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This page is a list of feature films originally released and/or distributed by Miramax. The page is divided into two categories Original Miramax which consists of the original Miramax library and films produced under Dimension Films both of which are owned by The Walt Disney Company under the Touchstone Pictures umbrella and Current Miramax which is the spinoff company that was founded in 2010 and who's library is currently owned by ViacomCBS. The list is ordered by the US release dates of each film.
Films[]
Original Miramax (1980-2001)[]
Release date | Title | Director | Notes | Budget | Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
November 26, 1980 | Rockshow | Bob Mercer | |||
December 11, 1981 | Spaced Out | Norman J. Warren | |||
May 8, 1981 | The Burning | Tony Maylam | produced by Miramax but distributed by Filmways | USD 1.5 million | USD 707,770 |
May 21, 1982 | The Secret Policeman's Other Ball | John Cleese | US version | ||
December 23, 1983 | Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars | D. A. Pennebaker | US distribution with 20th Century Fox | ||
April 27, 1984 | Eréndira | Ruy Guerra | |||
June 3, 1984 | Édith et Marcel | Claude Lelouch | |||
July 10, 1984 | B.C. Rock | Picha | |||
August 23, 1985 | Crossover Dreams | Leon Ichaso | |||
October 25, 1985 | The Dog Who Stopped the War | André Melançon | |||
March 14, 1986 | Cool Change | George T. Miller | |||
May 1, 1986 | The Quest | Brian Trenchard-Smith | AUD 388,000 | AUD 171,000 | |
September 26, 1986 | Twist and Shout | Bille August | |||
October 3, 1986 | Playing for Keeps | Bob Weinstein, Harvey Weinstein | produced by Miramax but distributed by Universal Pictures | USD 2.669 million | |
February 27, 1987 | Working Girls | Lizzie Borden | |||
March 27, 1987 | Ghost Fever | Lee Madden | |||
September 11, 1987 | I've Heard the Mermaids Singing | Patricia Rozema | |||
November 13, 1987 | Riders of the Storm | Maurice Phillips | |||
December 11, 1987 | Crazy Moon | Allan Eastman | |||
January 22, 1988 | The Grand Highway | Jean-Loup Hubert | |||
January 28, 1988 | Light Years | René Laloux | |||
May 15, 1988 | Mio in the Land of Faraway | Vladimir Grammatikov | |||
May 20, 1988 | Caribe | Michael Kennedy | |||
June 17, 1988 | Going Undercover | James Kenelm Clarke | |||
July 20, 1988 | Aria | Robert Altman, Bruce Beresford, Bill Bryden, Jean-Luc Godard, Derek Jarman, Franc Roddam, Nicolas Roeg, Ken Russell, Charles Sturridge, Julien Temple | |||
August 25, 1988 | The Thin Blue Line | Errol Morris | North American distribution only | ||
September 23, 1988 | Murder One | Grame Campbell | |||
December 2, 1988 | Dakota | Fred Holmes | |||
December 21, 1988 | Pelle the Conqueror | Bille August | |||
March 31, 1989 | Warm Nights on a Slow Moving Train | Bob Ellis | |||
April 14, 1989 | Edge of Sanity | Gérard Kikoïne | released under Millimeter Films label | ||
April 28, 1989 | Scandal | Michael Caton-Jones | |||
May 12, 1989 | The Return of Swamp Thing | Jim Wynorski | released under Millimeter Films label | ||
August 1, 1989 | Sex, Lies, and Videotape | Steven Soderbergh | distribution only | ||
August 25, 1989 | The Little Thief | Claude Miller | |||
September 29, 1989 | The Girl in a Swing | Gordon Hessler | |||
October 27, 1989 | Animal Behavior | H. Anne Riley, Kjehl Rasmussen | released under Millimeter Films label | ||
November 3, 1989 | Stepfather II | Jeff Burr | released under Millimeter Films label | ||
November 10, 1989 | My Left Foot | Jim Sheridan | nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture; produced by Granada Television | ||
January 26, 1990 | Strike It Rich | James Scott | released under Millimeter Films label | ||
February 9, 1990 | Torrents of Spring | Jerzy Skolimowski | released under Millimeter Films label | ||
February 23, 1990 | Cinema Paradiso | Giuseppe Tornatore | distribution | ||
April 6, 1990 | The Cook, the Thief, His Wife & Her Lover | Peter Greenaway | distribution | ||
April 13, 1990 | Mama, There's A Man in Your Bed | Coline Serreau | |||
May 4, 1990 | Tie Me Up! Tie Me Down! | Pedro Almodóvar | USA distribution, rights now owned by Pathé | ||
May 18, 1990 | Strapless | David Hare | |||
May 25, 1990 | King of the Wind | Peter Duffell | US distribution | ||
July 20, 1990 | The Unbelievable Truth | Hal Hartley | |||
August 31, 1990 | The Lemon Sisters | Joyce Chopra | |||
September 14, 1990 | Hardware | Richard Stanley | co-production with Palace Pictures, released under Millimeter Films label | ||
September 21, 1990 | The Tall Guy | Mel Smith | distribution | ||
October 26, 1990 | The Nasty Girl | Michael Verhoeven | distribution | ||
November 9, 1990 | The Krays | Peter Medak | distribution | ||
November 23, 1990 | Mr. and Mrs. Bridge | James Ivory | distribution | ||
December 5, 1990 | The Grifters | Stephen Frears | |||
December 21, 1990 | The Long Walk Home | Richard Pearce | |||
March 6, 1991 | Ju Dou | Zhang Yimou, Yang Fengliang | distribution | ||
March 13, 1991 | Paris Is Burning | Jennie Livingston | released under Prestige Films label | ||
April 26, 1991 | Dancin' thru the Dark | Mike Ockrent | distribution | ||
April 26, 1991 | Drowning by Numbers | Peter Greenaway | distribution, released under Prestige Films label | ||
April 26, 1991 | Journey of Hope | Xavier Koller | distribution | ||
May 3, 1991 | A Rage in Harlem | Bill Duke | |||
May 17, 1991 | Auntie Danielle | Étienne Chatiliez | released under Prestige Films label | ||
May 24, 1991 | Madonna: Truth or Dare | Alek Keshishian | |||
May 31, 1991 | Ambition | Scott Goldstein | |||
May 31, 1991 | Everybody's Fine | Giuseppe Tornatore | distribution | ||
June 28, 1991 | The Reflecting Skin | Philip Ridley | released under Prestige Films label | ||
July 3, 1991 | The Miracle | Neil Jordan | released under Prestige Films label | ||
July 26, 1991 | Bullet in the Head | John Woo | |||
August 2, 1991 | Voyeur | Alex van Warmerdam | released under Prestige Films label | ||
August 9, 1991 | Crossing the Line | David Leland | distribution | ||
August 14, 1991 | Iron & Silk | Shirley Sun | released under Prestige Films label | ||
August 23, 1991 | Pastime | Robin Armstrong | |||
August 23, 1991 | Uranus | Claude Berri | released under Prestige Films label | ||
August 30, 1991 | The Pope Must Die | Peter Richardson | co-production with Film4 and Palace Pictures | ||
October 11, 1991 | Antonia and Jane | Beeban Kidron | |||
October 30, 1991 | Exposure | Walter Salles | distribution | ||
November 15, 1991 | Kafka | Steven Soderbergh | |||
November 15, 1991 | Prospero's Books | Peter Greenaway | distribution | ||
November 22, 1991 | The Double Life of Veronique | Krzysztof Kieślowski | USA distribution | ||
December 5, 1991 | Black Rainbow | Mike Hodges | |||
December 6, 1991 | Young Soul Rebels | Isaac Julien | released under Prestige Films label | ||
December 20, 1991 | High Heels | Pedro Almodóvar | USA distribution | ||
December 27, 1991 | Hear My Song | Peter Chelsom | |||
January 24, 1992 | Love Crimes | Lizzie Borden | released under Millimeter Films label | ||
March 18, 1992 | American Dream | Barbara Kopple | released under Prestige Films label | ||
March 22, 1992 | Mediterraneo | Gabriele Salvatores | distribution | ||
April 3, 1992 | Delicatessen | Marc Caro, Jean-Pierre Jeunet | |||
May 1, 1992 | K2 | Franc Roddam | Theatrical distribution, rights are own by Paramount Pictures | ||
May 22, 1992 | Zentropa | Lars von Trier | released under Prestige Films label | ||
June 26, 1992 | Incident at Oglala | Michael Apted | |||
July 31, 1992 | Enchanted April | Mike Newell | distribution | ||
August 14, 1992 | Johnny Suede | Tom DiCillo | |||
August 28, 1992 | Freddie as F.R.O.7 | Jon Acevski | US distribution only; produced by Hollywood Road Films | ||
September 4, 1992 | Bob Roberts | Tim Robbins | co-production with Paramount Pictures (USA theatrical distribution), PolyGram Filmed Entertainment (International distribution), LIVE Entertainment and Working Title Films | ||
September 11, 1992 | Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth | Anthony Hickox | first release under Dimension Films | ||
September 18, 1992 | Sarafina! | Darrell Roodt | co-production with Hollywood Pictures | ||
October 9, 1992 | Breaking the Rules | Neal Israel | |||
October 23, 1992 | Reservoir Dogs | Quentin Tarantino | USA theatrical distribution; produced by LIVE America | ||
October 30, 1992 | Close to Eden | Nikita Mikhalkov | |||
October 30, 1992 | Rampage | William Friedkin | |||
November 6, 1992 | The Efficiency Expert | Mark Joffe | AUD 3.4 million | AUD 1,505,884 | |
November 6, 1992 | Sumo Do, Sumo Don't | Masayuki Suo | distribution | ||
November 25, 1992 | The Crying Game | Neil Jordan | nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture; distribution; co-production with Palace Pictures and Channel Four Films | GBP 2.3 million | USD 62.5 million |
December 9, 1992 | Godzilla vs. Biollante | Kazuki Ōmori | US distribution only, released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
December 11, 1992 | Passion Fish | John Sayles | |||
January 29, 1993 | Children of the Corn II: The Final Sacrifice | David Price | released under Dimension Films | ||
February 12, 1993 | Strictly Ballroom | Baz Luhrmann | distribution | AUD 3 million | AUD 80 million |
February 17, 1993 | Like Water for Chocolate | Alfonso Arau | USA distribution | USD 21.6 million | |
March 12, 1993 | Ethan Frome | John Madden | |||
March 19, 1993 | Just Another Girl on the I.R.T. | Leslie Harris | |||
March 26, 1993 | The Opposite Sex and How to Live with Them | Matthew Meshekoff | |||
April 23, 1993 | Map of the Human Heart | Vincent Ward | |||
April 30, 1993 | The Night We Never Met | Warren Leight | |||
June 25, 1993 | House of Cards | Michael Lessac | distribution pickup from Penta Pictures | ||
July 9, 1993 | The Legend | Corey Yuen | first film to be released by Miramax after being acquired by Disney. Released under Dimension Films. | ||
July 16, 1993 | Benefit of the Doubt | Jonathan Heap | first film to be released under the Miramax name during their Disney tenure. | ||
July 30, 1993 | Tom and Jerry: The Movie | Phil Roman | distribution only; produced by Turner Entertainment Co., WMG, and Film Roman; co-distributed by LIVE Entertainment in the US and Turner Pictures outside of the US, rights are now owned by Warner Bros. | ||
August 13, 1993 | Especially on Sunday | Giuseppe Tornatore, Marco Tullio Giordana, Giuseppe Bertolucci, Francesco Barilli | distribution; co-production with Intérmedias, Titanus, Paradis Films, Basic Cinematografica and Dusk Motion Pictures | ||
September 3, 1993 | Fortress | Stuart Gordon | released under Dimension Films | ||
September 17, 1993 | Into the West | Mike Newell | distribution | ||
October 13, 1993 | Dust Devil | Richard Stanley | direct-to-video | ||
October 15, 1993 | Farewell My Concubine | Chen Kaige | |||
October 29, 1993 | Deception | Graeme Clifford | |||
November 17, 1993 | The Piano | Jane Campion | co-production with Ciby 2000; nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture | ||
November 23, 1993 | The Magic Snowman | Stanko Crnobrnja, C. Stanner | |||
December 3, 1993 | The Snapper | Stephen Frears | |||
December 5, 1993 | Three Colours: Blue | Krzysztof Kieślowski | |||
February 4, 1994 | Gunmen | Deran Sarafian | |||
February 18, 1994 | Three Colours: White | Krzysztof Kieślowski | |||
March 18, 1994 | Mother's Boys | Yves Simoneau | |||
April 1, 1994 | The House of the Spirits | Bille August | |||
May 11, 1994 | The Crow | Alex Proyas | |||
May 23, 1994 | Desperate Remedies | Peter Wells | |||
May 25, 1994 | Little Buddha | Bernardo Bertolucci | distribution | ||
July 15, 1994 | Ciao, Professore! | Lina Wertmüller | distribution | ||
August 24, 1994 | Fresh | Boaz Yakin | |||
October 14, 1994 | Pulp Fiction | Quentin Tarantino | nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture | ||
October 19, 1994 | Clerks | Kevin Smith | bought distribution rights from View Askew Productions | ||
November 3, 1994 | Sirens | John Duigan | |||
November 16, 1994 | Heavenly Creatures | Peter Jackson | |||
November 23, 1994 | Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle | Alan Rudolph | |||
November 25, 1994 | Camilla | Deepa Mehta | |||
December 2, 1994 | Tom & Viv | Brian Gilbert | |||
December 9, 1994 | Queen Margot | Patrice Chéreau | |||
December 25, 1994 | Ready to Wear | Robert Altman | |||
December 25, 1994 | Three Colours: Red | Krzysztof Kieślowski | |||
January 18, 1995 | Bullets over Broadway | Woody Allen | |||
January 20, 1995 | Strawberry and Chocolate | Tomás Gutiérrez Alea, Juan Carlos Tabío | |||
January 21, 1995 | Rumble in the Bronx | Jackie Chan, Anita Mui, Françoise Yip | |||
February 17, 1995 | Through the Olive Trees | Abbas Kiarostami | distribution | ||
March 3, 1995 | Exotica | Atom Egoyan | |||
March 10, 1995 | Muriel's Wedding | P. J. Hogan | U.S. distribution | ||
March 24, 1995 | Priest | Antonia Bird | |||
April 11, 1995 | Roadflower | Deran Sarafian | direct-to-video | ||
May 5, 1995 | Picture Bride | Kayo Hatta | |||
May 12, 1995 | The Englishman who Went up a Hill but Came down a Mountain | Christopher Monger | |||
May 12, 1995 | Gordy | Mark Lewis | |||
June 2, 1995 | The Glass Shield | Charles Burnett | |||
June 9, 1995 | Smoke | Wayne Wang | |||
June 14, 1995 | Il Postino: The Postman | Michael Radford, Massimo Troisi | nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture | ||
June 28, 1995 | Belle de Jour | Luis Buñuel | re-release | ||
July 7, 1995 | The Crude Oasis | Alex Graves | |||
July 12, 1995 | Grosse Fatigue | Michel Blanc | distribution | ||
July 28, 1995 | Country Life | Michael Blakemore | |||
July 28, 1995 | Kids | Larry Clark | released under one-off label Shining Excalibur Films | ||
August 11, 1995 | Unzipped | Douglas Keeve | |||
August 25, 1995 | The Thief and the Cobbler | Richard Williams | distribution; theatrically known as Arabian Knight | ||
September 1, 1995 | The Innocent | John Schlesinger | USA distribution, co-production with Island World | ||
The Prophecy | Gregory Widen | released under Dimension Films | |||
September 12, 1995 | Children of the Corn III: Urban Harvest | James D. R. Hickox | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
September 22, 1995 | A Month by the Lake | John Irvin | |||
September 29, 1995 | Halloween: The Curse of Michael Myers | Joe Chappelle | released under Dimension Films | ||
October 6, 1995 | The Horseman on the Roof | Jean-Paul Rappeneau | distribution | ||
October 13, 1995 | Blue in the Face | Wayne Wang, Paul Auster | |||
November 9, 1995 | The Star Maker | Giuseppe Tornatore | |||
November 16, 1995 | The Crossing Guard | Sean Penn | |||
November 22, 1995 | Two Bits | James Foley | |||
December 1, 1995 | Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead | Gary Fleder | |||
December 8, 1995 | Georgia | Ulu Grosbard | |||
December 15, 1995 | Cry, the Beloved Country | Darrell Roodt | |||
December 19, 1995 | Men of War | Perry Lang | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
December 25, 1995 | Four Rooms | Allison Anders, Alexandre Rockwell, Robert Rodriguez, Quentin Tarantino | |||
December 29, 1995 | Restoration | Michael Hoffman | |||
January 11, 1996 | Mighty Aphrodite | Woody Allen | |||
January 12, 1996 | Don't Be a Menace to South Central While Drinking Your Juice in the Hood | Paris Barclay | |||
January 19, 1996 | French Twist | Josiane Balasko | distribution | ||
From Dusk till Dawn | Robert Rodriguez | released under Dimension Films, co-production with A Band Apart and Los Hooligans Productions | |||
January 26, 1996 | The Journey of August King | John Duigan | |||
February 2, 1996 | The NeverEnding Story III: Escape from Fantasia | Peter MacDonald | |||
February 9, 1996 | Beautiful Girls | Ted Demme | |||
March 8, 1996 | Chungking Express | Wong Kar-wai | |||
Hellraiser: Bloodline | Kevin Yagher (credited as Alan Smithee)
Joe Chappelle (uncredited) |
released under Dimension Films, co-production with Trans Atlantic Entertainment | |||
March 22, 1996 | Flirting with Disaster | David O. Russell | |||
April 3, 1996 | Faithful | Paul Mazursky | co-production with New Line Cinema, Price Entertainment and Savoy Pictures | ||
April 12, 1996 | Jane Eyre | Franco Zeffirelli | |||
April 26, 1996 | The Stendhal Syndrome | Dario Argento | distribution | ||
May 3, 1996 | Captives | Angela Pope | |||
May 3, 1996 | The Pallbearer | Matt Reeves | |||
May 10, 1996 | Dead Man | Jim Jarmusch | |||
May 10, 1996 | Of Love and Shadows | Betty Kaplan | distribution | ||
June 28, 1996 | Purple Noon | René Clément | re-release | ||
July 14, 1996 | The Visitors | Jean-Marie Poiré | |||
July 17, 1996 | Walking and Talking | Nicole Holofcener | co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Channel Four Films, Zenith Productions, Pandora Film, Mikado Films (France), Electric, TEAM Communications Group and Good Machine | ||
July 19, 1996 | Trainspotting | Danny Boyle | North America distribution, Film4 Productions released in the UK | ||
July 26, 1996 | Billy's Holiday | Richard Wherrett | |||
Supercop | Stanley Tong | US distribution only; released under Dimension Films | |||
August 2, 1996 | Emma | Douglas McGrath | |||
August 9, 1996 | Basquiat | Julian Schnabel | |||
August 16, 1996 | Supercop 2 | Stanley Tong
Matthew Tang |
US distribution only; released under Dimension Films | ||
August 30, 1996 | Crime Story | Kirk Wong
Jackie Chan (action) Bruce Law (action) |
|||
The Crow: City of Angels | Tim Pope | released under Dimension Films | |||
September 17, 1996 | Hidden Assassin | Ted Kotcheff | direct-to-video | ||
September 27, 1996 | Curdled | Reb Braddock | |||
October 8, 1996 | Children of the Corn IV: The Gathering | Greg Spence | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
October 9, 1996 | Microcosmos | Claude Nuridsany | |||
October 11, 1996 | Hard Core Logo | Bruce McDonald | |||
October 18, 1996 | Swingers | Doug Liman | |||
November 15, 1996 | Miracle at Oxford | Ferdinand Fairfax | |||
November 22, 1996 | Ridicule | Patrice Leconte | |||
November 27, 1996 | Sling Blade | Billy Bob Thornton | |||
November 29, 1996 | Adrenalin: Fear the Rush | Albert Pyun | released under Dimension Films, co-production with Filmwerks, Largo Entertainment, and Toga Productions | ||
December 6, 1996 | The English Patient | Anthony Minghella | winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture | ||
December 13, 1996 | Citizen Ruth | Alexander Payne | |||
December 13, 1996 | Victory | Mark Peploe | |||
December 18, 1996 | Marvin's Room | Jerry Zaks | |||
December 20, 1996 | Scream | Wes Craven | released under Dimension Films, co-production with Woods Entertainment | ||
January 3, 1997 | Everyone Says I Love You | Woody Allen | |||
January 17, 1997 | Albino Alligator | Kevin Spacey | |||
January 24, 1997 | Kolya | Jan Svěrák | distribution | ||
February 14, 1997 | Unhook the Stars | Nick Cassavetes | |||
February 28, 1997 | Fist of Legend | Gordon Chan | US distribution only, released under Dimension Films | ||
March 5, 1997 | Rhyme & Reason | Peter Spirer | |||
March 14, 1997 | The Substance of Fire | Daniel J. Sullivan | |||
April 4, 1997 | Chasing Amy | Kevin Smith | co-production with View Askew Productions | ||
April 11, 1997 | Cosi | Mark Joffe | |||
April 30, 1997 | Children of the Revolution | Peter Duncan | |||
May 23, 1997 | Addicted to Love | Griffin Dunne | co-production with Warner Bros. and Outlaw Productions | ||
May 23, 1997 | Brassed Off | Mark Herman | co-production with Channel Four Films | ||
June 6, 1997 | Squeeze | Robert Patton-Spruill | |||
June 12, 1997 | Robinson Crusoe | Rod Hardy | |||
June 13, 1997 | Temptress Moon | Chen Kaige | |||
July 11, 1997 | Shall We Dance? | Masayuki Suo | |||
July 18, 1997 | Her Majesty, Mrs. Brown | John Madden | |||
Operation Condor | Jackie Chan | US Distribution only, released under Dimension Films | |||
Operation Condor 2: The Armor of the Gods | Jackie Chan
Eric Tsang |
US distribution only, released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | |||
August 1, 1997 | Love Serenade | Shirley Barrett | |||
August 15, 1997 | Cop Land | James Mangold | |||
August 22, 1997 | Mimic | Guillermo del Toro | released under Dimension Films | ||
Nirvana | Gabriele Salvatores | ||||
August 27, 1997 | She's So Lovely | Nick Cassavetes | |||
September 5, 1997 | Mouth to Mouth | Manuel Gómez Pereira | distribution | ||
October 10, 1997 | The House of Yes | Mark Waters | |||
November 7, 1997 | The Wings of the Dove | Iain Softley | |||
November 26, 1997 | Welcome to Sarajevo | Michael Winterbottom | |||
December 3, 1997 | Office Killer | Cindy Sherman | |||
December 5, 1997 | Good Will Hunting | Gus Van Sant | nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture | ||
December 12, 1997 | Scream 2 | Wes Craven | released under Dimension Films | ||
December 16, 1997 | Bounty Hunters | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | |||
December 25, 1997 | Jackie Brown | Quentin Tarantino | |||
December 25, 1997 | Wishful Thinking | Adam Park | |||
December 25, 1997 | Shades of Fear | Beeban Kidron | |||
January 19, 1998 | Jerry and Tom | Saul Rubinek | co-production with Lionsgate Films | ||
January 20, 1998 | The Prophecy II | Greg Spence | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
January 23, 1998 | Phantoms | Joe Chappelle | released under Dimension Films, co-production with NEO Motion Pictures | ||
January 30, 1998 | Four Days in September | Bruno Barreto | |||
February 20, 1998 | Little City | Roberto Benabib | |||
Senseless | Penelope Spheeris | released under Dimension Films, co-production with Mandeville Films and Gold/Millar Productions | |||
March 14, 1998 | God Said Ha! | Julia Sweeney | |||
March 20, 1998 | Wide Awake | M. Night Shyamalan | |||
March 27, 1998 | A Price Above Rubies | Boaz Yakin | |||
Ride | released under Dimension Films | ||||
April 10, 1998 | The Big One | Michael Moore | |||
Sonatine | Takeshi Kitano | ||||
Summer Fling | David Keating | ||||
April 17, 1998 | Nightwatch | Ole Bornedal | released under Dimension Films | ||
April 18, 1998 | Since You've Been Gone | David Schwimmer | TV movie | ||
April 24, 1998 | Sliding Doors | Peter Howitt | co-production and co-distribution with Paramount Pictures | ||
April 24, 1998 | The Truce | Francesco Rosi | |||
May 8, 1998 | Artemisia | Agnès Merlet | |||
May 27, 1998 | I Got the Hook Up | released under Dimension Films | |||
June 5, 1998 | Beyond Silence | Caroline Link | distribution | ||
June 16, 1998 | The Rage | Sidney J. Furie | direct-to-video | ||
June 19, 1998 | Hav Plenty | Christopher Scott Cherot | |||
June 21, 1998 | Children of the Corn V: Fields of Terror | Ethan Wiley | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
June 26, 1998 | Smoke Signals | Chris Eyre | |||
August 5, 1998 | Halloween H20: 20 Years Later | Steve Miner | released under Dimension Films, co-production with Nightfall Productions and Trancas International | ||
August 7, 1998 | Telling You | Robert DeFranco | |||
August 14, 1998 | Air Bud: Golden Receiver | Richard Martin | US distribution only, released under Dimension Films, co-production with Keystone Pictures | ||
The Young Girls of Rochefort | Jacques Demy | re-release | |||
August 21, 1998 | Next Stop Wonderland | Brad Anderson | |||
August 28, 1998 | 54 | Mark Christopher | |||
September 4, 1998 | All I Wanna Do | Sarah Kernochan | |||
September 4, 1998 | Firelight | William Nicholson | |||
September 10, 1998 | With Friends Like These... | Philip Frank Messina | |||
September 11, 1998 | Rounders | John Dahl | |||
September 25, 1998 | Monument Ave. | Ted Demme | |||
October 9, 1998 | The Mighty | Peter Chelsom | |||
October 23, 1998 | Life Is Beautiful | Roberto Benigni | distribution outside Italy; nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture | ||
October 30, 1998 | Talk of Angels | Nick Hamm | |||
November 6, 1998 | Velvet Goldmine | Todd Haynes | |||
November 20, 1998 | Celebrity | Woody Allen | |||
December 4, 1998 | Little Voice | Mark Herman | |||
December 11, 1998 | Shakespeare in Love | John Madden | US distribution only; co-production with Universal Pictures; nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture | ||
December 18, 1998 | Playing by Heart | Willard Carroll | |||
December 25, 1998 | Down in the Delta | Maya Angelou | |||
The Faculty | Robert Rodriguez | released under Dimension Films, co-production with Los Hooligans Productions | |||
Sweet Revenge | Malcolm Mowbray | ||||
January 22, 1999 | Children of Heaven | Majid Majidi | distribution | ||
January 24, 1999 | Get Bruce | Andrew J. Kuehn | |||
January 29, 1999 | She's All That | Robert Iscove | |||
March 12, 1999 | Comedian Harmonists | Joseph Vilsmaier | |||
March 16, 1999 | From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money | Scott Spiegel | released under Dimension Films, co-production with A Band Apart and Los Hooligans, direct-to-video | ||
March 26, 1999 | A Walk on the Moon | Tony Goldwyn | |||
April 9, 1999 | Twin Dragons | Ringo Lam
Tsui Hark |
US distribution only; released under Dimension Films | ||
April 23, 1999 | eXistenZ | David Cronenberg | released under Dimension Films; co-production with Canadian Television Fund, Harold Greenberg Fund, The Movie Network, Natural Nylon, Téléfilm Canada, Serendipity Point Films, UGC | ||
The Mighty Peking Man | Meng Hua Ho | re-release | |||
May 7, 1999 | The Castle | Rob Sitch | |||
June 18, 1999 | An Ideal Husband | Oliver Parker | |||
June 25, 1999 | My Son the Fanatic | Udayan Prasad | |||
June 25, 1999 | Rogue Trader | James Dearden | |||
July 2, 1999 | The Lovers on the Bridge | Leos Carax | distribution | ||
July 23, 1999 | My Life So Far | Hugh Hudson | |||
August 3, 1999 | Tale of the Mummy | Russell Mulcahy | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
August 20, 1999 | Teaching Mrs. Tingle | Kevin Williamson | distribution | ||
August 25, 1999 | In Too Deep | Michael Rymer | released under Dimension Films | ||
August 27, 1999 | The Very Thought of You | Nick Hamm | |||
September 1, 1999 | Outside Providence | Michael Corrente | |||
September 10, 1999 | B. Monkey | Michael Radford | |||
September 24, 1999 | Guinevere | Audrey Wells | |||
October 1, 1999 | Happy, Texas | Mark Illsley | |||
October 8, 1999 | The Grandfather | José Luis Garci | |||
October 19, 1999 | Children of the Corn 666: Isaac's Return | Kari Skogland | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
October 29, 1999 | Music of the Heart | Wes Craven | |||
October 29, 1999 | Princess Mononoke | Hayao Miyazaki | English dub, distributor, produced by Studio Ghibli | ||
November 19, 1999 | Mansfield Park | Patricia Rozema | |||
December 1, 1999 | Spanish Fly | Daphna Kastner | |||
December 3, 1999 | Holy Smoke! | Jane Campion | |||
December 10, 1999 | The Cider House Rules | Lasse Hallström | nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture | ||
December 10, 1999 | Diamonds | John Asher | |||
December 25, 1999 | The Talented Mr. Ripley | Anthony Minghella | international distribution only; co-production with Mirage Enterprises and Paramount Pictures | ||
January 18, 2000 | From Dusk Till Dawn 3: The Hangman's Daughter | P. J. Pesce | released under Dimension Films; co-production with A Band Apart and Los Hooligans Productions | ||
January 21, 2000 | Down to You | Kris Isacsson | USD 9 million | USD 24,419,914 | |
February 4, 2000 | Scream 3 | Wes Craven | released under Dimension Films; co-production with Konrad Pictures and Craven-Maddalena Films | ||
February 25, 2000 | Reindeer Games | John Frankenheimer | released under Dimension Films | USD 45 million | USD 10 million |
March 14, 2000 | The Prophecy 3: The Ascent | Patrick Lussier | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
April 14, 2000 | East Is East | Damien O'Donnell | GBP 1.9 million | GBP 10 million | |
April 18, 2000 | Committed | Lisa Krueger | USD 3 million | USD 40,361 | |
May 5, 2000 | Human Traffic | Justin Kerrigan | distribution | GBP 2.2 million | GBP 2.5 million |
May 12, 2000 | Hamlet | Michael Almereyda | USD 2,046,433 | ||
June 9, 2000 | Love's Labour's Lost | Kenneth Branagh | USD 13 million | USD 299,792 | |
June 14, 2000 | The Crow: Salvation | Bharat Nalluri | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video; co-production with IMF, Edward R. Pressman Film Corporation, Jeff Most Productions, Pacifica Film Development | ||
June 16, 2000 | Boys and Girls | Robert Iscove | released under Dimension Films | ||
Butterfly's Tongue | José Luis Cuerda | EUR 2,211,800 | EUR 4,632,493 | ||
July 7, 2000 | Scary Movie | Keenen Ivory Wayans | released under Dimension Films; co-production with Wayans Bros. Entertainment, Gold/Miller Productions, Brad Grey Pictures | ||
September 1, 2000 | Highlander: Endgame | Doug Aarniokoski | USD 25 million | USD 15,843,608 | |
September 8, 2000 | Backstage | Chris Fiore | released under Dimension Films | ||
October 3, 2000 | Hellraiser: Inferno | Scott Derrickson | released under Dimension Films, direct-to-video | ||
October 17, 2000 | Beowulf | Graham Baker | |||
October 20, 2000 | The Legend of Drunken Master | Lau Kar-leung
Jackie Chan (uncredited) |
US distribution only, released under Dimension Films | ||
The Yards | James Gray | USD 24 million | USD 889,352 | ||
November 15, 2000 | Bounce | Don Roos | USD 35 million | USD 53,425,292 | |
December 1, 2000 | A Hard Day's Night | Richard Lester | theatrical re-release of 1964 film | ||
December 22, 2000 | Dracula 2000 | Patrick Lussier | released under Dimension Films; co-production with Neo Art & Logic | ||
December 25, 2000 | All the Pretty Horses | Billy Bob Thornton | co-production with Columbia Pictures | USD 57 million | USD 18,133,495 |
December 25, 2000 | Malèna | Giuseppe Tornatore | USD 14,493,284 | ||
December 25, 2000 | Vatel | Roland Joffé | USD 51,080 | ||
January 5, 2001 | Chocolat | Lasse Hallström | nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture | USD 25 million | USD 152,699,946 |
February 9, 2001 | The Taste of Others | Agnès Jaoui | EUR 9,020,000 | EUR 31,645,040 | |
March 7, 2001 | Blow Dry | Paddy Breathnach | Final film released under the original Miramax brand. | USD 637,769 | |
March 9, 2001 | Get Over It | Tommy O'Haver | The final film properly released under the original Dimension Films, co-production with Ignite Entertainment and Morpheus | ||
March 30, 2001 | Spy Kids | Robert Rodriguez | Some early projector prints of the film still had the Dimension Films and Miramax logos while the proper projector prints contained the Touchstone Pictures logo only. co-production with Troublemaker Studios |
Current Miramax (2014-present)[]
Release date | Title | Director | Notes | Budget | Gross |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
August 22, 2014 | Sin City: A Dame to Kill For | Robert Rodriguez, Frank Miller | co-production with Aldamisa Entertainment and Troublemaker Studios. First film released under the current Miramax company. | $65 million | $39.4 million |
January 16, 2015 | The Wedding Ringer | Jeremy Garelick | co-production with Screen Gems and Rainforest Films | $23 million | $79.8 million |
July 17, 2015 | Mr. Holmes | Bill Condon | co-production with BBC Films, See-Saw Films, AI-Film and FilmNation Entertainment | $25.5 million | |
August 26, 2016 | Southside with You | Richard Tanne | co-distribution with Roadside Attractions | $1.5 million | $6.3 million |
September 2, 2016 | The 9th Life of Louis Drax | Alexandre Aja | co-production with Summit Premiere & Brightlight Pictures | $263,463 | |
September 16, 2016 | Bridget Jones's Baby | Sharon Maguire | co-production with Universal Pictures, BBC Films, Working Title Films, and StudioCanal | $35 million | $211.8 million |
November 23, 2016 | Bad Santa 2 | Mark Waters | co-production with Broad Green Pictures, Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions and Mandeville Films | $26 million | $23 million |
July 6, 2018 | Whitney | Kevin Macdonald | co-production with Roadside Attractions and Altitude Film Distribution | $4.7 million | |
October 19, 2018 | Halloween | David Gordon Green | co-production with Universal Pictures, Blumhouse Productions and Rough House Pictures | $10 million | $253.7 million |
May 24, 2019 | The Perfection | Richard Shepard | produced by; distributed by Blockbuster Entertainment[1] | N/A | N/A |
October 15, 2019 | Jay and Silent Bob Reboot | Kevin Smith | co-production with DreamWorks Pictures, Touchstone Pictures, Destro Films, Mewesings, SModCo, View Askew Productions, Hideout Pictures, and Intercut Capital; distributed by Saban Films | $10 million | $4.7 million |
January 24, 2020 | The Gentlemen[2] | Guy Ritchie | produced by; distributed by DreamWorks Pictures, Touchstone Pictures and Reliance Entertainment | $22 million | $115 million |
Upcoming films[]
Release date | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
October 14, 2020 | Halloween Kills | David Gordon Green | co-production with Universal Pictures, Blumhouse Productions, Trancas International Pictures, and Rough House Productions |
November 11, 2020 | Uncle Frank | Alan Ball | produced by; distributed by Blockbuster Entertainment |
January 15, 2021 | Wrath of Man | Guy Ritchie | produced by; distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
March 19, 2021[3] | City of Lies | Brad Furman | co-production with Global Road Entertainment and Good Films[4][5][6]; distributed by Saban Films |
August 27, 2021 | He's All That | Mark Waters | distributed by Blockbuster Entertainment; co-production with Offspring Entertainment |
October 15, 2021 | Halloween Ends | David Gordon Green | co-production with Universal Pictures, Blumhouse Productions, Trancas International Pictures, and Rough House Productions |
December 17, 2021 | Mother/Android | Mattson Tomlin | co-production with Springbok Productions and 6th & Idaho Moving Picture Company; distributed by Blockbuster Entertainment |
January 21, 2022 | Operation Fortune | Guy Ritchie | distributed by Paramount Pictures; co-production with Springbok Productions |
TBA | The Georgetown Project | M.A. Fortin and Joshua John Miller | co-production with Outerbanks Entertainment |
TBA | Free Radicals | ||
TBA | Silent Retreat | ||
TBA | Confess, Fletch | ||
TBA | Limbo | ||
TBA | The Bee Keeper | ||
TBA | The Holdovers |
References[]
- ↑ D'Alessandro, Anthony (October 5, 2018). Allison Williams & Logan Browning Miramax Thriller ‘The Perfection’ Snapped Up By Netflix. Retrieved on December 26, 2018.
- ↑ Matthew McConaughey to Star in Guy Ritchie’s ‘Toff Guys’ With Kate Beckinsale, Henry Golding (EXCLUSIVE) (2018-10-10).
- ↑ Hipes, Patrick (2018-08-06). Johnny Depp’s ‘City Of Lies’ Movie Pulled From Release Schedule (en-US). Deadline.
- ↑ Open Road Acquires Johnny Depp Crime Thriller 'Labyrinth' (September 19, 2016). Retrieved on February 12, 2017.
- ↑ Miramax CEO to step down (December 28, 2016). Retrieved on February 12, 2017.
- ↑ Miramax CEO Steven Schoch Exiting Company (December 27, 2016). Retrieved on February 12, 2017.
External links[]
Categories: Miramax films | Lists of films by studio | American films by studio | Lists of films released by Disney | ViacomCBS-related lists |
This page was last edited on 25 September 2020, at 19:26 (UTC).
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