Formerly | Touchstone Films (1984–1986) |
---|---|
Company type | Label [1] |
Industry | Motion pictures |
Founded | February 15, 1984 |
Founder | Ron W. Miller |
Defunct | September 2, 2016 |
Fate | Defunct |
Headquarters | 500 South Buena Vista Street, , U.S. |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Sean Bailey [2] (2010–2016) |
Products | Motion pictures |
Parent | Walt Disney Studios |
Touchstone Pictures was an American film production label of Walt Disney Studios, founded and owned by The Walt Disney Company. Feature films released under the Touchstone label were produced and financed by Walt Disney Studios, and featured more mature themes targeted at adult audiences than typical Walt Disney Pictures films. [3] [4] As such, Touchstone was merely a pseudonym label for the studio and did not exist as a distinct business operation. [1]
Established on February 15, 1984, [5] by then-Disney CEO Ron W. Miller as Touchstone Films, Touchstone operated as an active film production division of Disney during the mid 1980s through the early 2010s, releasing a majority of the studio's PG-13 and R-rated films. In 2009, Disney entered into a five-year, thirty-picture distribution deal with DreamWorks Pictures under which DreamWorks' productions would be released through the Touchstone banner; the label then distributed DreamWorks' films from 2011 to 2016. [6] [7] Following the release of The Light Between Oceans , the final film of the DreamWorks deal, the Touchstone label was retired.
Due to the increased public assumption that Disney films were aimed at children and families, films produced by Walt Disney Productions began to falter at the box office. [5] This began in 1975 with the release of Escape to Witch Mountain and its 1978 sequel. In late 1979, Walt Disney Productions released The Black Hole , a science-fiction movie that was the studio's first production to receive a PG rating (the company, however, had already distributed via Buena Vista Distribution its first PG-rated film, Take Down , almost a year before the release of The Black Hole). [8]
Over the next few years, Disney experimented with more PG-rated fare, such as the horror-mystery The Watcher in the Woods , the spy-themed comedy Condorman ,[ citation needed ] and the Paramount Pictures co-produced fantasy epic Dragonslayer . With Disney's 1982 slate of PG-rated films, which included the thriller drama Night Crossing and the science-fiction film Tron , the company lost over $27 million. Tron was considered a potential Star Wars -level success by the production company.
In late 1982, Disney vice president of production Tom Wilhite announced that they would produce and release more mature films under a new brand. Wilhite elaborated to The New York Times : "We won't get into horror or exploitive sex, but using a non-Disney name will allow us wider latitude in the maturity of the subject matter and the edge we can add to the humor." He stated that one of the first films that would be released under this new brand was Trenchcoat , a comedy caper starring Margot Kidder and Robert Hays; [9] however, the new brand had not yet been created by the time of the film's release in March 1983, so it was instead released by Walt Disney Productions, but with no production company credited in the released prints.
The company registered a loss of $33 million in 1983, resulting primarily from such films as the adaptation of Ray Bradbury's horror-fantasy novel Something Wicked This Way Comes , the horror-comedy The Devil and Max Devlin starring Elliott Gould and Bill Cosby, and the dramas Tex and Never Cry Wolf , the latter a PG release that featured male nudity, which did well as the studio downplayed the film's association with the Disney brand. [5]
Touchstone Films was founded by then-Disney CEO Ron W. Miller on February 15, 1984, as a label for their PG films, with an expected three to four movies released under the label. Touchstone Films' first film was Splash , a huge hit that grossed $68 million at the domestic box office that year. Touchstone Films was a brand chosen from over 1,200 potential names; the runner-up name was "Silver Wind". [5] [10] [11] Incoming Disney CEO Michael Eisner and film chief Jeffrey Katzenberg considered renaming the label to "Hollywood Pictures", which went on to become a separate Disney film label on February 1, 1989. [12]
In 1986, Down and Out in Beverly Hills was another early success for Touchstone and was Disney's first R-rated film. It was followed in 1987 by Disney's first PG-13-rated film, Adventures in Babysitting . Disney increased the momentum with additional PG-13 and R-rated films with Ruthless People (1986), Outrageous Fortune (1987), Tin Men (1987), and other top movies. [10] In April 1986, Touchstone films were licensed to Showtime/The Movie Channel for five years, starting in 1987. [13]
Touchstone Films was renamed Touchstone Pictures after the release of Ruthless People in 1986. With Touchstone films, Disney moved to the top of box office receipts, beating out all the other major film studios by 1988. [10] On April 13, 1988, Touchstone became a unit of Walt Disney Pictures under newly appointed president Ricardo Mestres. [14] On October 23, 1990, Disney formed Touchwood Pacific Partners I to supplant the Silver Screen Partners partnership series as their movie studios' primary funding source. [15]
With several production companies getting out of film production or closing shop by December 2, 1988, the Walt Disney Studios announced the formation of the Hollywood Pictures division, which would only share marketing and distribution with Touchstone, to fill the void. Mestres was appointed president of Hollywood. [12] On July 27, 1992, Touchstone agreed to an exclusive, first-look production and distribution agreement with Merchant Ivory Productions for three years. [16]
Following the success of the Disney-branded PG-13-rated Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl in 2003 and other films that in the 1980s and 1990s would have been released as Touchstone or Hollywood Pictures films, Disney weighed distribution of films more toward Disney-branded films and away from Touchstone, though not entirely disbanding them as it continued to use the Touchstone label for R and most PG-13-rated fare. [1] In 2006, Disney limited Touchstone's output to two or three films in favor of Walt Disney Pictures titles due to an increase in film industry costs. [17] Disney indicated scaling back on using multiple brands in 2007 with the renaming of Touchstone Television to ABC Television Studio in February and the outright elimination of the Buena Vista brand in April. [18] [16] On January 14, 2010, Sean Bailey was appointed president of live-action production at Walt Disney Studios, overseeing all films produced by Walt Disney Pictures and Touchstone Pictures. [2]
In 2009, Disney repurposed Touchstone as a distribution label for films produced by DreamWorks Studios. [7] [19] Disney provided $100 million in financing to DreamWorks productions and an additional $75 million credit line if DreamWorks could not get additional equity funding. In January 2012, Disney was reportedly in the early stages of considering Touchstone's fate, including a possible sale. [20]
Following Disney's decision not to renew their long-standing deal with Jerry Bruckheimer Films in 2013, producer Jerry Bruckheimer revealed that he insisted on revitalizing the Touchstone label for production. Disney was uninterested, with studio chairman Alan Horn admitting that Touchstone's output had been reduced to only distributing DreamWorks' films as those films were in the label's interest. [21] In addition to DreamWorks' films, Touchstone also released non-Disney-branded animated films such as Gnomeo & Juliet , The Wind Rises , and Strange Magic . [22]
By the end of the DreamWorks deal in August 2016, Disney had distributed 14 of DreamWorks' original 30-picture agreement, with thirteen through Touchstone. [23] [24] The deal ended with The Light Between Oceans being the final theatrical film released by Disney under the Touchstone banner. Universal Pictures then replaced Disney as DreamWorks' distributor. [25] [26] Disney retained the film rights to these DreamWorks films in perpetuity as compensation for the studio's outstanding loan. [27]
Following the release of The Light Between Oceans, the label became defunct. Since then, several other Disney divisions have produced or are developing television series and films based on previous Touchstone properties—such as Turner & Hooch, High Fidelity, Three Men and a Baby , Sister Act , and Real Steel—for Disney+ and Hulu. [28] [29] [30] [31]
Some well-known Touchstone Pictures releases include Beaches , Turner & Hooch , Splash , The Color of Money , Down and Out in Beverly Hills , Good Morning, Vietnam , Who Framed Roger Rabbit , Dead Poets Society , Dick Tracy , Pretty Woman , Sister Act , Ed Wood , Up Close & Personal , The Waterboy , The Insider , The Royal Tenenbaums , Sweet Home Alabama , The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy , The Prestige , The Help , War Horse , Lincoln, and Bridge of Spies . Its highest-grossing film release is Armageddon . Although animated films produced by Walt Disney Studios are primarily released by Walt Disney Pictures, Touchstone's animated releases include the original theatrical release of The Nightmare Before Christmas , Gnomeo & Juliet , The Wind Rises , and Strange Magic . Six Touchstone films have received nominations for the Academy Award for Best Picture: Dead Poets Society, The Insider, The Help, War Horse, Lincoln, and Bridge of Spies. [32]
Through Touchstone, Disney's first R-rated film, Down and Out in Beverly Hills, was released on January 31, 1986, and was a box office success. Ruthless People followed on June 27, 1986, and was also very successful. Both of these pictures starred Bette Midler, who had signed a six-picture deal with Disney and became a major film star again with these hits as well as Beaches and Outrageous Fortune.
One of the most notable producers of Touchstone films was Jerry Bruckheimer, who had a production deal with Disney from 1993 to 2014. [33] [34] Touchstone films produced by Bruckheimer include The Ref , Con Air , Armageddon, Enemy of the State , Gone in 60 Seconds , Coyote Ugly , and Pearl Harbor . Bruckheimer also produced several other films released under the Disney and Hollywood Pictures labels.
Releases from Touchstone were distributed theatrically by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures and through home media platforms by Buena Vista Home Entertainment (branded as "Touchstone Home Entertainment"). [35]
Rank | Title | Year | Box office gross |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Signs | 2002 | $227,966,634 |
2 | Armageddon | 1998 | $201,578,182 |
3 | Pearl Harbor | 2001 | $198,542,554 |
4 | Lincoln | 2012 | $182,207,973 |
5 | Pretty Woman | 1990 | $178,406,268 |
6 | The Help | 2011 | $169,708,112 |
7 | Wild Hogs | 2007 | $168,273,550 |
8 | Three Men and a Baby | 1987 | $167,780,960 |
9 | The Proposal | 2009 | $163,958,031 |
10 | The Waterboy | 1998 | $161,491,646 |
11 | Who Framed Roger Rabbit | 1988 | $154,112,492 |
12 | Sister Act | 1992 | $139,605,150 |
13 | Ransom | 1996 | $136,492,681 |
14 | Bringing Down the House | 2003 | $132,716,677 |
15 | Sweet Home Alabama | 2002 | $127,223,418 |
16 | Good Morning, Vietnam | 1987 | $123,922,370 |
17 | The Village | 2004 | $114,197,520 |
18 | Enemy of the State | 1998 | $111,549,836 |
19 | Phenomenon | 1996 | $104,636,382 |
20 | Dick Tracy | 1990 | $103,738,726 |
21 | Gone in 60 Seconds | 2000 | $101,648,571 |
22 | Con Air | 1997 | $101,117,573 |
23 | Gnomeo & Juliet | 2011 | $99,967,670 |
24 | Dead Poets Society | 1989 | $95,860,116 |
25 | Unbreakable | 2000 | $95,011,339 |
Rank | Title | Year | Box office gross |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Armageddon | 1998 | $553,709,788 |
2 | Pretty Woman | 1990 | $463,406,268 |
3 | Pearl Harbor | 2001 | $449,220,945 |
4 | Signs | 2002 | $408,247,917 |
5 | Who Framed Roger Rabbit | 1988 | $351,500,000 |
6 | The Proposal | 2009 | $317,375,031 |
7 | Ransom | 1996 | $309,492,681 |
8 | Real Steel | 2011 | $299,268,508 |
9 | Lincoln | 2012 | $275,293,450 |
10 | The Village | 2004 | $256,697,520 |
11 | Wild Hogs | 2007 | $253,625,427 |
12 | Enemy of the State | 1998 | $250,649,836 |
13 | Unbreakable | 2000 | $248,118,121 |
14 | Gone in 60 Seconds | 2000 | $237,202,299 |
15 | Dead Poets Society | 1989 | $235,860,116 |
16 | Sister Act | 1992 | $231,605,150 |
17 | Con Air | 1997 | $224,012,234 |
18 | Flightplan | 2005 | $223,387,299 |
19 | The Help | 2011 | $216,639,112 |
20 | King Arthur | 2004 | $203,567,857 |
21 | Need for Speed | 2014 | $203,277,636 |
22 | Gnomeo & Juliet | 2011 | $193,967,670 |
23 | The Waterboy | 1998 | $185,991,646 |
24 | Sweet Home Alabama | 2002 | $180,622,424 |
25 | War Horse | 2011 | $177,584,879 |
Touchstone Television served as Touchstone Pictures' counterpart label for television programming, producing television series including The Golden Girls , Blossom, Home Improvement, My Wife and Kids , Desperate Housewives , Lost , Grey's Anatomy , Scrubs , Criminal Minds , and Monk . In 2007, the company was renamed ABC Studios as part of a move by Disney to re-align its studios around core brands such as ABC. [18]
On August 10, 2020, Disney announced that it would revive the Touchstone Television brand as a renaming of Fox 21 Television Studios as part of its phase-out of the "Fox" brand from the studios it acquired from 21st Century Fox. At the same time, the existing ABC Studios merged with the previous iteration of ABC Signature Studios to form ABC Signature. [37] [38]
However, on December 1, 2020, Disney announced the revived Touchstone Television label would be folded into 20th Television. [39] Subsequently, on October 1, 2024, Disney announced that ABC Signature would also be folded into 20th Television. [40]
Industry | Video games |
---|---|
Founded | 2007 |
Founder | Richard Berger |
Defunct | 2008 |
Parent | Disney Interactive Studios |
By the end of 2007, Disney's video game subsidiary Buena Vista Games had begun to produce material under its own short-lived Touchstone imprint. As is the case with its motion picture and television counterparts, Touchstone Interactive merely acted as a brand label of Disney Interactive and not its own entity. The only title it released was the Turok video game in 2008. [41]
In the early 1990s, after having pulled their comic licenses from Gladstone Publishing and begun to create comics based on Disney properties themselves through the Disney Comics label, the company additionally considered an expansion into the burgeoning adult comics market (the expansion also included Hollywood Comics, modeled after Hollywood Pictures, and Vista Comics, offering stories based on Disney's superhero and adventure films). Former DC Comics editor Art Young led the nascent effort, which was aided by his contacts within the British and American comic markets. The new label was dubbed Touchmark Comics, echoing the Touchstone brand used for films and television. [42] Proposed titles included Enigma by Peter Milligan and Sebastian O by Grant Morrison. The brand got as far as a promotional booklet given out at the 1991 San Diego Comic-Con. [43]
Before the idea could progress further, however, the so-called "Disney Implosion" (the result of poor sales and aggressive overexpansion) forced the company to cut back on its comic book ambitions, and Touchmark was scrapped. [44] Young subsequently returned to DC and helped launch the Vertigo imprint in 1993, using many of the intended projects from Touchmark. [45] Now as Marvel Comics.
Walt Disney Pictures is an American film production company and subsidiary of Walt Disney Studios, a division of Disney Entertainment, which is owned by The Walt Disney Company. The studio is the flagship producer of live-action feature films and animation within the Walt Disney Studios unit, and is based at the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. Animated films produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios and Pixar Animation Studios are also released under the studio banner. Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures distributes and markets the films produced by Walt Disney Pictures.
Hollywood Pictures Company was an American film production label of Walt Disney Studios, founded and owned by The Walt Disney Company. Established in 1989, by Disney CEO Michael Eisner and studio chief Jeffrey Katzenberg, Hollywood Pictures was founded to increase the film output of the Walt Disney Studios, and release films similar to those of Touchstone Pictures. These films, featuring more mature themes, were targeted at adult audiences unlike the family-oriented productions of the studio's flagship Walt Disney Pictures division. After years of hiatus, the label was closed in 2007. The studio's most commercially successful film was M. Night Shyamalan's The Sixth Sense, which grossed over $670 million worldwide upon its release in 1999.
ABC Signature was an American television production studio and the flagship production arm of ABC, which is a subsidiary of Disney Television Studios, a sub-division of the Disney Entertainment business segment and division of The Walt Disney Company. The studio's banner was also used by Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment for its distribution of the studio's shows on home video starting 2008.
The first and original incarnation of Walt Disney Television was an American production company and the original/former television production division of the Walt Disney Company, which was active from 1983 to 2003.
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.
Disney Music Group (DMG) is the music recording and publishing arm of Walt Disney Studios, a division of Disney Entertainment, which is owned by The Walt Disney Company. It is located at the studio's headquarters in Burbank, California. The division's subsidiaries consist of two owned record labels—Walt Disney Records and Hollywood Records—along with Disney Music Publishing, the publishing entity that administers the company's music, as well as Disney Concerts. Disney Music's Vevo account on YouTube is currently one of the most-viewed YouTube channels as of June 2023.
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.
Beacon Pictures is an American film and television production and international sales company founded in 1990 by Armyan Bernstein, who is also its chairman. The company produces motion pictures for studios such as Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures, Universal Pictures and Sony Pictures Entertainment. In 1996, it struck a first look deal with Universal.
Disney–ABC Domestic Television is the in-home sales and content distribution firm of Disney Platform Distribution, a subsidiary of Disney Entertainment, which is a division of The Walt Disney Company. Content distribution responsibilities include domestic television syndication, domestic pay TV, Internet and cable video-on-demand (VOD), and pay-per-view outlets.
Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Inc. is the home entertainment distribution arm of the Walt Disney Company. The division handles the distribution of Disney's films, television series, and other audiovisual content across digital formats and platforms.
Disney Platform Distribution, Inc. is a business unit within Disney Entertainment that manages all third-party media sales efforts for distribution, affiliate marketing and affiliate-related business operations for all of the company's direct-to-consumer services and linear media networks; content sales agreements for Disney Entertainment and ESPN.
Tollin Productions is an American movie and television production company operated by Mike Tollin and Brian Robbins in 1994. Joe Davola was also an unofficial partner in the company and co-produced many of the company's productions along with Robbins and Tollin from 1994–2013 and 2021–present.
Scott Free Productions is a British-American independent film and television production company founded in 1970 by filmmakers and brothers Ridley Scott and Tony Scott. They formed the feature film development company Percy Main Productions in 1980, naming the company after the English village Percy Main, where their father grew up. The company was renamed Scott Free Productions in 1995. Scott Free has produced films ranging from the 2000 Hollywood blockbuster Gladiator (2000) to "smaller pictures" like Cracks (2009). Between the productions of White Squall (1996) and G.I. Jane (1997), Ridley Scott reorganised the company.
Jerry Bruckheimer Films Inc. (JBF) is an American independent film production company formed by Jerry Bruckheimer in 1995, after cutting his ties with film producer Don Simpson before his death in 1996. It produces blockbuster films such as the Pirates of the Caribbean film series.
DreamWorks Pictures is an American film studio and distribution label of Amblin Partners. It was originally founded on October 12, 1994, as a live-action film studio by Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg, and David Geffen, of which they owned 72%. The studio formerly distributed its own and third-party films. It has produced or distributed more than ten films with box-office grosses of more than $100 million each.
Film projects in various stages of production include: "The BFG," and "The Light Between Oceans," scheduled for release by Disney in 2016.