The following is a list of feature films produced and distributed by the American studio Columbia Pictures from 1950 until 1959. While the company continued to make many of its films in-house, it increasingly also released films made by independent producers. [1]
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 1950 | All the King's Men | Remade in 2006; Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
January 5, 1950 | Mary Ryan, Detective | |
January 11, 1950 | The Nevadan | co-production with Scott-Brown Productions |
January 12, 1950 | Mark of the Gorilla | co-production with Sam Katzman Productions |
February 2, 1950 | Trail of the Rustlers | |
February 9, 1950 | Girls' School | |
February 15, 1950 | The Traveling Saleswoman | Co-production with Joan Davis Productions |
February 22, 1950 | Tyrant of the Sea | |
Mule Train | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions | |
Father Is a Bachelor | ||
March 9, 1950 | Blondie's Hero [N 1] | |
March 16, 1950 | A Woman of Distinction | |
March 18, 1950 | The Palomino | Co-production with Robert Cohn Productions |
April 1, 1950 | Cargo to Capetown | |
April 6, 1950 | Cody of the Pony Express | Serial film |
April 13, 1950 | Outcast of Black Mesa | |
Beware of Blondie [N 1] | ||
April 26, 1950 | Faust and the Devil | Co-production with Cineopra |
April 27, 1950 | Military Academy with That Tenth Avenue Gang | |
Kill the Umpire | ||
Captive Girl | ||
April 28, 1950 | No Sad Songs for Me | |
May 3, 1950 | The Doorman | Mexican film; co-production with Posa Films |
May 4, 1950 | Beauty on Parade | |
May 18, 1950 | Customs Agent | |
May 19, 1950 | Fortunes of Captain Blood | |
Cow Town | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions | |
June 1, 1950 | The Good Humor Man | |
Texas Dynamo | ||
Hoedown | ||
June 8, 1950 | State Penitentiary | |
June 21, 1950 | Rogues of Sherwood Forest | |
July 1, 1950 | 711 Ocean Drive | Co-production with Frank Seltzer Productions |
July 13, 1950 | David Harding, Counterspy | |
July 20, 1950 | Atom Man vs. Superman | distribution only; Serial film |
July 25, 1950 | Beyond the Purple Hills | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
August 3, 1950 | Streets of Ghost Town | |
On the Isle of Samoa | ||
August 17, 1950 | The Petty Girl | |
August 30, 1950 | When You're Smiling | |
August 1950 | In a Lonely Place | co-production with Santana Pictures Corporation |
Convicted | ||
September 8, 1950 | Rookie Fireman | |
September 14, 1950 | Across the Badlands | |
September 15, 1950 | The Fuller Brush Girl | |
September 30, 1950 | Indian Territory | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
October 1950 | Between Midnight and Dawn | |
October 1, 1950 | Raiders of Tomahawk Creek | |
October 25, 1950 | Last of the Buccaneers | Co-production with SK Pictures |
November 1, 1950 | Chain Gang | |
November 2, 1950 | Harriet Craig | |
Pirates of the High Seas | Serial film | |
November 15, 1950 | The Texan Meets Calamity Jane | |
Emergency Wedding | ||
November 16, 1950 | The Tougher They Come | |
November 20, 1950 | The Blazing Sun | Co-production with Gene Autry Productions |
November 21, 1950 | Counterspy Meets Scotland Yard | |
November 22, 1950 | Pygmy Island | |
December 1, 1950 | The Killer That Stalked New York | Co-production with Robert Cohn Productions |
Lightning Guns | ||
December 2, 1950 | He's a Cockeyed Wonder | |
December 12, 1950 | Revenue Agent | |
December 24, 1950 | The Flying Missile | |
December 25, 1950 | Born Yesterday | Remade in 1993; Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 29, 1950 | Frontier Outpost | |
December 1950 | Stage to Tucson | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 2, 1951 | Gasoline Alley | |
January 15, 1951 | Prairie Roundup | |
January 17, 1951 | Al Jennings of Oklahoma | |
January 30, 1951 | Gene Autry and the Mounties | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
February 14, 1951 | A Yank in Korea | |
February 23, 1951 | Ridin' the Outlaw Trail | |
February 26, 1951 | Fury of the Congo | |
March 5, 1951 | Flame of Stamboul | |
March 8, 1951 | My True Story | |
March 10, 1951 | Valentino | Co-production with Edward Small Productions |
March 15, 1951 | Fort Savage Raiders | |
Texans Never Cry | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions | |
March 1951 | M | distribution only; co-production with Superior Productions |
April 1, 1951 | Santa Fe | Co-production with Scott-Brown Productions |
April 16, 1951 | Whirlwind | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
April 18, 1951 | The Brave Bulls | Co-production with Rossen Enterprises |
May 2, 1951 | The Seven Macho Men | Co-production with Posa Films |
May 4, 1951 | Her First Romance | |
May 5, 1951 | Smuggler's Gold | |
May 30, 1951 | Snake River Desperadoes | |
When the Redskins Rode | Co-production with Esskay Pictures Corporation | |
May 31, 1951 | Roar of the Iron Horse | Serial film |
Lorna Doone | co-production with Edward Small Productions | |
June 3, 1951 | The Texas Rangers | Remake of 1936 film; co-production with Edward Small Productions |
June 12, 1951 | China Corsair | |
June 13, 1951 | Sirocco | co-production with Santana Pictures Corporation |
June 20, 1951 | Silver Canyon | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
June 27, 1951 | Mask of the Avenger | |
July 1, 1951 | The Big Gusher | |
July 13, 1951 | Never Trust a Gambler | |
July 16, 1951 | Hurricane Island | Co-production with Esskay Pictures Corporation |
July 24, 1951 | Pickup | Co-production with Forum Productions and Hugo Haas Productions |
July 26, 1951 | Bonanza Town | |
July 1951 | Two of a Kind | |
August 2, 1951 | The Whistle at Eaton Falls | distribution only; produced by Louis De Rochemont Associates and RD-DR Corporation |
August 13, 1951 | The Magic Face | Co-production with Mort Briskin-Robert Smith Productions |
The Lady and the Bandit | ||
August 14, 1951 | Cyclone Fury | |
August 23, 1951 | Criminal Lawyer | |
Chain of Circumstance | ||
September 10, 1951 | Saturday's Hero | |
September 13, 1951 | Mysterious Island | Serial film |
September 17, 1951 | Corky of Gasoline Alley | |
September 21, 1951 | The Mob | |
September 30, 1951 | The Hills of Utah | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
September 1951 | Sunny Side of the Street | |
October 1951 | Five | co-production with Arch Oboler Productions |
October 4, 1951 | Jungle Manhunt | |
October 18, 1951 | The Magic Carpet | Co-production with The Katzman Corporation and Esskay Pictures Corporation |
October 24, 1951 | The Harlem Globetrotters | |
The Family Secret | Co-production with Santana Pictures Corporation | |
October 26, 1951 | Ten Tall Men | Co-production with Norma Productions and Halburt Productions |
October 30, 1951 | The Kid from Amarillo | |
October 31, 1951 | The Son of Dr. Jekyll | |
November 5, 1951 | The Barefoot Mailman | co-production with Robert Cohn Productions |
November 12, 1951 | Purple Heart Diary | |
November 20, 1951 | Valley of Fire | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
December 2, 1951 | Man in the Saddle | Co-production with Scott-Brown Productions |
December 15, 1951 | Pecos River | |
December 20, 1951 | Death of a Salesman | Co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions |
December 27, 1951 | Captain Video | Serial film |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 2, 1952 | Indian Uprising | Co-production with Edward Small Productions |
January 11, 1952 | Boots Malone | |
January 15, 1952 | The Old West | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
January 16, 1952 | Scandal Sheet | Co-production with Motion Picture Investors |
January 21, 1952 | Harem Girl | |
January 30, 1952 | If I Were a Congressman | Co-production with Posa Films |
January 31, 1952 | Smoky Canyon | |
The First Time | Co-production with Norma Productions and Halburt Productions | |
February 28, 1952 | The Hawk of Wild River | |
Okinawa | ||
March 13, 1952 | The Marrying Kind | |
March 17, 1952 | Jungle Jim in the Forbidden Land | |
March 18, 1952 | Night Stage to Galveston | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
March 20, 1952 | My Six Convicts | Co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions |
April 3, 1952 | A Yank in Indo-China | Co-production with Esskay Pictures Corporation |
April 10, 1952 | King of the Congo | Serial film |
April 20, 1952 | Laramie Mountains | |
April 29, 1952 | Walk East on Beacon! | Co-production with RD-DR Productions |
May 7, 1952 | Thief of Damascus | |
May 9, 1952 | The Sniper | Co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions |
May 15, 1952 | Paula | |
May 30, 1952 | Apache Country | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
May 1952 | Sound Off | |
June 1, 1952 | Brave Warrior | Co-production Esskay Pictures Corporation |
Montana Territory | ||
June 15, 1952 | The Rough, Tough West | |
June 25, 1952 | The Brigand | Co-production with Edward Small Productions |
July 1, 1952 | Cripple Creek | |
July 4, 1952 | California Conquest | Co-production with Esskay Pictures Corporation |
July 7, 1952 | Red Snow | Co-production with All American Film Corporation |
July 12, 1952 | Junction City | |
July 24, 1952 | Blackhawk | Distribution only; Serial film |
July 25, 1952 | Barbed Wire | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
July 29, 1952 | Affair in Trinidad | Co-production with The Beckworth Corporation |
July 1952 | Storm Over Tibet | Co-production with Summit Productions |
August 19, 1952 | The Kid from Broken Gun | |
August 27, 1952 | Captain Pirate | |
Last Train from Bombay | ||
September 4, 1952 | Assignment – Paris! | |
September 10, 1952 | The Atomic Fireman | Mexican film; co-production with Posa Films |
September 30, 1952 | Wagon Team | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
September 1952 | Strange Fascination | Co-production with Hugo Haas Productions |
Rainbow 'Round My Shoulder | ||
October 8, 1952 | The Golden Hawk | Co-production with Esskay Pictures Corporation |
The Four Poster | co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions | |
October 30, 1952 | The Happy Time | |
November 6, 1952 | Son of Geronimo | Serial film |
November 15, 1952 | Hangman's Knot | Co-production with Producers-Actors Corporation |
November 30, 1952 | Blue Canadian Rockies | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
November 1952 | Voodoo Tiger | |
December 9, 1952 | The Pathfinder | |
December 10, 1952 | Invasion U.S.A. | Co-production with American Pictures Company and Mutual Productions of the West |
December 25, 1952 | The Member of the Wedding | Co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions |
December 1952 | Eight Iron Men | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 1953 | Winning of the West | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
February 1953 | Target Hong Kong | |
February 1, 1953 | Last of the Comanches | |
February 3, 1953 | Savage Mutiny | |
March 3, 1953 | All Ashore | |
March 7, 1953 | Prince of Pirates | Co-production with Esskay Pictures Corporation |
March 20, 1953 | The Glass Wall | |
March 24, 1953 | Salome | Co-production with The Beckworth Corporation |
March 25, 1953 | On Top of Old Smoky | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
April 1, 1953 | Jack McCall, Desperado | |
April 6, 1953 | One Girl's Confession | Co-production with Hugo Haas Productions |
April 7, 1953 | Problem Girls | |
April 9, 1953 | Man in the Dark | Columbia's first 3D film |
May 1, 1953 | Fort Ti | 3D film |
May 5, 1953 | Ambush at Tomahawk Gap | |
The Juggler | Co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions | |
May 8, 1953 | Serpent of the Nile | |
May 20, 1953 | The 49th Man | |
Siren of Bagdad | Co-production with Esskay Pictures Corporation | |
Goldtown Ghost Riders | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions | |
June 4, 1953 | The Lost Planet | Serial film |
July 1, 1953 | The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T | Co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions; only film created by children's author Dr. Seuss |
July 4, 1953 | The Last Posse | |
July 5, 1953 | Pack Train | distribution only produced by Gene Autry Productions |
July 17, 1953 | Let's Do It Again | |
July 20, 1953 | Flame of Calcutta | Co-production with Esskay Pictures Corporation |
July 29, 1953 | Valley of Head Hunters | |
July 30, 1953 | The Stranger Wore a Gun | 3D film; co-production with Scott-Brown Productions |
August 3, 1953 | Cruisin' Down the River | |
August 5, 1953 | From Here to Eternity | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
August 21, 1953 | Sky Commando | |
August 1953 | Mission Over Korea | Co-production with Robert Cohn Productions |
September 2, 1953 | The Photographer | Mexican film; co-production with Posa Films |
September 7, 1953 | China Venture | |
September 17, 1953 | The Great Adventures of Captain Kidd | Serial film |
September 20, 1953 | Saginaw Trail | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions |
September 1953 | Conquest of Cochise | |
October 1, 1953 | Combat Squad | Co-production with Jack Broder Productions Inc. |
October 14, 1953 | The Big Heat | |
October 1953 | Slaves of Babylon | |
November 3, 1953 | Prisoners of the Casbah | Co-production with The Katzman Corporation |
Last of the Pony Riders | distribution only; produced by Gene Autry Productions | |
November 10, 1953 | Paris Model | Co-production with American Pictures Company |
November 11, 1953 | Gun Fury | 3D film |
December 2, 1953 | The Nebraskan | |
December 3, 1953 | El Alamein | |
December 15, 1953 | Killer Ape | |
December 23, 1953 | Miss Sadie Thompson | 3D film; co-production with The Beckworth Corporation |
December 24, 1953 | Bad for Each Other | |
December 30, 1953 | Paratrooper | Released on August 11 in the UK as The Red Beret; co-production with Warwick Films |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 1954 | Charge of the Lancers | |
The Wild One | co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions | |
February 24, 1954 | Bait | Co-production with Hugo Haas Productions |
March 1954 | It Should Happen to You | |
March 1, 1954 | The Battle of Rogue River | |
March 10, 1954 | Drive a Crooked Road | |
April 2, 1954 | Jesse James vs. the Daltons | 3D film |
April 7, 1954 | The Mad Magician | |
April 15, 1954 | Gunfighters of the Northwest | Serial film |
April 23, 1954 | Drums of Tahiti | 3D film |
April 1954 | The Iron Glove | |
The Price of Living | U.S.A. distributor; co-production with Internacional Cinematográfica | |
May 1, 1954 | Massacre Canyon | |
May 3, 1954 | The Miami Story | Co-production with Clover Productions |
May 10, 1954 | Indiscretion of an American Wife [N 2] | distribution only; produced by Produzione Films Vittorio De Sica and Selznick International Pictures |
June 6, 1954 | The Saracen Blade | |
June 24, 1954 | The Caine Mutiny | Co-production with Stanley Kramer Productions |
June 1954 | Jungle Man-Eaters | |
July 3, 1954 | The Outlaw Stallion | |
July 16, 1954 | Hell Below Zero | Co-production with Warwick Films |
July 28, 1954 | On the Waterfront | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture; co-production with Horizon Pictures |
August 1, 1954 | The Law vs. Billy the Kid | |
August 6, 1954 | Human Desire | |
Pushover | ||
September 1, 1954 | A Tailored Gentleman | Mexican film; co-production with Posa Films |
September 2, 1954 | The Black Dakotas | |
September 3, 1954 | O Cangaceiro | Co-production with Vera Cruz Studios |
September 4, 1954 | A Bullet Is Waiting | co-production with Welsch Productions, Inc. |
October 28, 1954 | The Black Knight | Co-production with Warwick Films |
November 1, 1954 | Cannibal Attack | |
The Detective | U.S. distribution only; produced by Facet Productions | |
November 4, 1954 | Three Hours to Kill | |
November 5, 1954 | Fire Over Africa | U.S. distribution only |
November 10, 1954 | Phffft! | |
November 11, 1954 | Riding with Buffalo Bill | Serial film |
November 1954 | The Affairs of Messalina | U.S. distribution only; produced by CEI Incom, Produzione Gallone, Filmsonor and Suevia Films |
December 1, 1954 | Masterson of Kansas | |
December 4, 1954 | They Rode West | |
December 1954 | The Bamboo Prison | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 26, 1955 | The Violent Men | Filmed in CinemaScope |
February 1, 1955 | Ten Wanted Men | Co-production with Ranown Pictures Corporation and Scott-Brown Productions |
February 9, 1955 | The Long Gray Line | Co-production with Rota Productions; Filmed in CinemaScope |
February 10, 1955 | Pirates of Tripoli | Co-production with The Katzman Corporation |
February 24, 1955 | Three for the Show | Filmed in CinemaScope |
February 1955 | Women's Prison | |
March 19, 1955 | Tight Spot | |
March 27, 1955 | Wyoming Renegades | |
April 19, 1955 | Cell 2455, Death Row | |
April 30, 1955 | New Orleans Uncensored | |
April 1955 | Jungle Moon Men | |
May 1, 1955 | Seminole Uprising | |
May 1955 | The End of the Affair | Co-production with Coronado Productions |
June 9, 1955 | The Adventures of Captain Africa | Serial film |
June 10, 1955 | 5 Against the House | Co-production with Dayle Productions |
June 22, 1955 | Bring Your Smile Along | |
July 13, 1955 | The Night Holds Terror | |
July 1955 | It Came from Beneath the Sea | Co-production with Clover Productions |
Creature with the Atom Brain | ||
Chicago Syndicate | ||
August 24, 1955 | Apache Ambush | |
August 31, 1955 | Drop the Curtain | Mexican film; co-production with Posa Films |
August 31, 1955 | The Man from Laramie | Co-production with William Goetz Productions; Filmed in CinemaScope |
September 1, 1955 | The Gun That Won the West | Co-production with Clover Productions |
September 14, 1955 | Footsteps in the Fog | Co-production with Frankovich Productions |
September 16, 1955 | Duel on the Mississippi | Co-production with Clover Productions |
September 22, 1955 | My Sister Eileen | Filmed in CinemaScope |
September 1955 | Special Delivery | Co-production with Trans-Rhein Film |
October 1955 | Count Three and Pray | Co-production with Copa Productions; Filmed in CinemaScope |
October 1, 1955 | Devil Goddess | |
October 14, 1955 | A Prize of Gold | Co-production with Warwick Films |
November 7, 1955 | Queen Bee | |
November 23, 1955 | Three Stripes in the Sun | |
November 30, 1955 | The Crooked Web | Co-production with Clover Productions |
November 1955 | Teen-Age Crime Wave | |
December 7, 1955 | The Last Frontier | Filmed in CinemaScope |
December 11, 1955 | The Prisoner | Co-production with Facet Productions and London Independent Producers |
December 15, 1955 | A Lawless Street | Co-production with Producer-Actors Corporation and Scott-Brown Productions |
December 1955 | Hell's Horizon | Co-production with Gravis Productions |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 6, 1956 | Perils of the Wilderness | Serial film |
January 1956 | Inside Detroit | Co-production with Clover Productions |
February 15, 1956 | Fury at Gunsight Pass | |
February 16, 1956 | Picnic | Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture Filmed in CinemaScope |
February 1956 | The Houston Story | Co-production with Clover Productions |
Battle Stations | ||
Joe MacBeth | Co-production with Frankovich Productions | |
March 1956 | Hot Blood | Filmed in CinemaScope |
March 2, 1956 | Uranium Boom | Co-production with Clover Productions |
March 21, 1956 | Rock Around the Clock | Co-production with Clover Productions |
March 27, 1956 | The Cockleshell Heroes | Co-production with Warwick Films Filmed in CinemaScope |
March 31, 1956 | The Harder They Fall | |
April 1, 1956 | Blackjack Ketchum, Desperado | Co-production with Clover Productions |
April 11, 1956 | The Last Ten Days | Co-production with Cosmopol-Film |
April 24, 1956 | Jubal | Filmed in CinemaScope |
April 1956 | Over-Exposed | |
June 20, 1956 | Safari | Co-production with Warwick Films Filmed in CinemaScope |
June 21, 1956 | The Eddy Duchin Story | Filmed in CinemaScope |
June 25, 1956 | Secret of Treasure Mountain | |
July 31, 1956 | Storm Center | Co-production with Phoenix Productions |
July 1956 | The Werewolf | Co-production with Clover Productions |
Earth vs. the Flying Saucers | ||
Bermuda Affair | Co-production with Bermuda Studio Productions | |
August 1, 1956 | Autumn Leaves | Co-production with William Goetz Productions |
August 4, 1956 | Blazing the Overland Trail | Serial film |
August 12, 1956 | He Laughed Last | |
August 22, 1956 | The Solid Gold Cadillac | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
August 27, 1956 | Papa, Mama, the Maid and I | U.S. distribution only; produced by Concinor, Champs-Élysées Productions, Concinex and Lambor Films |
September 7, 1956 | Port Afrique | Co-production with Coronado Productions |
September 24, 1956 | The Silent World | U.S. distribution only; produced by Rank Organisation, FSJYC Production, Requins Associés, Société Filmad and Titanus |
September 1956 | 1984 | Co-production with Holiday Film Productions Ltd. |
Miami Exposé | Co-production with Clover Productions | |
October 2, 1956 | Cha-Cha-Cha Boom! | Co-production with Four-Leaf Productions |
October 31, 1956 | You Can't Run Away from It | Filmed in CinemaScope |
October 1956 | Spin a Dark Web | Co-production with Frankovich Productions |
November 1, 1956 | The White Squaw | |
November 19, 1956 | Seven Samurai | U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by Toho |
November 1956 | Suicide Mission | U.S. distribution only; produced by Nordsjøfilm and North Sea |
Odongo | Co-production with Warwick Films; Filmed in CinemaScope | |
Reprisal! | Co-production with Romson Productions | |
December 5, 1956 | Nightfall | Co-production with Copa Productions |
December 14, 1956 | Don't Knock the Rock | Co-production with Clover Productions |
December 25, 1956 | Full of Life | |
December 1956 | Ride the High Iron | Co-production with Meridian Productions |
7th Cavalry | Co-production with Producers-Actors Corporation and Scott-Brown Productions | |
Rumble on the Docks | Co-production with Clover Productions | |
The Gamma People | Co-production with Warwick Films | |
The Last Man to Hang? | Co-production with Association of Cinema Technicians | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 1957 | Zarak | co-production with Warwick Films; Filmed in CinemaScope |
February 1957 | Wicked as They Come | Co-production with Frankovich Productions |
February 1, 1957 | Utah Blaine | co-production with Clover Productions |
March 6, 1957 | The Shadow on the Window | |
March 25, 1957 | The Tall T | Co-production with Producers-Actors Corporation and Scott-Brown Productions |
March 1957 | Zombies of Mora Tau | Co-production with Clover Productions |
The Man Who Turned to Stone | ||
April 1, 1957 | The Phantom Stagecoach | |
April 12, 1957 | The Strange One | Co-production with Horizon Pictures |
April 17, 1957 | Abandon Ship! | Co-production with Copa Productions |
April 25, 1957 | The Garment Jungle | |
April 1957 | The Guns of Fort Petticoat | co-production with Brown-Murphy Productions |
May 1, 1957 | Sierra Stranger | Co-production with Acireman Productions |
May 21, 1957 | Torero | Co-production with Producciones Barbachano Ponce and Producciones Olmeca |
May 1957 | Hellcats of the Navy | Co-production with Morningside Productions |
June 1, 1957 | Beyond Mombasa | co-production with Hemisphere Pictures and Todon Productions |
June 1957 | Calypso Heat Wave | co-production with Clover Productions |
The Night the World Exploded | ||
The Giant Claw | ||
The Burglar | co-production with Samson Productions | |
20 Million Miles to Earth | co-production with Morningside Productions | |
July 26, 1957 | The Young Don't Cry | |
July 1957 | The 27th Day | |
August 2, 1957 | Jeanne Eagels | |
August 7, 1957 | 3:10 to Yuma | Remade in 2007 |
August 8, 1957 | Fire Down Below | co-production with Warwick Films; Filmed in CinemaScope |
August 13, 1957 | Pickup Alley | |
August 17, 1957 | Operation Mad Ball | |
August 1957 | No Time to Be Young | |
Town on Trial | ||
September 1957 | The Parson and the Outlaw | co-production with Charles 'Buddy' Rogers Productions |
Escape from San Quentin | Co-production with Clover Productions | |
The Brothers Rico | Co-production with William Goetz Productions | |
October 9, 1957 | Raquel's Shoeshiner | Co-production with Posa Films |
October 25, 1957 | Pal Joey | Co-production with Essex Productions and George Sidney Productions; Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
How to Murder a Rich Uncle | Co-production with Warwick Films; Filmed in CinemaScope | |
October 31, 1957 | Decision at Sundown | Co-production with Producer-Actors Corporation and Scott-Brown Productions |
October 1957 | Domino Kid | Co-production with Rorvic Productions and Calhoun-Orsatti Enterprises |
The Tijuana Story | Co-production with Clover Productions | |
November 6, 1957 | The Story of Esther Costello | Co-production with Romulus Films |
December 14, 1957 | The Bridge on the River Kwai | Co-production with Horizon Pictures Winner of the Academy Award for Best Pictures Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama; Filmed in CinemaScope |
December 16, 1957 | The Admirable Crichton | Co-production with Modern Screenplay Productions |
December 1957 | The Hard Man | Co-production with Romson Productions |
The Long Haul | Co-production with Marksman Films | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 1958 | The World Was His Jury | Co-production with Clover Productions |
Return to Warbow | ||
January 7, 1958 | Cowboy | co-production with Phoenix Pictures |
February 1958 | Going Steady | co-production with Clover Productions |
Bonjour Tristesse | co-production with Wheel Productions; Filmed in CinemaScope | |
March 3, 1958 | The True Story of Lynn Stuart | |
March 30, 1958 | Night of the Demon | US distribution of a UK film; co-production with Sabre Film Production |
March 1958 | Bitter Victory | Co-production with Transcontinental Films and Robert Laffont Productions; Filmed in CinemaScope |
April 1958 | High Flight | Co-production with Warwick Films; Filmed in CinemaScope |
June 1, 1958 | The Revenge of Frankenstein | U.S. distributor; produced by Hammer Film Productions |
June 11, 1958 | The Camp on Blood Island | |
The Lineup | Co-production with Pajemer Productions | |
June 22, 1958 | Gideon of Scotland Yeard | |
June 24, 1958 | The Goddess | Co-production with Carnegie Productions |
June 25, 1958 | This Angry Age | co-production with Dino de Laurentiis Cinematografica |
Screaming Mimi | co-production with Sage Productions | |
June 1958 | The Case Against Brooklyn | Co-production with Morningside Productions |
Let's Rock | ||
July 1, 1958 | The Key | Co-production with Highroad and Open Road Films; Filmed in CinemaScope |
July 8, 1958 | She Played with Fire | Co-production with John Harvel Productions |
July 1958 | Crash Landing | Co-production with Clover Productions |
Gunman's Walk | Filmed in CinemaScope | |
Life Begins at 17 | Co-production with Clover Productions | |
August 1958 | Tank Force | U.S. distributor; produced by Warwick Films |
August 6, 1958 | Buchanan Rides Alone | Co-production with Producer-Actors Corporation and Scott-Brown Productions |
September 1, 1958 | Apache Territory | Co-production with Rorvic Productions |
September 17, 1958 | The Snorkel | U.S. distributor; produced by Hammer Film Productions |
September 1958 | Ghost of the China Sea | Co-production with Charles B. Griffith Productions & Polynesian Film Productions |
The Whole Truth | ||
October 23, 1958 | Housewife to Your Neighbor | Mexican film; co-production with Asociación Mexicana de la Cruz Roja and Posa Films |
October 1958 | Me and the Colonel | |
Kill Her Gently | ||
November 2, 1958 | Tarawa Beachhead | |
November 1958 | The Last Hurrah | |
December 23, 1958 | The 7th Voyage of Sinbad | |
December 25, 1958 | Bell, Book and Candle | Co-production with Phoenix Productions; Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Comedy |
December 1958 | The Man Inside | Co-production with Warwick Films; Filmed in CinemaScope |
Senior Prom | ||
Murder by Contract | Co-production with Orbit Productions | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 1, 1959 | Good Day for a Hanging | co-production with Morningside Productions |
January 30, 1959 | The Last Blitzkrieg | Co-production with Clover Productions |
February 10, 1959 | Forbidden Island | Co-production with Charles B. Griffith Productions |
February 15, 1959 | Ride Lonesome | Co-production with Ranown Pictures; Filmed in CinemaScope |
February 1959 | City of Fear | Co-production with Orbit Productions |
March 2, 1959 | The Two-Headed Spy | Co-production with Sabre Film Production |
March 25, 1959 | Verboten! [N 3] | Distribution only, produced by RKO Radio Pictures, Rank Organisation and Globe Enterprises |
March 1959 | Gunmen from Laredo | |
April 1959 | The Bandit of Zhobe | co-production with Warwick Films; Filmed in CinemaScope |
April 1, 1959 | Juke Box Rhythm | Co-production with Clover Productions |
April 10, 1959 | Gidget | Filmed in CinemaScope |
May 1959 | Face of a Fugitive | co-production with Morningside Productions |
May 1, 1959 | The Young Land | Distribution only; co-production with C.V. Whitney Pictures |
May 2, 1959 | Up and Down | Mexican film; co-production with Posa Films |
May 28, 1959 | The H-Man | US and select international distribution only; produced by Toho |
June 17, 1959 | Middle of the Night | Co-production with Sudan Productions |
June 24, 1959 | Porgy and Bess | Distribution only; produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
July 1959 | The Legend of Tom Dooley | Co-production with Sheptner Productions |
July 1, 1959 | Anatomy of a Murder | Nominee for the Academy Award for Best Picture Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama Co-production with Carlyle Productions |
July 29, 1959 | The Tingler | Co-production with William Castle Productions |
August 1, 1959 | Have Rocket, Will Travel | |
August 5, 1959 | It Happened to Jane | Co-production with Arwin Productions |
Hey Boy! Hey Girl! | ||
August 6, 1959 | The 30 Foot Bride of Candy Rock | Co-production with D.R.B. Production Company |
October 1, 1959 | They Came to Cordura | Co-production with Goetz Pictures and Baroda Productions Filmed in CinemaScope |
October 21, 1959 | The Crimson Kimono | co-production with Globe Enterprises |
October 22, 1959 | The Last Angry Man | Co-production with Fred Kohlmar Productions |
November 2, 1959 | Edge of Eternity | Co-production with Thunderbird Productions; Filmed in CinemaScope |
November 1959 | The Mouse That Roared | co-production with Highroad Productions |
Battle of the Coral Sea | Co-production with Morningside Productions | |
The Warrior and the Slave Girl | US distribution only; produced by Filmar, Alexandra Produzioni Cinematografiche and Atenea Films | |
December 1, 1959 | 1001 Arabian Nights | Co-production with UPA; Columbia's first animated film |
December 20, 1959 | Suddenly, Last Summer | Co-production with Horizon Pictures, Academy Pictures Corporation, Camp Films |
December 1959 | The Gene Krupa Story | |
The Flying Fontaines | Co-production with Clover Productions |
Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. (WBEI), commonly known as Warner Bros. (WB), is an American filmed entertainment studio headquartered at the Warner Bros. Studios complex in Burbank, California, and is the flagship subsidiary of Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD). Founded on April 4, 1923 by four brothers, Harry, Albert, Sam and Jack Warner, the company established itself as a leader in the American film industry before diversifying into animation, television, and video game. It is one of the "Big Five" major American film studios and a member of the Motion Picture Association (MPA).
Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc., commonly known as Columbia Pictures, is an American film production and distribution company that is the flagship unit of the Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group, a division of Sony Entertainment's Sony Pictures, which is one of the "Big Five" film studios and a subsidiary of the multinational conglomerate Sony Group Corporation.
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.
TriStar Pictures, Inc. is an American film studio and production company that is a member of the Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group, part of the multinational conglomerate Sony Group Corporation. It is a corporate sibling of fellow Sony studio, Columbia Pictures.
Harry Cohn was a co-founder, president, and production director of Columbia Pictures Corporation.
Sony Pictures Entertainment Inc. is an American diversified multinational mass media and entertainment studio conglomerate that produces, acquires, and distributes filmed entertainment through multiple platforms. Through an intermediate holding company called Sony Film Holding Inc., it is operated as a subsidiary of Sony Entertainment Inc., which is itself a subsidiary of the Japanese multinational technology and media conglomerate Sony Group Corporation.
Screen Gems is an American film production company owned by Sony Pictures Entertainment, a subsidiary of Japanese multinational conglomerate, Sony Group Corporation. The Screen Gems brand has served several different purposes for its parent companies over the decades since its incorporation, initially as a cartoon studio, then a television studio, and later on as a film studio. The label currently serves as a film production that specializes in genre films, mainly horror.
Poverty Row is a slang term for small Hollywood studios that produced B movies from the 1920s to the 1950s, typically with much smaller budgets and lower production values than those of the major studios. Although many of these studios were based in the vicinity of Gower Street in Hollywood, the term does not necessarily relate to any specific physical location.
The Sony Pictures Entertainment Motion Picture Group is a division of Sony Pictures Entertainment to manage its motion picture operations. It was launched in 1998 by integrating the businesses of Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. and TriStar Pictures, Inc.
She Couldn't Take It is a 1935 American screwball comedy film made at Columbia Pictures, directed by Tay Garnett, written by C. Graham Baker, Gene Towne and Oliver H.P. Garrett, and starring George Raft and Joan Bennett. It was one of the few comedies Raft made in his career.
Winners of the West is a 1940 American Western film serial from Universal Pictures, directed by Ford Beebe and Ray Taylor. It stars Dick Foran and Anne Nagel in a plot about the construction of a railroad and a local ganglord, who opposes it. It was Universal's 115th serial release.
Flight is a 1929 American pre-Code adventure and aviation film directed by Frank Capra. The film stars Jack Holt, Lila Lee and Ralph Graves, who also came up with the story, for which Capra wrote the dialogue. Dedicated to the United States Marine Corps, the production was greatly aided by their full cooperation.
A serial film,film serial, movie serial, or chapter play, is a motion picture form popular during the first half of the 20th century, consisting of a series of short subjects exhibited in consecutive order at one theater, generally advancing weekly, until the series is completed. Usually, each serial involves a single set of characters, protagonistic and antagonistic, involved in a single story, which has been edited into chapters after the fashion of serial fiction and the episodes cannot be shown out of order or as a single or a random collection of short subjects.