From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Listing for films produced by the motion picture divisions of
CBS (a subsidiary of
Paramount Global ), includes
Cinema Center Films ,
CBS Theatrical Films and
CBS Films .
Copyright status
Currently the rights to all of these films are owned by
Paramount Pictures (through Viacom's acquisition of CBS in 2000), the CCF and CTF films are distributed by
Paramount Home Entertainment in the home media market. As for CBS Films,
Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions has the U.S. home entertainment distribution rights and the foreign theatrical and home entertainment distribution rights for all pre-2015 films,
[1] while
Lionsgate owns the distribution rights for the 2015–2019 releases. Paramount will assume distribution rights when their respective deals expire. As for TV rights for these libraries, they are owned by
CBS Media Ventures , with the pay cable rights for CBS Films going though sister company
Showtime Networks .
Cinema Center Films
With Six You Get Eggroll
[2] (August 7, 1968) Arwin Productions, Inc.
The April Fools
[2] (May 28, 1969) Jalem Productions, Inc.
Me, Natalie (July 13, 1969) Nob Hill Productions
[3]
Hail, Hero! (October 4, 1969) Halcyon Productions
[3]
The Royal Hunt of the Sun
[2] (October 6, 1969)
A Boy Named Charlie Brown (December 4, 1969)
United Feature Syndicate
[3]
The Reivers
[2] (December 25, 1969) Duo Productions, Solar Productions, Inc.
[3]
The Boys in the Band (March 17, 1970)
[3]
A Man Called Horse (April 29, 1970) Sandy Howard Productions Corp.
[3]
Something for Everyone (July 22, 1970) Media Productions
[3]
Darker than Amber (August 14, 1970)
[3]
Homer (September 21, 1970)
Palomar Pictures
[3]
Scrooge (November 5, 1970) National General Pictures
[3]
Rio Lobo Western (December 17, 1970) Malabar Productions
[3]
Little Big Man
[2] (December 23, 1970)
Big Jake (May 26, 1971)
[om 1] Batjac Productions, Inc.
[3]
Blue Water, White Death (June 1, 1971) Blue Water Film Corporation Productions
[3]
Who Is Harry Kellerman and Why Is He Saying Those Terrible Things About Me? (June 15, 1971)
[3]
Le Mans (June 23, 1971) Solar Productions
[3]
Figures in a Landscape (July 18, 1971) Cinecrest Film Ltd.
[3]
Come to Your Senses (October 1, 1971) Prana-Mendelson Productions
[3]
The African Elephant (October 1971) Dartmouth Productions
[3]
Something Big (November 11, 1971) Stanmore Productions, Inc., Penbar Productions, Inc.
[3]
The Christian Licorice Store (November 24, 1971)
[3]
The Little Ark (March 1972) Robert B. Radnitz Productions Ltd.
[3]
The War Between Men and Women (June 2, 1972) Jalem Productions, Inc., Lienroc Productions
[3]
The Revengers (June 21, 1972)
[3]
Prime Cut (June 28, 1972) Wizan Productions
[3]
Snoopy, Come Home (August 9, 1972) Lee Mendelson Film Productions, Inc., Bill Melendez Productions
[3]
Unmade projects
The following projects were announced but not made:
The Apollo of Bellac (1967), based on the play by Jean Giradou
Contrast (circa 1967), based on two short stories by
W. Somerset Maugham
Nelly Bly (circa 1967), a biopic of the famous reporter
Musical adaptation of
Treasure Island by
Elliot Kastner and
Jerry Gershwin
[4]
Yucatán (1971), a motorcycle adventure starring Steve McQueen
[5]
Man on a Nylon String (1971), an adventure tale to be made by Solar Productions but not starring Steve McQueen set in the Alps
[5]
Applegate's Gold (circa 1971), a Western for Solar Productions
[5]
Cutting Loose – unreleased documentary
[6]
CBS Theatrical Films
Release Date
Title
[7]
March 13, 1981
Back Roads
July 23, 1982
The Challenge
February 18, 1983
Table for Five
May 18, 1984
Finders Keepers
August 3, 1984
Grandview, U.S.A.
September 21, 1984
Windy City
October 26, 1984
American Dreamer
August 23, 1985
Better Off Dead
September 26, 1985
The Lightship
November 1, 1985
Eleni
November 8, 1985
Target
Cancelled film
Starblasters was to be a video game-themed movie, due to be released about Christmas time 1982, at least some of the film was to be computer-animated. It would have been the second video game-themed movie after
Tron which was released in July of that year.
[8]
CBS Films
Release Date
Title
Budget
Gross (worldwide)
Notes
January 22, 2010
Extraordinary Measures
$30 million
$15.1 million
Co-production with
Double Feature Films
April 23, 2010
The Back-up Plan
$35 million
$77.5 million
Co-production with
Escape Artists
November 24, 2010
Faster
$24 million
$35.5 million
Co-production with
TriStar Pictures and
Castle Rock Entertainment
January 28, 2011
The Mechanic
$40 million
$51.0 million
Co-production with
Millennium Films
March 4, 2011
Beastly
$17 million
$43.1 million
February 3, 2012
The Woman in Black
$13 million
$127.7 million
US distribution only, produced by
Hammer Pictures ,
UK Film Council ,
Alliance Films ,
Exclusive Media Group and
Cross Creek Pictures
March 9, 2012
Salmon Fishing in the Yemen
$14.5 million
$34.6 million
US distribution only, produced by
Lionsgate Films ,
UK Film Council and
BBC Films
September 7, 2012
The Words
$6 million
$13.2 million
October 12, 2012
Seven Psychopaths
$15 million
$33 million
Co-production with the
British Film Institute ,
Blueprint Pictures and
Film4 Productions
March 1, 2013
The Last Exorcism Part II
$5 million
$15.2 million
Co-production with
StudioCanal and
Strike Entertainment
May 31, 2013
The Kings of Summer
n/a
$1.4 million
Co-production with
Big Beach Films
July 26, 2013
The To Do List
$1.5 million
$3.9 million
November 1, 2013
Last Vegas
$28 million
$134.4 million
Co-production with
Good Universe
December 6, 2013
Inside Llewyn Davis
$11 million
$13+ million
US distribution only, produced by
StudioCanal ,
Scott Rudin Productions , and
Mike Zoss Productions
April 4, 2014
Afflicted
$318,000
$121,200
Co-production with
Entertainment One and
IM Global
April 25, 2014
Gambit
n/a
$14.2 million
US home video distribution only
[9]
August 15, 2014
What If
$11 million
$7.8 million
US distribution only, produced by
Entertainment One and
Telefilm Canada
September 26, 2014
Pride
$16.7 million
US distribution only, co-production with
20th Century Fox ,
BBC Films ,
British Film Institute ,
Canal+ ,
Ciné+ ,
Ingenious Media and
Pathé
February 20, 2015
The DUFF
$8.5 million
$43.5 million
Co-production with
Wonderland Sound and Vision and Vast Entertainment
November 13, 2015
Love the Coopers
$24 million
$41.1 million
Co-production with
Groundswell Productions ,
Imagine Entertainment , and Handwritten Films
March 25, 2016
Get a Job
Co-production with
Lionsgate Premiere and Double Feature Films
April 12, 2016
Flight 7500
[10]
$2.8 million
Co-distribution with
Lionsgate Films
August 12, 2016
Hell or High Water
$12 million
$37.9 million
Co-production with
Sidney Kimmel Entertainment ,
Odd Lot Entertainment , Film 44, and LBI Entertainment
October 7, 2016
Middle School: The Worst Years of My Life
$8.5 million
$23.3 million
Co-production with
Lionsgate Films , James Patterson Entertainment, and
Participant Media
December 21, 2016
Patriots Day
$40 million
[11]
$52.4 million
[11]
Co-distribution with
Lionsgate Films
March 10, 2017
The Sense of an Ending
Co-distribution with Lionsgate
[12]
June 2, 2017
Dean
$950,000
$254,536
September 15, 2017
American Assassin
$33 million
$66.7 million
International distribution by Lionsgate Films
February 2, 2018
Winchester
$3.5 million
[13]
$44 million
[14]
September 28, 2018
Hell Fest
[15]
$5.5 million
[16]
$18.2 million
[16]
Co-production with Valhalla Entertainment and Tucker Tooley Entertainment
November 16, 2018
At Eternity's Gate
[17]
$11.5 million
[18]
Co-production with Iconoclast and
Riverstone Pictures
March 15, 2019
Five Feet Apart
[19]
$7 million
$88.4 million
[20]
Co-distribution with
Lionsgate Films
June 7, 2019
Pavarotti
[21]
$5.9 million
[22]
August 9, 2019
Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark
[23]
$25 million
$104.5 million
[24]
Co-production with
Lionsgate Films and
Entertainment One
September 6, 2019
Strange but True
[25]
Co-production with
Lionsgate Films
October 11, 2019
Jexi
[26]
$5 million
$9.2 million
Last cinema release.
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