | US distribution only; produced by Vestron Pictures, Davis Entertainment Company and Licht/Mueller Film Corporation[22] |
September 8, 1989 | The Runnin' Kind | |
September 15, 1989 | True Love | US distribution only; produced by Forward Films |
October 13, 1989 | Damned River | US distribution only; produced by Silver Lion Films |
November 17, 1989 | All Dogs Go to Heaven | US distribution only; co-production with Goldcrest Films and Sullivan Bluth Studios[23] |
December 22, 1989 | Always | studio credit only; co-production with Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment; distributed by Universal Pictures[24] |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
April 20, 1990 | Lisa | co-production with Surreal Productions[25] |
November 16, 1990 | Rocky V | co-production with Chartoff-Winkler Productions and Star Partners III, Ltd.[26] |
August 27, 1993 | Son of the Pink Panther | co-production with Filmauro[27] |
September 23, 1994 | Sleep with Me | US distribution only; produced by August Entertainment, Paribas Film Corporation and Castleberg Productions |
March 31, 1995 | Tank Girl | co-production with Trilogy Entertainment Group |
April 7, 1995 | Rob Roy | |
August 25, 1995 | Lord of Illusions | co-production with Seraphim Productions[28] |
September 15, 1995 | Hackers | |
September 22, 1995 | Showgirls | US distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures and Chargeurs |
October 27, 1995 | Leaving Las Vegas | US distribution only; produced by Lumiere Pictures and Initial Productions |
November 17, 1995 | GoldenEye | distribution only; produced by Eon Productions |
December 1, 1995 | Wild Bill | co-production with The Zanuck Company |
December 29, 1995 | Richard III | US distribution only; co-production with Bayly/Paré Productions, British Screen and First Look Pictures |
March 8, 1996 | The Birdcage | |
March 22, 1996 | It's My Party | co-production with Opala Productions |
March 29, 1996 | A Family Thing | |
November 1, 1996 | Larger than Life | co-production with Trilogy Entertainment |
November 8, 1996 | Mad Dog Time | Also known as Trigger Happy; US distribution only |
February 14, 1997 | Touch | US distribution only; produced by Lumière International |
August 27, 1997 | Hoodlum | |
December 19, 1997 | Tomorrow Never Dies | co-production with Eon Productions |
February 13, 1998 | Hurricane Streets | US distribution only |
March 13, 1998 | The Man in the Iron Mask | |
September 25, 1998 | Ronin | co-production with FGM Entertainment |
February 26, 1999 | Just the Ticket | |
March 12, 1999 | The Rage: Carrie 2 | co-production with Red Bank Films |
August 6, 1999 | The Thomas Crown Affair | co-production with Irish DreamTime |
November 19, 1999 | The World Is Not Enough | co-production with Eon Productions; distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer; copyright holder |
December 10, 1999 | Miss Julie | distribution only; produced by Moonstone Entertainment and Red Mullet Productions |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 22, 2000 | Things You Can Tell Just by Looking at Her[N 41] | North American distribution only; released on Showtime |
March 24, 2000 | Mr. Accident | distribution only |
September 15, 2000 | Crime and Punishment in Suburbia | co-production with Killer Films |
September 2000 | The Fantasticks | Filmed in 1995; release suspended for five years due to lackluster reception; cut down to 86 minutes and shown in four theaters |
April 20, 2001 | The Claim | distribution only |
August 3, 2001 | Ghost World | co-production with Granada Productions |
August 31, 2001 | Jeepers Creepers[N 41] | North American distribution only; co-production with American Zoetrope |
September 28, 2001 | Born Romantic | distribution only |
December 7, 2001 | No Man's Land | distribution only Winner of the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film |
March 29, 2002 | No Such Thing | co-production with American Zoetrope |
May 3, 2002 | Deuces Wild | distribution only |
May 24, 2002 | CQ | co-production with American Zoetrope |
June 28, 2002 | Pumpkin | |
August 9, 2002 | 24 Hour Party People | distribution only; produced by Revolution Films, UK Film Council, FilmFour and Baby Cow Productions |
September 13, 2002 | Igby Goes Down | |
October 11, 2002 | Bowling for Columbine | North American distribution only; produced by Alliance Atlantis Winner of the Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature |
October 25, 2002 | All or Nothing[N 42] | U.S. distribution only; produced by StudioCanal |
November 22, 2002 | Die Another Day | Eon Productions, co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer; copyright holder |
November 27, 2002 | Personal Velocity: Three Portraits | North American distribution only |
December 13, 2002 | Evelyn | distribution only |
December 27, 2002 | Nicholas Nickleby | |
February 21, 2003 | Dark Blue[N 41] | co-production with Alphaville Films |
March 28, 2003 | Assassination Tango | co-production with American Zoetrope |
April 25, 2003 | City of Ghosts | North American distribution only |
May 30, 2003 | Together | North American distribution only |
August 29, 2003 | Jeepers Creepers II | co-production with American Zoetrope |
October 17, 2003 | Pieces of April | North American distribution only |
February 6, 2004 | Osama | North American distribution only |
May 14, 2004 | Coffee and Cigarettes | |
May 28, 2004 | Saved! | distribution only |
August 6, 2004 | Code 46 | distribution only, co-produced by BBC Films and Revolution Films |
September 24, 2004 | The Yes Men | distribution only |
October 22, 2004 | Undertow | distribution in North and Latin America, South Africa, Australia and New Zealand only |
December 22, 2004 | Hotel Rwanda | co-distributed with Lions Gate Entertainment |
April 15, 2005 | The Amityville Horror | co-produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Dimension Films; copyright holder |
September 30, 2005 | Capote | co-distributed with Sony Pictures Classics Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 5, 2006 | Art School Confidential | co-distributed with Sony Pictures Classics |
September 26, 2006 | The Woods | |
November 17, 2006 | Casino Royale | Eon Productions, co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Columbia Pictures; copyright holder |
September 7, 2007 | Romance & Cigarettes | co-production with The Coen Brothers and Icon Productions |
November 9, 2007 | Lions for Lambs | co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
November 14, 2008 | Quantum of Solace | Eon Productions, co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Columbia Pictures; copyright holder |
December 25, 2008 | Valkyrie | co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
September 25, 2009 | Fame | co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
March 26, 2010 | Hot Tub Time Machine | co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and New Crime Productions; last original film to date to be released under the banner |
April 13, 2012 | The Cabin in the Woods[29] | uncredited; co-production with Lionsgate and Mutant Enemy[30] |
November 9, 2012 | Skyfall | Eon Productions, co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Columbia Pictures; copyright holder |
November 21, 2012 | Red Dawn | co-production with Contrafilm and FilmDistrict; copyright holder |
February 20, 2015 | Hot Tub Time Machine 2 | co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Panay Films and Paramount Pictures; copyright holder |
Title | Notes |
---|---|
The Girl in the Lake | co-production with These Pictures and Jack Tar Pictures; first film since revival[31] |