The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and released in the 1930s.
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 3, 1930 | The Bishop Murder Case | |
January 24, 1930 | The Woman Racket | |
January 31, 1930 | They Learned About Women | Technicolor sequences |
January 31, 1930 | The Ship from Shanghai | |
February 2, 1930 | Not So Dumb | |
February 21, 1930 | Anna Christie | |
February 23, 1930 | Chasing Rainbows | Technicolor sequences |
February 28, 1930 | Lord Byron of Broadway | Technicolor sequences |
February 28, 1930 | A Lady to Love | |
March 15, 1930 | The Girl Said No | |
March 20, 1930 | Montana Moon | |
March 22, 1930 | Free and Easy | |
April 12, 1930 | This Mad World | |
April 19, 1930 | The Divorcee | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 26, 1930 | Children of Pleasure | Technicolor sequences |
May 2, 1930 | Redemption | |
May 3, 1930 | Strictly Unconventional | |
May 10, 1930 | Caught Short | A Cosmopolitan production |
May 10, 1930 | The Rogue Song | MGM’s first all-talkie in colour in Technicolor |
May 17, 1930 | In Gay Madrid | |
May 24, 1930 | The Lady of Scandal | |
May 30, 1930 | The Florodora Girl | A Marion Davies production |
June 14, 1930 | The Big House | A Cosmopolitan production Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
June 21, 1930 | One Embarrassing Night | US distribution; a Herbert Wilcox production for the British & Dominions Film Corporation |
June 28, 1930 | The Sins of the Children | A Cosmopolitan production |
July 5, 1930 | The Sea Bat | |
July 7, 1930 | Estrellados | Spanish-language version of Free and Easy |
July 12, 1930 | The Unholy Three | |
July 19, 1930 | Our Blushing Brides | |
August 2, 1930 | Way Out West | |
August 9, 1930 | Let Us Be Gay | |
August 16, 1930 | Call of the Flesh | Technicolor sequences |
August 23, 1930 | Good News | Multicolor sequences |
August 26, 1930 | Romance | |
August 30, 1930 | Doughboys | |
September 6, 1930 | Love in the Rough | |
September 20, 1930 | Madam Satan | Multicolor sequences |
September 27, 1930 | Men of the North | |
October 10, 1930 | Olimpia | Spanish-language version of His Glorious Night |
October 11, 1930 | Those Three French Girls | A Cosmopolitan production |
October 18, 1930 | Billy the Kid | |
November 1, 1930 | Way for a Sailor | |
November 8, 1930 | A Lady's Morals | |
November 14, 1930 | El presidio | Spanish-language version of The Big House |
November 15, 1930 | Remote Control | |
November 22, 1930 | War Nurse | |
November 29, 1930 | Min and Bill | |
December 6, 1930 | Passion Flower | |
December 18, 1930 | Wu Li Chang | Spanish-language version of Mr. Wu |
December 28, 1930 | New Moon | |
December 30, 1930 | Paid | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 3, 1931 | Reducing | |
January 5, 1931 | Anna Christie | German-language version |
January 10, 1931 | The Bachelor Father | |
January 16, 1931 | Monsieur Le Fox | Spanish-language version of Men of the North |
January 23, 1931 | De frente, marchen | Spanish-language version of Doughboys |
January 24, 1931 | The Great Meadow | |
January 31, 1931 | Inspiration | |
February 7, 1931 | Dance, Fools, Dance | |
February 7, 1931 | The Easiest Way | |
February 21, 1931 | Si l'empereur savait ça | French-language version of His Glorious Night |
February 21, 1931 | The Prodigal | |
February 28, 1931 | Parlor, Bedroom and Bath | |
March 7, 1931 | Gentleman's Fate | |
March 13, 1931 | La fruta amarga | Spanish-language version of Min and Bill |
March 14, 1931 | Men Call It Love | |
March 27, 1931 | En cada puerto un amor | Spanish-language version of Way for a Sailor |
March 28, 1931 | A Tailor Made Man | |
April 3, 1931 | La mujer X | Spanish-language version of Madame X |
April 4, 1931 | Strangers May Kiss | |
April 11, 1931 | Stepping Out | |
April 11, 1931 | It's a Wise Child | |
April 18, 1931 | The Secret Six | A George Hill-Cosmopolitan production |
April 25, 1931 | Shipmates | |
May 2, 1931 | Daybreak | |
May 16, 1931 | Never the Twain Shall Meet | |
May 23, 1931 | Trader Horn | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 30, 1931 | Laughing Sinners | |
June 6, 1931 | Just a Gigolo | |
June 13, 1931 | Five and Ten | |
June 20, 1931 | A Free Soul | Academy Award for Best Actor: Lionel Barrymore Remade in 1953 as The Girl Who Had Everything |
June 26, 1931 | El proceso de Mary Dugan | Spanish-language version of The Trial of Mary Dugan |
July 4, 1931 | The Man in Possession | |
July 17, 1931 | Su última noche | Spanish-language remake of The Gay Deceiver |
July 18, 1931 | The Great Lover | |
July 25, 1931 | Politics | |
August 1, 1931 | Son of India | |
August 8, 1931 | Sporting Blood | |
August 15, 1931 | Pardon Us | A Hal Roach Feature |
August 22, 1931 | Guilty Hands | |
August 29, 1931 | This Modern Age | |
September 5, 1931 | The Squaw Man | |
September 12, 1931 | The Phantom of Paris | |
September 26, 1931 | Sidewalks of New York | |
October 2, 1931 | Cheri-Bibi | Spanish-language version of The Phantom of Paris |
October 3, 1931 | New Adventures of Get Rich Quick Wallingford | |
October 10, 1931 | Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise) | |
October 24, 1931 | The Sin of Madelon Claudet | |
November 7, 1931 | The Guardsman | |
November 9, 1931 | The Champ | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 14, 1931 | Flying High | |
November 21, 1931 | Possessed | |
November 28, 1931 | West of Broadway | |
December 5, 1931 | The Cuban Love Song | |
December 12, 1931 | Private Lives | |
December 26, 1931 | Mata Hari | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 2, 1932 | Emma | |
January 16, 1932 | Hell Divers | |
January 23, 1932 | Lovers Courageous | |
February 6, 1932 | The Passionate Plumber | |
February 13, 1932 | The Beast of the City | |
February 20, 1932 | Freaks | |
February 27, 1932 | Polly of the Circus | |
March 5, 1932 | Arsène Lupin | |
March 25, 1932 | Tarzan the Ape Man | |
March 26, 1932 | The Wet Parade | |
April 9, 1932 | But the Flesh Is Weak | |
April 24, 1932 | Are You Listening | |
April 30, 1932 | When a Feller Needs a Friend | |
May 14, 1932 | Huddle | |
May 14, 1932 | Letty Lynton | |
May 28, 1932 | As You Desire Me | |
June 4, 1932 | New Morals for Old | |
June 4, 1932 | Night Court | |
June 25, 1932 | Red-Headed Woman | |
July 2, 1932 | Unashamed | |
July 9, 1932 | The Washington Masquerade | |
July 16, 1932 | Skyscraper Souls | |
August 6, 1932 | Downstairs | |
August 13, 1932 | Speak Easily | |
August 27, 1932 | Divorce in the Family | |
September 1, 1932 | Blondie of the Follies | |
September 11, 1932 | Grand Hotel | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
September 17, 1932 | Pack Up Your Troubles | Presented by Hal Roach (A Hal Roach Comedy) |
September 24, 1932 | Smilin’ Through | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
October 1, 1932 | Kongo | |
October 15, 1932 | Faithless | |
October 22, 1932 | Red Dust | |
November 5, 1932 | The Mask of Fu Manchu | A Cosmopolitan production |
November 7, 1932 | Payment Deferred | |
November 18, 1932 | Prosperity | |
December 8, 1932 | Flesh | |
December 16, 1932 | Fast Life | |
December 23, 1932 | The Son-Daughter | |
December 23, 1932 | Rasputin and the Empress | |
December 30, 1932 | Strange Interlude | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 20, 1933 | The Outsider | US distribution; presented in the UK by Eric Hakim |
January 21, 1933 | Whistling in the Dark | |
February 3, 1933 | The Secret of Madame Blanche | |
February 10, 1933 | What! No Beer? | |
February 17, 1933 | Men Must Fight | |
February 24, 1933 | Clear All Wires! | |
March 10, 1933 | Fast Workers | |
March 31, 1933 | Gabriel Over the White House | A Cosmopolitan production |
April 14, 1933 | Today We Live | |
April 14, 1933 | The White Sister | |
April 28, 1933 | Looking Forward | |
May 5, 1933 | The Devil's Brother | |
May 12, 1933 | The Barbarian | |
May 19, 1933 | Made on Broadway | |
May 26, 1933 | Peg o' My Heart | A Cosmopolitan production |
June 2, 1933 | The Nuisance | |
June 9, 1933 | Hell Below | |
June 16, 1933 | Reunion in Vienna | |
June 23, 1933 | When Ladies Meet | A Cosmopolitan production |
June 30, 1933 | Midnight Mary | |
July 7, 1933 | Hold Your Man | |
July 14, 1933 | Storm at Daybreak | |
July 28, 1933 | Another Language | |
July 28, 1933 | The Stranger's Return | |
August 4, 1933 | Tugboat Annie | |
August 25, 1933 | Turn Back the Clock | |
August 29, 1933 | Dinner at Eight | |
September 1, 1933 | Beauty for Sale | |
September 8, 1933 | Penthouse | |
September 15, 1933 | Broadway to Hollywood | |
September 22, 1933 | The Solitaire Man | |
September 29, 1933 | Stage Mother | |
October 6, 1933 | Night Flight | |
October 13, 1933 | Bombshell | |
October 20, 1933 | Meet the Baron | |
October 27, 1933 | Day of Reckoning | |
November 3, 1933 | The Chief | |
November 10, 1933 | The Prizefighter and the Lady | |
November 14, 1933 | Eskimo | |
November 17, 1933 | Christopher Bean | |
November 24, 1933 | Dancing Lady | |
December 1, 1933 | Should Ladies Behave | |
December 8, 1933 | The Women in His Life | |
December 22, 1933 | Going Hollywood | |
December 26, 1933 | Queen Christina | |
December 29, 1933 | Sons of the Desert | A Hal Roach Comedy |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 5, 1934 | Fugitive Lovers | |
January 26, 1934 | You Can't Buy Everything | A Cosmopolitan production |
February 2, 1934 | This Side of Heaven | |
February 16, 1934 | The Cat and the Fiddle | |
February 23, 1934 | The Mystery of Mr. X | |
March 9, 1934 | The Show-Off | |
March 16, 1934 | Lazy River | |
March 30, 1934 | Riptide | |
April 6, 1934 | Men in White | A Cosmopolitan production |
April 10, 1934 | Viva Villa! | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 13, 1934 | Laughing Boy | |
April 16, 1934 | Tarzan and His Mate | |
May 4, 1934 | Manhattan Melodrama | A Cosmopolitan production |
May 9, 1934 | Sadie McKee | |
May 25, 1934 | The Thin Man | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
June 1, 1934 | Hollywood Party | |
June 8, 1934 | Operator 13 | A Cosmopolitan production |
June 29, 1934 | Murder in the Private Car | |
July 13, 1934 | Stamboul Quest | |
July 27, 1934 | Paris Interlude | |
August 3, 1934 | The Girl from Missouri | |
August 10, 1934 | Straight Is the Way | |
August 17, 1934 | Treasure Island | |
August 24, 1934 | Hide-Out | |
September 1, 1934 | Chained | |
September 7, 1934 | Have a Heart | |
September 14, 1934 | Death on the Diamond | |
September 21, 1934 | The Barretts of Wimpole Street | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture Remade in 1956 |
September 28, 1934 | Outcast Lady | |
October 5, 1934 | Student Tour | |
October 19, 1934 | What Every Woman Knows | |
November 2, 1934 | The Merry Widow | |
November 9, 1934 | Evelyn Prentice | A Cosmopolitan production |
November 23, 1934 | The Painted Veil | |
November 30, 1934 | Babes in Toyland | A Hal Roach production; owned by MGM itself via Orion Pictures since 1997 |
December 7, 1934 | A Wicked Woman | |
December 14, 1934 | The Gay Bride | |
December 21, 1934 | The Band Plays On | |
December 22, 1934 | Sequoia | |
December 23, 1934 | Forsaking All Others | A W. S. Van Dyke production |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 3, 1936 | Riffraff | |
January 10, 1936 | Three Live Ghosts | |
January 17, 1936 | Exclusive Story | |
January 24, 1936 | Tough Guy | |
February 1, 1936 | Rose Marie | |
February 14, 1936 | The Bohemian Girl | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
February 15, 1936 | The Voice of Bugle Ann | |
February 21, 1936 | The Garden Murder Case | |
February 28, 1936 | Wife vs. Secretary | |
March 6, 1936 | Three Godfathers | |
March 17, 1936 | Robin Hood of El Dorado | |
March 20, 1936 | Petticoat Fever | |
March 27, 1936 | Moonlight Murder | |
April 4, 1936 | The Unguarded Hour | |
April 8, 1936 | The Great Ziegfeld | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 10, 1936 | Small Town Girl | |
April 24, 1936 | Absolute Quiet | |
May 8, 1936 | Speed | |
May 9, 1936 | Neighborhood House | A Hal Roach Comedy - produced as a feature but released as a 2-reel short. |
May 15, 1936 | The Three Wise Guys | |
May 22, 1936 | Trouble for Two | |
May 29, 1936 | Fury | Fritz Lang's first American film |
June 19, 1936 | We Went to College | |
June 26, 1936 | San Francisco | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
July 10, 1936 | The Devil-Doll | |
July 20, 1936 | Suzy | |
July 31, 1936 | Women Are Trouble | |
August 7, 1936 | His Brother's Wife | |
August 14, 1936 | Piccadilly Jim | |
August 20, 1936 | Romeo and Juliet | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
August 21, 1936 | Kelly the Second | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
August 28, 1936 | The Gorgeous Hussy | A Clarence Brown production |
September 11, 1936 | Sworn Enemy | |
September 18, 1936 | The Devil Is a Sissy | |
September 25, 1936 | Old Hutch | |
October 2, 1936 | The Longest Night | |
October 9, 1936 | Libeled Lady | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
October 16, 1936 | All American Chump | |
October 23, 1936 | Mr. Cinderella | Presented by Hal Roach Studios |
October 30, 1936 | Our Relations | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
November 6, 1936 | Tarzan Escapes | |
November 13, 1936 | Mad Holiday | |
November 20, 1936 | Love on the Run | |
November 27, 1936 | Born to Dance | |
December 11, 1936 | General Spanky | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
December 12, 1936 | Camille | |
December 18, 1936 | Sinner Take All | |
December 25, 1936 | After the Thin Man | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 8, 1937 | Under Cover of Night | |
January 22, 1937 | Dangerous Number | |
January 26, 1937 | April Blossoms/April Romance | US distribution only; produced in the UK by Alliance Films |
January 29, 1937 | The Good Earth | Presented by The Theatre Guild Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
January 29, 1937 | Man of the People | |
February 5, 1937 | Mama Steps Out | |
February 19, 1937 | The Last of Mrs. Cheyney | |
February 26, 1937 | Espionage | |
March 12, 1937 | A Family Affair | 1st entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
March 19, 1937 | Personal Property | |
March 26, 1937 | Maytime | |
April 2, 1937 | Song of the City | |
April 9, 1937 | Aldebaran | US distribution; produced in Italy by Manenti Film |
April 16, 1937 | Way Out West | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy, presented by Hal Roach Studios |
April 23, 1937 | The Good Old Soak | |
April 23, 1937 | Nobody's Baby | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
April 30, 1937 | Night Must Fall | |
May 7, 1937 | They Gave Him a Gun | |
May 7, 1937 | The Thirteenth Chair | |
May 11, 1937 | Captains Courageous | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 21, 1937 | Pick a Star | A Hal Roach comedy |
June 4, 1937 | Parnell | |
June 11, 1937 | A Day at the Races | |
June 18, 1937 | Married Before Breakfast | |
July 2, 1937 | The Emperor's Candlesticks | |
July 9, 1937 | Between Two Women | |
July 16, 1937 | Topper | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
July 23, 1937 | Saratoga | |
July 30, 1937 | London by Night | |
August 20, 1937 | Broadway Melody of 1938 | |
August 27, 1937 | Bad Guy | |
September 1, 1937 | The Firefly | |
September 3, 1937 | Big City | |
September 10, 1937 | The Women Men Marry | |
September 17, 1937 | My Dear Miss Aldrich | |
October 1, 1937 | Madame X | |
October 15, 1937 | The Bride Wore Red | |
October 15, 1937 | Double Wedding | |
October 22, 1937 | Conquest | |
October 29, 1937 | Live, Love and Learn | |
November 12, 1937 | The Last Gangster | |
November 19, 1937 | Navy Blue and Gold | |
December 3, 1937 | Beg, Borrow or Steal | |
December 3, 1937 | Thoroughbreds Don't Cry | |
December 10, 1937 | You're Only Young Once | 2nd entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
December 14, 1937 | Mannequin | A Frank Borzage production |
December 24, 1937 | Rosalie | |
December 31, 1937 | The Bad Man of Brimstone | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 7, 1938 | Man-Proof | |
January 14, 1938 | Love Is a Headache | |
February 4, 1938 | Everybody Sing | |
February 11, 1938 | Of Human Hearts | |
February 15, 1938 | Paradise for Three | |
February 18, 1938 | A Yank at Oxford | Made by MGM-British |
February 25, 1938 | Arsène Lupin Returns | |
March 4, 1938 | Merrily We Live | Presented by Hal Roach (A Hal Roach Feature Comedy) |
March 12, 1938 | The First Hundred Years | |
March 18, 1938 | The Girl of the Golden West | |
March 26, 1938 | Judge Hardy's Children | 3rd entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
April 22, 1938 | Test Pilot | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 13, 1938 | Hold That Kiss | |
May 19, 1938 | Yellow Jack | |
May 20, 1938 | Swiss Miss | Presented by Hal Roach Studios |
June 2, 1938 | Three Comrades | |
June 10, 1938 | The Toy Wife | |
June 17, 1938 | Lord Jeff | |
June 24, 1938 | Woman Against Woman | |
July 1, 1938 | Port of Seven Seas | |
July 5, 1938 | Fast Company | |
July 8, 1938 | Marie Antoinette | |
July 15, 1938 | The Shopworn Angel | |
July 22, 1938 | Love Finds Andy Hardy | 4th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
July 29, 1938 | The Chaser | |
August 5, 1938 | The Crowd Roars | |
August 12, 1938 | Rich Man, Poor Girl | |
August 19, 1938 | Block-Heads | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
September 2, 1938 | Three Loves Has Nancy | |
September 9, 1938 | Boys Town | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
September 16, 1938 | Too Hot to Handle | |
September 30, 1938 | Vacation from Love | |
October 7, 1938 | Stablemates | |
October 14, 1938 | Young Dr. Kildare | 1st entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
October 18, 1938 | Listen, Darling | |
October 29, 1938 | The Citadel | made by MGM-British Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 4, 1938 | The Great Waltz | |
November 11, 1938 | Spring Madness | |
November 18, 1938 | The Shining Hour | |
November 25, 1938 | Out West with the Hardys | |
December 2, 1938 | Flirting with Fate | Distribution only; produced by David Loew Productions |
December 8, 1938 | Pygmalion | US distribution; produced in the UK by Gabriel Pascal Productions Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 9, 1938 | Dramatic School | |
December 16, 1938 | A Christmas Carol | |
December 22, 1938 | Sweethearts | MGM's first three-strip Technicolor film; first feature film appearance of Tanner the Lion |
December 23, 1938 | The Girl Downstairs | |
Release date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 6, 1939 | Stand Up and Fight | |
January 13, 1939 | Burn 'Em Up O'Connor | |
January 27, 1939 | Idiot's Delight | |
January 27, 1939 | Four Girls in White | |
February 3, 1939 | Honolulu | |
February 10, 1939 | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn | Remade in 1960 |
February 17, 1939 | Fast and Loose | |
February 24, 1939 | Let Freedom Ring | |
March 10, 1939 | The Ice Follies of 1939 | |
March 17, 1939 | Within the Law | |
March 21, 1939 | Society Lawyer | |
March 24, 1939 | Sergeant Madden | |
April 7, 1939 | Broadway Serenade | |
April 14, 1939 | The Kid from Texas | |
April 21, 1939 | The Hardys Ride High | 6th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
April 28, 1939 | Calling Dr. Kildare | 2nd entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
May 5, 1939 | Lucky Night | |
May 12, 1939 | Tell No Tales | |
May 15, 1939 | Goodbye, Mr. Chips | Made by MGM-British Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture Remade as musical in 1969 |
May 19, 1939 | It's a Wonderful World | |
May 26, 1939 | Bridal Suite | |
June 9, 1939 | 6,000 Enemies | |
June 15, 1939 | Land of Liberty | Distribution only; produced by Motion Picture Producers & Distributors of America A compilation film for the Golden Gate International Exposition and the 1939 New York World's Fair |
June 16, 1939 | Tarzan Finds a Son! | |
June 22, 1939 | Maisie | |
June 30, 1939 | Stronger Than Desire | |
July 6, 1939 | On Borrowed Time | |
July 21, 1939 | Andy Hardy Gets Spring Fever | 7th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
August 4, 1939 | They All Come Out | |
August 10, 1939 | Miracles for Sale | |
August 11, 1939 | Lady of the Tropics | |
August 15, 1939 | The Wizard of Oz | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1989 |
August 18, 1939 | These Glamour Girls | |
August 29, 1939 | Ask a Policeman | US distribution only; made in the UK by Gainsborough Pictures |
September 1, 1939 | The Women | |
September 8, 1939 | Blackmail | |
September 15, 1939 | Thunder Afloat | |
September 29, 1939 | Dancing Co-Ed | |
October 6, 1939 | Fast and Furious | |
October 13, 1939 | Babes in Arms | |
October 20, 1939 | At the Circus | |
October 27, 1939 | Bad Little Angel | |
November 9, 1939 | Ninotchka | Nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture Remade as musical in 1957 |
November 17, 1939 | Another Thin Man | 3rd entry in the Thin Man film series |
November 24, 1939 | The Secret of Dr. Kildare | 3rd entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
December 1, 1939 | Joe and Ethel Turp Call on the President | |
December 8, 1939 | Henry Goes Arizona | |
December 13, 1939 | Nick Carter, Master Detective | |
December 15, 1939 | Balalaika | |
December 19, 1939 | Gone with the Wind | Co-produced by Selznick International Pictures Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1989 |
December 19, 1939 | Remember? | |
December 22, 1939 | Judge Hardy and Son |
Trader Horn is a 1931 American Pre-Code adventure film directed by W.S. Van Dyke and starring Harry Carey and Edwina Booth. It is the first non-documentary film shot on location in Africa. The film is based on the book of the same name by trader and adventurer Alfred Aloysius Horn and tells of adventures on safari in Africa.
Samuel Goldwyn, also known as Samuel Goldfish, was a Polish-born American film producer and pioneer in the American film industry, who produced Hollywood's first major motion picture. He was best known for being the founding contributor and executive of several motion picture studios in Hollywood. He was awarded the 1973 Golden Globe Cecil B. DeMille Award, the Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award (1947) and the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award (1958).
Goldwyn Pictures Corporation was an American motion picture production company that operated from 1916 to 1924 when it was merged with two other production companies to form the major studio, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. It was founded on November 19, 1916, by Samuel Goldfish, an executive at Lasky's Feature Play Company, and Broadway producer brothers Edgar and Archibald Selwyn, using an amalgamation of both last names to name the company.
The Samuel Goldwyn Company was an American independent film company founded by Samuel Goldwyn Jr., the son of the famous Hollywood mogul, Samuel Goldwyn, in 1978.
Samuel Goldwyn Films, LLC is an American film company that licenses, releases and distributes art-house, independent and foreign films. It was founded by Samuel Goldwyn Jr., the son of the Hollywood business magnate/mogul, Samuel Goldwyn. The current incarnation is a successor to The Samuel Goldwyn Company.
Metro Pictures Corporation was a motion picture production company founded in early 1915 in Jacksonville, Florida. It was a forerunner of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The company produced its films in New York, Los Angeles, and sometimes at leased facilities in Fort Lee, New Jersey. It was purchased in 1919.
The Sony Pictures Studios is an American television and film studio complex located in Culver City, California at 10202 West Washington Boulevard and bounded by Culver Boulevard (south), Washington Boulevard (north), Overland Avenue (west) and Madison Avenue (east). Founded in 1912, the facility is currently owned by Sony Pictures and houses the division's film studios, such as Columbia Pictures, TriStar Pictures, and Screen Gems. The complex was the original studios of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer from 1924 to 1986 and Lorimar-Telepictures from 1986 to 1988.
Samuel Goldwyn Studio was the name that Samuel Goldwyn used to refer to the lot located on the corner of Formosa Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard in West Hollywood, California, as well as the offices and stages that his company, Samuel Goldwyn Productions, rented there during the 1920s and 1930s. At various times, the location was also known as Pickford–Fairbanks Studios, the United Artists Studio, Warner Hollywood Studios, and its name since 1999, The Lot at Formosa.
Samuel Goldwyn Productions was an American film production company founded by Samuel Goldwyn in 1923, and active through 1959. Personally controlled by Goldwyn and focused on production rather than distribution, the company developed into the most financially and critically successful independent production company in Hollywood's Golden Age.
This is a complete list of the 166 shorts in the Tom and Jerry series produced and released between 1940 and 2021. Of these, 162 are theatrical shorts, one is a made-for-TV short, one is a two-minute sketch shown as part of a telethon, and two are special shorts released on HBO Max.
MGM Animation/Visual Arts was an American animation studio established in 1962 by animation director/producer Chuck Jones, producer Les Goldman and executive Walter Bien as Sib Tower 12 Productions. Its productions include the last series of Tom and Jerry theatrical shorts, the TV specials Horton Hears a Who! and How the Grinch Stole Christmas!, and the feature film The Phantom Tollbooth, all released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Animation was an American animation division of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, that specializes in animated productions for theatrical features and television, and based in Hollywood, California. It was founded in 1993 and primarily involved in producing children's entertainment based upon MGM's ownership of intellectual properties, such as The Pink Panther, The Lionhearts, The Secret of NIMH, and All Dogs Go to Heaven.
This is a list of feature films originally released and/or distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer.
Louis B. Mayer Pictures was an American film production company of the silent era which operated from 1918 until 1924.
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a 1960 American adventure drama film directed by Michael Curtiz. Based on the 1884 novel of the same name by Mark Twain, it was the third sound film version of the story and the second filmed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer. The film was the first adaptation of Huckleberry Finn to be filmed in CinemaScope and Technicolor. It stars Eddie Hodges as Huck and former boxer Archie Moore as the runaway slave Jim. Tony Randall also appeared in the film, and Buster Keaton had a bit role in what proved to be his final film for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, his former studio. Neville Brand portrayed Pap Finn, Huck's alcoholic father.
Dulcy is a 1923 American silent comedy film directed by Sidney A. Franklin and starring Constance Talmadge. The film was adapted from the Broadway production of the same name written by George S. Kaufman and Marc Connelly. The play opened in New York in August 1921 and ran for 241 performances.
Sheldon v. Metro-Goldwyn Pictures Corp., 309 U.S. 390 (1940), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held, in the case of an unauthorized adaptation, courts may elect to award only a portion of an infringer's profits to the plaintiff. The proportion that the defendant is entitled to keep is in proportion to the amount of original creative work that went into the adaptation, and the court may be assisted in determining that by expert witness testimony. The Court found that awarding more to the plaintiff "would be to inflict an unauthorized penalty."