Universal Studios
|
The current Universal Studios logo |
Universal Studios (sometimes called
Universal Pictures), a subsidiary of
NBC Universal, is a
Big Ten movie studio that has production studios and offices located at 100 Universal City Plaza Drive in
Universal City, California, an unincorporated area of Los Angeles County between
Los Angeles and
Burbank. Distribution and other corporate, administrative offices are based in
New York City. Universal is the second longest-lived studio in Hollywood (
Viacom's
Paramount Pictures, Universal's ownership partner of
United International Pictures is the first longest).
The second longest-lived Hollywood film production company, Universal Pictures can trace its origins back to the creation in 1909 of a predecessor, the Yankee Film Company. The founder of Universal,
Carl Laemmle, was a
German Jewish immigrant who had settled in
Wisconsin, where he managed a clothing store.
Carl Laemmle partnered with Abe Stern and Julius Stern to create Universal Pictures. On a 1905 buying trip to Chicago, he was struck by the popularity of
nickelodeons. One story has Laemmle watching a box office for hours, counting patrons and calculating the take for the day. Within weeks of his Chicago trip, he gave up
dry goods to buy the first of several nickelodeons. For Laemmle and other such entrepreneurs, the creation in 1908 of the
Edison-backed
Motion Picture Trust meant that exhibitors were expected to pay fees for any Trust-produced film they showed. On the basis of Edison's patent on the electric motor used in cameras and projectors, along with other patents, the Trust collected fees on all aspects of movie production and exhibition, and also held a monopoly on distribution.
Soon Laemmle and other disgruntled nickelodeon owners saw that a way to avoid paying Edison was to produce their own pictures, and in
June 1909, Laemmle and partners started the Yankee Film Company. That company quickly evolved into the "Independent Moving Picture Company", or IMP; and a further reorganization in 1911 saw IMP reincorporate as the "Universal Film Manufacturing Co.," on
June 8,
1912, introducing the word "universal" into the organization's name. While Laemmle was the primary figure in Universal, by absorbing several smaller firms he acquired a number of partners, among them
Mark Dintinfass,
Charles Baumann and
Adam Kessel, and
Pat Powers. Eventually all would be bought out by Laemmle. Film production and distribution were the Universal company's activities.
The new Universal company was an immediate success, in part because Laemmle broke with Edison's custom of refusing credit to actors. By naming the stars of films, he was able to attract many of the leading players of the time, and contributed to the creation of the star system. Most notably, in 1910, he actively promoted
Florence Lawrence, then known as the "Biograph girl", in what may be the first instance of a studio using a film star in its marketing.
Following the westward trend of the industry, in 1915, Laemmle opened the world's largest motion picture production facility, Universal City Studios, on a 230-acre (0.9 km²) converted farm just over the Cahuenga Pass from Hollywood. Studio management now became the third facet of Universal's operations, with the studio incorporated as a distinct subsidiary organization.
Despite Laemmle's role as an innovator, as a studio head he was extremely cautious, and within a few years the rapidly expanding film business had passed him by. Unlike rivals
Adolph Zukor,
William Fox and
Marcus Loew, Laemmle chose not to develop a theater chain. He also financed all of his own films, refusing to take on debt. By the early 1920s, as the other studios soared, Universal was decidedly in the second rank. Content with a market in small towns, its product was primarily
melodramas, cheap
westerns, and
serials. For a few years in the early twenties the young producer
Irving Thalberg tried to improve the quality of Universal's output, but he left in 1923 for a better opportunity with the
Louis B. Mayer company.
In 1926, Universal also opened a production unit in Germany,
Deutsche Universal-Film AG, under production direction of
Joe Pasternak. This unit produced 3â€"4 films per year until 1936, migrating to Hungary and then Austria in the face of Hitler's increasing domination of central Europe. With the advent of sound, these productions were made in the German language or, occasionally, Hungarian or Polish. In the USA, Universal Pictures did not distribute any of this subsidiary's films, but at least some of them were exhibited through other, independent, foreign-language film distributors based in New York, without benefit of English subtitles. Nazi persecution and a change in ownership for the parent Universal Pictures organization resulted in the dissolution of this subsidiary.
Carl Laemmle, Jr. benefited from one of the greatest acts of
nepotism in Hollywood history when his father handed him the keys toâ€"and control ofâ€"Universal City as a 21st birthday gift in 1928. To his credit, Laemmle, Jr. saw what his father could not, and acted at once to bring Universal up to date. Laemmle, Jr. bought and built theaters, converted the studio to sound production, and upgraded the quality of production. His early efforts included the 1929 version of
Show Boat, the lavish musical
Broadway (1929) which included
Technicolor sequences, the first all-color musical feature (for Universal);
King of Jazz (1930); and
All Quiet on the Western Front, winner of the "Best Picture" award for 1930. Laemmle, Jr. also created a successful niche for the studio, beginning a long-running series of monster movies, affectionately dubbed:
Universal Horror, among them
Frankenstein,
Dracula, and
The Mummy. Other Laemmle productions of this period include
Imitation of Life and
My Man Godfrey.
Taking on the task of modernizing and upgrading a film conglomerate in the depths of the depression was risky, and for a time Universal slipped into receivership. The theater chain was scrapped, but Laemmle Jr. held fast to distribution, studio and production operations. His intentions to upgrade production resulted in a lavish remake of
Show Boat, featuring several stars from the
Broadway stage version, which began production in late 1935 and was released in May, 1936. This would prove to be a costly production for the studio, and for the Laemmle family. Throughout its twenty-plus years' existence, Universal had never borrowed money; to complete production on "Show Boat" the studio turned to the
Standard Chartered Bank for a $750,000 production loan. When production dragged on, a cash-strapped studio could not repay the loan, and the bank foreclosed, claiming the pledged collateral, the Laemmle family's stock in (and therefore control of) Universal Pictures Company Inc.
Despite the fact that the 1936 "Show Boat" turned out to be a critically acclaimed box-office hit, the Laemmles were unceremoniously removed from all association with the company, and the new owners instituted severe cuts in production budgets. Gone were the big ambitions, and though Universal had few big names under contract, those it had been cultivating, like
William Wyler and
Margaret Sullavan, now left. By the start of World War II, the company was concentrating on small-budget production of the fare that had once been Universal's sidelines: westerns, melodramas, serials and sequels to the studio's horror classics. Only the films of young singer
Deanna Durbin were given reasonably high budgets, under the control of Joe Pasternak upon his emigration from Europe; if any one star can be said to have kept Universal in business during the late 1930s, it was Durbin, despite her often being woefully miscast as a young teenager when she was, clearly, a fully adult woman. Fortunately, just when Durbin outgrew her screen persona, the studio signed the comedy team of
Abbott and Costello (
Bud Abbott and
Lou Costello) to a long-term contract. A string of low-budget hits beginning with "
Buck Privates" (1941) placed Abbott and Costello among the top box office draws in the country, improving Universal's bottom line even more than Durbin's glossy productions had. Other low and medium budget fare dominated through the years of
World War II, when the studio's roster included many cast-off Paramount players like
Mae West,
W.C. Fields, and
Marlene Dietrich. The studio also churned out various sequels for each of its monsters. During the war years Universal did have a co-production arrangement with producer
Walter Wanger and his partner, director
Fritz Lang, but their pictures were a small bit of quality in a schedule dominated by the likes of
Cobra Woman and
Frontier Gal.
After the War, looking to expand his American presence, the British entrepreneur
J. Arthur Rank bought a one-fourth interest in Universal in 1945. While trying to improve the quality of the studio's output, he instigated a merger in 1946 with a struggling American independent production company,
International Pictures.
William Goetz, a founder of International, was made head of production at the renamed (as Universal-International Pictures Inc.) production arm of the Universal Pictures complex (distribution and copyright control remained under the name of Universal Pictures Company Inc.; Universal-International Pictures additionally served Universal as an import-export subsidiary, and copyright holder for the production arm's films), and he set out an ambitious schedule. While there were to be a few hits like
The Egg & I,
The Killers, and
The Naked City, the studio still struggled. By the late 1940s, Goetz was out, and the studio reverted once more to the low-budget fare it knew best. Once again, the films of Abbott and Costello, including
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, were among the studio's top-grossing productions. But at this point Rank lost interest and sold his shares to the investor
Milton Rackmil, whose
Decca Records would take full control of Universal in 1952.
Though Decca would continue to keep picture-budgets lean, they were favored by changing circumstances in the film business, as other studios let their contract-actors go in the wake of the 1948
U.S. vs. Paramount Pictures, et al. case. Leading actors were increasingly free to work where and when they chose, and in 1950
MCA agent
Lew Wasserman made a deal with Universal for his client
James Stewart that would change the rules of the business. Wasserman's deal gave Stewart a share in the profits of three pictures in lieu of a large salary. When one of those films,
Winchester '73 proved to be a hit, Stewart became a rich man. This kind of arrangement would become the rule for many future productions at Universal, and eventually at other studios as well.
By the late 1950s, the motion picture business was in trouble. The combination of the studio/theater-chain break-up and the rise of
television saw the mass audience drift away, probably forever. Talent agent MCA had also become a powerful television producer, renting space at
Republic Studios for its
Revue Studios subsidiary. After a period of complete shutdown, a moribund Universal agreed to sell its (by now) 360-acre (1.5 km²) studio lot to MCA in 1958, for $11 million. Although MCA owned the studio lot, but not Universal Pictures, it was increasingly influential on Universal's product. The studio lot was upgraded and modernized, while MCA clients like
Doris Day,
Lana Turner, and
Cary Grant were signed to Universal Pictures contracts.
The actual, long-awaited takeover of Universal Pictures by MCA finally took place in mid-1962, and the production subsidiary reverted in name to Universal Pictures, while the parent company became MCA/Universal Pictures Inc. Universal-International Pictures Inc. remained a subsidiary only engaged in export/international release of Universal product. In addition, Revue Studios became known as Universal Television. As a last gesture before getting out of the talent agency business, virtually every MCA client was signed to a Universal contract. And so, with MCA in charge, for a few years in the 1960s Universal became what it had never been: a full-blown, first-class movie studio, with leading actors and directors under contract; offering slick, commercial films; and a studio tour subsidiary (launched in 1964). But it was too late, since the audience was no longer there, and by 1968, the film-production unit began to downsize. Television now carried the load, as Universal dominated the American networks, particularly
NBC (which later merged with Universal to form NBC Universal; see below), where for several seasons it provided up to half of all
prime time shows. An innovation of which Universal was especially proud was the creation in this period of the 90-minute, made-for-television movie.
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Gate to Universal Studios, Hollywood. |
Though Universal's film unit did produce occasional hits, among them
Airport,
The Sting,
American Graffiti, and a blockbuster that restored the company's fortunes,
Jaws, Universal in the 1970s was primarily a television studio. Weekly series production was the workhorse of the company. There would be other film hits like
E.T: The Extra-Terrestrial,
Back to the Future, and
Jurassic Park, but overall the film business was still hit-and-miss. In the early 1970s, Universal teamed up with
Paramount Pictures to form Cinema International Corporation, which distributed films by Paramount and Universal worldwide. It was replaced by
United International Pictures in 1981, when
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer joined the fold. UIP began distributing films by start-up studio
DreamWorks in 1997, and MGM subsequently dropped out of the venture in 2001, letting
20th Century Fox internationally distribute its films. Anxious to expand its broadcast and cable presence, in 1990 Lew Wasserman, now head of MCA, sought a rich partner, of MCA/Universal to
Matsushita Electric, the
Japanese electronics manufacturer. At this time, the production subsidiary was renamed Universal Studios Inc.
This provided a cash infusion, but the clash of cultures was too great to overcome, and, in frustration, five years later Matsushita sold control MCA/Universal to the
Canadian liquor distributor
Seagram. Hoping to build a media empire around Universal, Seagram bought
Polygram and other entertainment properties, and created MCA/Universal Home Video Inc. to enter the lucrative videotape sales industry; but the up-and-down profit in Hollywood was no substitute for a secure cash-cow like whiskey.
To raise money, Seagram head
Edgar Bronfman, Jr. sold Universal's television holdings (including cable network
USA) to
Barry Diller. (These same properties would be bought back later at greatly inflated prices.) Seeing a way out, in June 2000, Seagram sold itself to
French water utility and media company
Vivendi and the media conglomerate became
Vivendi Universal, while the music-related subsidiaries of MCA were sold to
Geffen Music, thus effectively ending the existence of MCA.
Subsequently burdened with debt, Vivendi Universal sold its subsidiary
Vivendi Universal Entertainment (including the studio and theme parks) to
GE in 2004, parent of NBC. The resulting media super-conglomerate was renamed
NBC Universal, while Universal Studios Inc. remained the name of the production subsidiary; and while some expressed doubts that regimented, profit-minded GE and high-living Hollywood could coexist, so far the mix seems to be working. The reorganized "Universal" film conglomerate has enjoyed several financially successful years. As presently structured, GE owns 80% of NBC Universal, with Vivendi holding the remaining 20%, with an option to sell its share in
2006.
However, 2006 presents Universal with some new challenges. In late 2005, Viacom's Paramount Pictures swooped in to acquire DreamWorks SKG after aqcuisition talks between GE and DreamWorks stalled. Universal's long time Chairman, Stacey Snyder, left Universal in early 2006 to head up DreamWorks. Snyder was replaced by Marc Shmuger, a veteran Universal and studio executive. Shmuger has a reputation for being very bright, opinionated, and is well respected in the industry. Some question his experience in dealing with talent. With no blockbusters on Universal's 2006 slate, Shmuger's tenure will be defined by what the studio develops in the next few years.
Universal, like any other major movie studio, owns a considerable library. It owns almost every feature and short Universal themselves made, as well as almost all TV shows Revue/Universal made. In addition, Universal owns almost all of the pre-1950 sound features originally made by
Paramount Pictures-these films came under Universal ownership after MCA, which (through in-name only division
EMKA, Ltd.) purchased the films in 1957, bought Universal, as well as a few
Alfred Hitchcock features originally released by Paramount, along with the libraries of
USA Films,
October Films, and the 1996-1999 films by
PolyGram Filmed Entertainment (
MGM owns most of the pre-1996 PolyGram library, though Universal owns a few films from that era as well) and its subsidiaries, as well as (through parent NBC Universal) much of the post-1973 NBC library of shows and made-for-TV movies. It also owns several films made by others, including some pre-1952
United Artists material, and the UK rights to most of the
RKO Pictures library.
Universal has used an image of planet
Earth as their logo since the early 1920s. The first of these was a static logo with the word "UNIVERSAL" around it. Around 1925, this was changed into an animated revolving globe of the world, which faded into the smiling face of Carl Laemmle. In 1927, a new logo was introduced which had an airplane making a cloud of smoke around a revolving globe, which transforms into the words "UNIVERSAL PICTURES". During the early talkie period, the logo seems to have been abandoned. An updated logo was re-introduced in
1931, as an airplane circling the globe "wipes" into place, the words "A UNIVERSAL PICTURE". With new management in the mid-1930s came a completely new logo; introduced in
1936, a highly stylized glass globe, surrounded by twinkling stars, rotating to display the words "A UNIVERSAL PICTURE." This logo quickly conveyed a message of "new management" while tapping into the modern movement in design.
Following the 1946 merger with International Pictures, a new, more conventional logo was introduced, with a realistic representation of earth shown underneath the new name "Universal-International" in a dignified type font. When the "International" portion of the name was dropped in 1963, the logo was updated to a more stylized revolving globe inside a whirling Van Allen belt, with the name "UNIVERSAL" centered over it. "A" and "PICTURE" were sandwiched over the "UNIVERSAL" text from 1963 to 1972. Starting in 1972, added at the bottom of the screen was the sub-head, "AN MCA COMPANY."
To celebrate the company's 75th anniversary, the logo got a digital makeover in
1990. Using CGI, the new introduction simulates a satellite-eye view of earth; as the point-of-view pulls back, a classically-styled "UNIVERSAL" moves into place like a belt. In its first year of use, a montage of clips from earlier logos began the logo. This was tweaked a bit in 1997 to add lights on earth and highlights on the rotating letter-wrap. Added to this was a dramatic, swelling theme by
Jerry Goldsmith.
There have been occasional modifications to the logo to match the picture. For example, for
Waterworld in 1995, the sea level on earth rises, covering the land as the "UNIVERSAL" title moves into place. For the movie
Doom the Earth is replaced with Mars in the Universal logo.
1920s
|
Universal Studios logo from 1920-1929 |
*
White Youth (1920)
*
The Flaming Disc (1920)
*
Am I Dreaming? (1920)
*
The Dragon's Net (1920)
*
The Adorable Savage (1920)
*
Putting It Over (1920)
*
The Fire Eater (1921)
*
A Battle of Wits (1921)
*
Dream Girl (1921)
*
The Millionaire (1921)
*
A Daughter of the Law (1921)
*
The Conflict (1921)
*
The Rage of Paris (1921)
*
No Woman Knows (1921)
*
Action (1921)
*
The Danger Man (1921)
*
The Kiss (1921)
*
The Heart of Arizona (1921)
*
The Beautiful Gambler (1921)
*
Desperate Trails (1921)
*
The Man Tamer (1921)
*
Cheated Love (1921)
*
The Blazing Trail (1921)
*
The Freeze-Out (1921)
*
The Diamond Queen (1921)
*
Foolish Wives (1921)
The Hunchback of Notre Dame (1923)
The Phantom of the Opera (1925)
*
Melody of Love (1928, Universal's first all-talkie)
*
Show Boat (1929)
*
Broadway (1929, first Universal talkie with color sequences)
1930s
|
Universal Studios logo from 1929-1936 |
*
All Quiet on the Western Front (1930)
*
The King of Jazz (1930, first Universal all-color talkie)
*
Dracula (1931)
*
Frankenstein (1931)
*
Back Street (1932)
*
The Mummy (1932)
*
Counsellor at Law (1933)
*
The Invisible Man (1933)
*
Imitation of Life (1934)
*
The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
*
Magnificent Obsession (1935)
*
Show Boat (1936)
*
My Man Godfrey (1936)
*
Three Smart Girls (1936)
*
Dracula's Daughter (1936)
*
One Hundred Men and a Girl (1937)
*
Destry Rides Again (1939)
*
My Little Chickadee (1939)
*
Son of Frankenstein (1939)
1940s
|
Universal Studios logo from 1936-1946 |
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Enemy Agent (1940)
*
The Bank Dick (1940)
*
Black Friday (1940)
*
Buck Privates (1941)
*
The Wolf Man (1941)
*
House of Frankenstein (1945)
*
House of Dracula (1945)
*
The Egg & I (1946)
*
The Killers (1946)
*
Great Expectations (1946 film) (U.S. distribution only, in late 1947)
*
The Naked City (1948)
*
Hamlet (1948, U.S. distribution only)
*
Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)
|
Universal International logo (1946-1963) |
1950s
*
Winchester '73 (1950)
*
Harvey (1950)
*
Magnificent Obsession (1954)
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Written on the Wind (1956)
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Pillow Talk (1959)
*
Imitation of Life (1959, remake of 1934 film)
1960s
|
A Universal Picture logo (1963-1972) |
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Spartacus (1960)
*
Flower Drum Song (1961)
*
Lover Come Back (1961, distribution)
*
That Touch of Mink (1962, distribution)
*
To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)
*
The Birds (1963)
*
Send Me No Flowers (1963)
*
Marnie (1964)
*
Charade (1964)
*
Mirage (1965)
*
The Rare Breed (1966)
*
Torn Curtain (1966)
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Thoroughly Modern Millie (1967)
*
The War Wagon (1967)
*
Sweet Charity (1969)
*
Anne of the Thousand Days (1969)
1970s
|
Universal logo (1972â€"1990) |
*
Airport and its sequels (1974, 1977, and 1979, respectively)
*
The Andromeda Strain (1971)
*
Silent Running (1972)
*
Slaughterhouse Five (1972)
*
American Graffiti (1973, plus sequel in 1979)
*
The Sting (1973, plus sequel in 1983)
*
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
*
Earthquake (1974)
*
Jaws (1975, plus sequels in 1978, 1983, and 1987)
*
Swashbuckler (1976)
*
Slap Shot (1977)
*
The Slipper and the Rose (1977)
*
Smokey and the Bandit (1977, plus sequels in 1980 and 1983)
*
Sorcerer (1977, co-production with
Paramount Pictures)
*
The Deer Hunter (1978)
*
Jaws 2 (1978)
*
National Lampoon's Animal House (1978)
1980s
*
The Blues Brothers (1980)
*
On Golden Pond (1981, distribution only)
*
Halloween II (1981)
*
The Great Muppet Caper (1981, distribution only)
*
Conan the Barbarian (1982)
*
Halloween III: Season of the Witch (1982)
*
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
*
Fast Times at Ridgemont High (1982)
*
The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982)
*
Sophie's Choice (1982, distribution only)
*
Cat People (1982)
*
The Thing (1982)
*
The Dark Crystal (1982)
*
Jaws 3-D (1983)
*
Scarface (1983)
*
Sixteen Candles (1984)
*
Firestarter (1984)
*
Back to the Future (1985, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
*
The Breakfast Club (1985)
*
Weird Science (1985)
*
An American Tail (1986, plus its three sequels)
*
Jaws: The Revenge (1987)
*
Harry and the Hendersons (1987, and later the 1990s TV series)
*
Prince of Darkness (1987)
*
*batteries not included (1987)
*
The Land Before Time (1988, plus sequels, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment and
Lucasfilm Ltd.)
*
They Live (1988)
*
The Great Outdoors (1988)
*
Field of Dreams (1989)
*
Back to the Future Part II (1989, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
*
Do the Right Thing (1989)
*
Born on the Fourth of July (1989)
1990s
|
Universal Studios 75th Anniversary logo from 1990-1991 |
|
Universal Studios logo from 1991-1997 |
*
Tremors (
1990)
*
Problem Child (1990)
*
Henry & June (
1990)
*
Back to the Future Part III (1990, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
*
Darkman (1990) (plus its two sequels)
*
Child's Play 2 (1990)
*
Kindergarten Cop (1990)
*
Problem Child 2 (1991)
*
Child's Play 3 (1991)
*
Scent of a Woman (1992)
*
Candyman (1992, distributor)
*
Carlitos Way (1993)
*
Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story (1993)
*
The Cowboy Way (1994)
*
Jurassic Park (1993, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
*
The Real McCoy (1993)
*
Schindler's List (1993, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
*
We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story (1993, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
*
The Flintstones (1994, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment and
Hanna-Barbera)
*
The Shadow (1994)
*
The Little Rascals (1994, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment and
King World)
*
The River Wild (1994)
*
The War (1994)
*
Reality Bites (1994)
*
Street Fighter (1994, distributor)
*
Junior (1994)
*
Apollo 13 (1995)
*
Babe (1995)
*
Balto (1995)
*
Casino (1995)
*
Casper (1995, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment and
Harvey Comics)
*
Twelve Monkeys (1995)
*
Ed (1996)
*
The Chamber (1996)
*
The Nutty Professor (1996, co-production with
Imagine Entertainment)
*
Daylight (1996)
*
Dante's Peak (1997)
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Liar Liar (1997)
*
The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
*
Small Soldiers (1998, co-production with
DreamWorks)
*
Patch Adams (1998)
*
Meet Joe Black (1998)
*
Babe: Pig in the City (1998, sequel to
Babe, distributor)
*
Bride of Chucky (1998)
*
Mercury Rising (1998)
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October Sky (1999)
*
The Mummy (1999)
*
American Pie (1999)
*
The Hurricane (1999)
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Snow Falling on Cedars (1999)
*
End of Days (1999)
*
Anglea's Ashes (1999, co-production with
Paramount Pictures)
|
The current Universal Studios logo, from 1997-present |
2000s
*
U-571 (2000, distributor)
*
Billy Elliot (2000, distributor)
*
Gladiator (2000)
*
Nutty Professor II: The Klumps (2000)
*
Erin Brockovich (2000, co-production with
Columbia Pictures)
*
Meet the Parents (2000, co-production with
DreamWorks, plus its sequel in 2004)
*
Harrison's Flowers (2000)
*
The Watcher (2000)
* The Family Man (2000)
* How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000, co-production with Imagine Entertainment)
* Brotherhood of the Wolf (2001) (distributor)
* A Beautiful Mind (2001, distribution, co-production with DreamWorks and Imagine Entertainment)
* The Mummy Returns (2001)
* The Fast and the Furious (2001)
* Captain Corelli's Mandolin (2001, co-produced with Working Title Films)
* American Pie 2 (2001)
* K-PAX (2001)
* Jurassic Park III (2001, co-production with Amblin Entertainment)
* Spy Game (2001, distributor)
* The Bourne Identity (2002)
* Undercover Brother (2002)
* The Scorpion King (2002)
* 8 Mile (2002)
* Red Dragon (2002)
* The Emperor's Club (2002)
* The Pianist (2002, distributor)
* The Life of David Gale (2003)
* 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003)
* American Wedding (2003)
* Bruce Almighty (2003, co-production with Spyglass Entertainment)
* The Cat in The Hat (2003, co-production with DreamWorks and Imagine Entertainment)
* Honey (2003)
* Hulk (2003)
* Love Actually (2003, distributor)
* Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World (2003, co-production with 20th Century Fox and Miramax Films)
* Peter Pan (2003, co-production with Columbia Pictures and Revolution Studios)
* The Rundown (2003)
* Seabiscuit (2003, co-production with DreamWorks and Spyglass Entertainment)
* Along Came Polly (2004)
* The Bourne Supremacy (2004)
* Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (2004, co-production with Miramax Films)
* The Chronicles of Riddick (2004)
* Friday Night Lights (2004)
* In Good Company (2004)
* Meet the Fockers (2004, sequel to Meet the Parents
, co-production with DreamWorks)
* Ray (2004, distribution)
* Van Helsing (2004)
* Land of the Dead (using the 1930's Universal logo)
(2005)
* White Noise (2005)
* Assault on Precinct 13 (2005)
*
The Wedding Date (2005)
*
The 40-Year-Old Virgin (2005)
*
The Interpreter (2005)
*
Doom (2005)
*
Cinderella Man (2005)
*
Jarhead (2005)
*
Kicking & Screaming (2005)
*
King Kong (2005, remake of the 1933
RKO classic)
*
Munich (2005, co-production with
DreamWorks and
Amblin Entertainment)
*
The Perfect Man (2005)
*
Prime (2005)
*
The Producers (2005, co-production with
Columbia Pictures)
*
Serenity (2005)
*
The Skeleton Key (2005)
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Two for the Money (2005)
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Nanny McPhee (2006, with
Working Title Films and
Studio Canal)
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Curious George (2006, with
Imagine Entertainment)
*
Slither (2006)
*
The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)
*
Miami Vice (2006)
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United 93 (2006)
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Evan Almighty (2007)
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In The Pink (film) (2007)
*
The Incredible Hulk (2008)
*
Jurassic Park IV (2008, co-production with
Amblin Entertainment)
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Metal Gear Solid (2008)
*
The Pirates Who Don't Do Anything: A VeggieTales Movie (2008, co-production with
Big Idea Productions)
In the early years of Universal, the company absorbed a number of small firms. Among those early film-production studios (and their proprietors) were:
*
Champion Motion Picture Co., Mark Dintinfass, president
*
Nestor Motion Picture Company, David Horsley
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The New York Motion Picture Company, Charles Baumann and Adam Kessel, proprietors
*
Powers Motion Picture Co., Pat Powers, president
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Rex Motion Picture Co., William SwansonFor several years some of these junior partners carried considerable weight within Universal; inevitably factions and rivalries were the rule. At least one version of corporate history claims that the twenty-year-old Irving Thalberg rose so quickly because he told subordinates that he alone spoke for Carl Laemmle in making production decisions, while the others were more concerned with battling among themselves.
* Bruck, Connie.
When Hollywood Had a King. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1998.
* Drinkwater, John.
The Life and Adventures of Carl Laemmle. G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1931, illustrated.
*
Forest Lawn Hollywood Hills - map
Providencial and Water Development * Los Angeles Library Photo Collection "Bird-Eye View of Universal City" 1911
* Los Angeles Library Photo Collection "Nestor Studios" .
* Mordden, Ethan.
The Hollywood Studios. New York: Fireside, 1989.
* McDougal, Dennis.
The Last Mogul: Lew Wasserman, MCA and the Hidden History of Hollywood. New York: Crown Publishers, 1998.
* Schatz, Thomas.
The Genius of the System. New York: Pantheon Books, 1989.
* Sklar, Robert.
Movie-Made America. New York: Vintage, 1994.
*
List of assets owned by General Electric*
Lists of corporate assets*
Universal Horror*
Cartoon Studios*
Universal Studios Hollywood*
Universal Orlando Resort*
Your Studio and You, a comedy film made by
South Park creators
Trey Parker and
Matt Stone after the acquisition of Universal by Seagram
*
Universal Studios