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This is a list of films produced by 20th Century Fox (now 20th Century Studios [1] ) from 1935 to 1939.
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
June 1, 1935 | Under the Pampas Moon | |
July 31, 1935 | Dante's Inferno | |
August 9, 1935 | Call of the Wild | distributed by United Artists; produced by 20th Century Pictures |
August 30, 1935 | Redheads on Parade | |
September 6, 1935 | Steamboat Round the Bend | |
September 13, 1935 | The Gay Deception | |
September 20, 1935 | Thunder in the Night | |
September 27, 1935 | Thunder Mountain | |
October 4, 1935 | Here's to Romance | |
October 11, 1935 | Charlie Chan in Shanghai | |
October 18, 1935 | This Is the Life | |
October 25, 1935 | Way Down East | |
Bad Boy | ||
November 1, 1935 | Music Is Magic | |
November 8, 1935 | Metropolitan | 20th Century Fox's first production. |
November 14, 1935 | The Man Who Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo | |
November 15, 1935 | Thanks a Million | |
November 22, 1935 | In Old Kentucky | |
November 29, 1935 | Navy Wife | |
December 6, 1935 | Show Them No Mercy! | |
December 13, 1935 | Your Uncle Dudley | |
December 20, 1935 | Whispering Smith Speaks | |
December 27, 1935 | The Littlest Rebel | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 3, 1936 | King of Burlesque | |
January 10, 1936 | Charlie Chan's Secret | |
January 17, 1936 | Paddy O'Day | |
January 24, 1936 | Professional Soldier | |
January 31, 1936 | My Marriage | |
February 7, 1936 | Every Saturday Night | |
February 14, 1936 | It Had to Happen | |
February 21, 1936 | Here Comes Trouble | |
February 28, 1936 | The Prisoner of Shark Island | |
March 6, 1936 | The Country Doctor | |
March 13, 1936 | Song and Dance Man | |
March 20, 1936 | Everybody's Old Man | |
March 27, 1936 | Charlie Chan at the Circus | |
O'Malley of the Mounted | ||
April 3, 1936 | Gentle Julia | |
April 10, 1936 | A Message to Garcia | distribution only; produced by 20th Century Pictures |
April 17, 1936 | Captain January | |
L'homme des Folies Bergère | French-language film, originally released in 1935; produced by 20th Century Pictures | |
April 24, 1936 | The Country Beyond | |
May 1, 1936 | Under Two Flags | |
May 8, 1936 | Champagne Charlie | |
May 15, 1936 | The First Baby | |
May 22, 1936 | Half Angel | |
June 5, 1936 | Private Number | |
June 12, 1936 | Little Miss Nobody | |
June 19, 1936 | Human Cargo | |
Sins of Man | ||
June 26, 1936 | The Crime of Dr. Forbes | |
July 3, 1936 | White Fang | |
The Border Patrolman | ||
July 10, 1936 | Educating Father | |
July 17, 1936 | High Tension | |
July 24, 1936 | Poor Little Rich Girl | |
36 Hours to Kill | ||
August 1, 1936 | To Mary – with Love | |
August 7, 1936 | Charlie Chan at the Race Track | |
August 14, 1936 | Girls' Dormitory | |
August 21, 1936 | Sing, Baby, Sing | |
August 28, 1936 | Star for a Night | |
September 4, 1936 | The Road to Glory | |
September 11, 1936 | Pepper | |
King of the Royal Mounted | ||
September 18, 1936 | Back to Nature | |
September 25, 1936 | Ramona | Fox's first all-Technicolor feature film. |
October 2, 1936 | Thank You, Jeeves! | |
October 9, 1936 | Ladies in Love | |
October 16, 1936 | Dimples | |
October 23, 1936 | Pigskin Parade | |
October 30, 1936 | 15 Maiden Lane | |
November 6, 1936 | Under Your Spell | |
Wild Brian Kent | ||
November 13, 1936 | Can This Be Dixie? | |
November 20, 1936 | Reunion | |
November 27, 1936 | White Hunter | |
December 11, 1936 | Banjo on My Knee | |
Laughing at Trouble | ||
December 18, 1936 | Career Woman | |
December 25, 1936 | Stowaway | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 7, 1938 | Tarzan's Revenge | |
City Girl | ||
January 14, 1938 | Change of Heart | |
Hawaiian Buckaroo | ||
January 21, 1938 | Charlie Chan at Monte Carlo | |
January 28, 1938 | Happy Landing | |
February 4, 1938 | International Settlement | |
February 11, 1938 | Checkers | |
February 18, 1938 | The Baroness and the Butler | |
March 4, 1938 | Sally, Irene and Mary | |
Love on a Budget | ||
March 11, 1938 | Walking Down Broadway | |
March 18, 1938 | Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm | |
March 25, 1938 | Mr. Moto's Gamble | |
April 1, 1938 | Island in the Sky | |
April 8, 1938 | Rawhide | |
April 15, 1938 | In Old Chicago | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture. co-production with Darryl F. Zanuck Productions |
April 22, 1938 | Battle of Broadway | |
April 29, 1938 | Four Men and a Prayer | |
May 6, 1938 | A Trip to Paris | |
May 13, 1938 | Kentucky Moonshine | |
May 20, 1938 | Rascals | |
May 27, 1938 | Kidnapped | |
June 3, 1938 | Josette | |
June 10, 1938 | One Wild Night | |
June 17, 1938 | Three Blind Mice | |
June 24, 1938 | Mr. Moto Takes a Chance | |
July 1, 1938 | Always Goodbye | |
July 8, 1938 | We're Going to Be Rich | |
Panamint's Bad Man | ||
July 15, 1938 | Passport Husband | |
July 22, 1938 | I'll Give a Million | |
July 29, 1938 | Little Miss Broadway | |
August 5, 1938 | Gateway | |
August 12, 1938 | Keep Smiling | |
August 16, 1938 | Alexander's Ragtime Band | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture. |
August 26, 1938 | Speed to Burn | |
September 2, 1938 | My Lucky Star | |
September 9, 1938 | Safety in Numbers | |
September 16, 1938 | Hold That Co-ed | |
September 23, 1938 | Time Out for Murder | |
September 30, 1938 | Straight, Place and Show | |
October 7, 1938 | Meet the Girls | |
October 14, 1938 | Five of a Kind | |
October 21, 1938 | Mysterious Mr. Moto | |
October 28, 1938 | Suez | |
Always in Trouble | ||
November 11, 1938 | Just Around the Corner | |
November 18, 1938 | Sharpshooters | |
November 25, 1938 | Submarine Patrol | |
December 2, 1938 | Road Demon | |
December 9, 1938 | Up the River | |
December 16, 1938 | Down on the Farm | |
December 23, 1938 | Thanks for Everything | |
December 30, 1938 | Kentucky |
Major film studios are production and distribution companies that release a substantial number of films annually and consistently command a significant share of box office revenue in a given market. In the American and international markets, the major film studios, often known simply as the majors or the Big Five studios, are commonly regarded as the five diversified media conglomerates whose various film production and distribution subsidiaries collectively command approximately 80 to 85% of U.S. box office revenue. The term may also be applied more specifically to the primary motion picture business subsidiary of each respective conglomerate.
Searchlight Pictures, Inc. is an American independent film production and distribution arm of The Walt Disney Studios, a subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company's Disney Entertainment division. Founded in 1994 as Fox Searchlight Pictures for 20th Century Fox, the studio focuses primarily on producing, distributing, and acquiring specialty films.
Blue Sky Studios, Inc. was an American visual effects and computer animation studio based in Greenwich, Connecticut. It was founded on February 22, 1987, by Chris Wedge, Michael Ferraro, Carl Ludwig, Alison Brown, David Brown, and Eugene Troubetzkoy after their employer, MAGI, one of the visual effects studios behind Tron, shut down. Using its in-house rendering software, the studio created visual effects for commercials and films before dedicating itself to animated film production. It produced 13 feature films, the first being Ice Age, released in 2002 by 20th Century Fox, and the final one being Spies in Disguise, released in 2019.
The Walt Disney Studios is a major division of the Disney Entertainment business segment of The Walt Disney Company best known for housing its multifaceted film studio divisions. Founded on October 16, 1923, and based mainly at the namesake studio lot in Burbank, California, it is the seventh-oldest global film studio and the fifth-oldest in the United States, a member of the Motion Picture Association (MPA) and one of the "Big Five" major film studios.
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures is an American film distributor within the Disney Entertainment division of the Walt Disney Company. It handles theatrical and occasional digital distribution, marketing and promotion for films produced and released by the Walt Disney Studios, including Walt Disney Pictures, Walt Disney Animation Studios, Pixar, Marvel Studios, Lucasfilm, 20th Century Studios, and internationally Searchlight Pictures; which operates its own autonomous theatrical distribution and marketing unit in the United States.
20th Century Home Entertainment was a home video distribution arm that distributed films produced by 20th Century Studios, Searchlight Pictures, and 20th Century Animation and several third-party studios, as well as television series by 20th Television, Searchlight Television, 20th Television Animation, and FX Productions in home entertainment formats.
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Fox 2000 Pictures was an American film production company within The Walt Disney Studios. It was a sister studio of the larger film studios 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight Pictures, specializing in producing independent films in mid-range releases that largely targeted underserved groups. The company dissolved on May 14, 2021, following the release of The Woman in the Window on Netflix, and the acquisition of 21st Century Fox by The Walt Disney Company on March 20, 2019.
20th Century Animation, Inc. is an American animation studio located in Century City, Los Angeles. Formed in 1994, it is organized as a division and label of 20th Century Studios, a subsidiary of the Walt Disney Studios, and is tasked with producing animated feature-length films. At one point, 20th Century Animation had two subsidiaries: Fox Animation Studios, which was shut down on June 26, 2000, and Blue Sky Studios, which was closed on April 10, 2021. Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment distributes the films produced by 20th Century Animation in home media under the 20th Century Home Entertainment banner.
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FoxNext, LLC was a virtual reality and theme park unit of 20th Century Fox, now known as 20th Century Studios. It was established in 2017 prior to Disney's acquisition of Fox and operated under the Disney Parks, Experiences and Products unit of The Walt Disney Company. It handled the development and publishing of virtual reality and augmented reality titles, as well as the development of 20th Century Studios's theme and amusement parks. The division's president was Salil Mehta, a former executive from NBCUniversal and The Walt Disney Company, who has been with Fox since 2013 and later returned to Disney after Disney acquired Fox in 2019 until on January 23, 2020, when the company's gaming assets were sold to Scopely.
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