This is a list of films produced and/or released by American film studio TriStar Pictures. Some of the films listed here were distributed theatrically in the United States by the company's distribution division, Sony Pictures Releasing (formerly known as Triumph Releasing Corporation (1982–1994) and Columbia TriStar Film Distributors International (1988–2005).
Release date | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
April 6, 1984 | Where the Boys Are '84[1] | theatrical distribution only; produced by ITC Entertainment | |
May 11, 1984 | The Natural | co-production with Delphi II Productions | |
July 13, 1984 | The Muppets Take Manhattan | co-production with Henson Associates and Delphi II Productions | |
July 27, 1984 | Meatballs Part II | ||
August 31, 1984 | Flashpoint[2] | theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO Pictures | |
September 7, 1984 | The Last Winter | ||
September 21, 1984 | The Evil That Men Do | ||
Places in the Heart | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture co-production with Delphi II Productions | ||
October 12, 1984 | Songwriter | ||
November 2, 1984 | Blame It on the Night | ||
Lovelines | |||
November 9, 1984 | Silent Night, Deadly Night | ||
November 21, 1984 | Supergirl[3] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Pueblo Film | |
December 14, 1984 | Runaway | co-production with Delphi III Productions | |
December 21, 1984 | Birdy | co-production with A&M Records and Delphi III Productions | |
[4] | theatrical distribution only; produced by The Cannon Group | ||
February 8, 1985 | Heaven Help Us | theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO Pictures | |
March 22, 1985 | The Last Dragon | co-production with Motown Productions and Delphi III Productions | |
April 3, 1985 | Alamo Bay | co-production with Delphi IV Productions | |
May 1, 1985 | Little Treasure | ||
May 3, 1985 | Private Resort | co-production with Delphi III Productions | |
May 22, 1985 | [5] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
June 21, 1985 | Lifeforce | ||
July 19, 1985 | The Legend of Billie Jean | co-production with Delphi III Productions | |
August 7, 1985 | Real Genius | ||
August 16, 1985 | Volunteers | theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO Pictures | |
October 4, 1985 | Sweet Dreams | ||
October 25, 1985 | My Man Adam | ||
November 27, 1985 | theatrical distribution only; produced by St. Michael Finance Limited | ||
January 3, 1986 | Head Office | theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO Pictures | |
January 17, 1986 | Iron Eagle | ||
February 14, 1986 | |||
February 21, 1986 | The Hitcher | theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO Pictures | |
March 21, 1986 | Rad[6] | theatrical distribution only; produced by TaliaFilm II Productions | |
March 1986 | Odd Jobs | theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO Pictures | |
April 11, 1986 | Band of the Hand | co-production with Delphi V Productions | |
April 25, 1986 | 8 Million Ways to Die | theatrical distribution only; produced by PSO Productions, Inc. | |
May 9, 1986 | Short Circuit | co-production with PSO Productions, Inc. and The Turman-Foster Company | |
June 27, 1986 | Labyrinth[7] | co-production with Henson Associates and Lucasfilm | |
July 2, 1986 | About Last Night... | co-production with Delphi V Productions | |
July 30, 1986 | Nothing in Common | co-production with Delphi Films and Rastar | |
August 22, 1986 | Night of the Creeps | ||
Touch and Go | |||
October 10, 1986 | Peggy Sue Got Married | co-production with American Zoetrope, Delphi V Productions and Rastar | |
October 31, 1986 | Let's Get Harry | ||
November 7, 1986 | The Boss' Wife | ||
November 14, 1986 | Every Time We Say Goodbye | co-production with Delphi V Productions | |
December 19, 1986 | No Mercy | co-production with Delphi Productions | |
February 6, 1987 | Light of Day[8] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Taft Entertainment | |
March 6, 1987 | Angel Heart | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
March 27, 1987 | Blind Date | co-production with Delphi Productions | |
April 24, 1987 | Extreme Prejudice | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
Forever, Lulu | |||
May 8, 1987 | Gardens of Stone | co-production with American Zoetrope and ML Delphi Premier Productions | |
May 22, 1987 | Amazing Grace and Chuck | co-production with Delphi Productions and Rastar | |
July 10, 1987 | The Squeeze | ||
August 1, 1987 | Love at Stake | ||
August 7, 1987 | Nadine | co-production with ML Delphi Premier Productions | |
August 14, 1987 | The Monster Squad | theatrical distribution only; produced by Taft Entertainment | |
September 18, 1987 | The Principal | co-production with ML Delphi Premier Productions | |
October 2, 1987 | Like Father Like Son | co-production with Imagine Entertainment | |
October 9, 1987 | Man on Fire | theatrical distribution only | |
October 23, 1987 | Suspect | co-production with ML Delphi Premier Productions | |
November 13, 1987 | The Running Man | theatrical distribution only; produced by Taft Entertainment | |
December 18, 1987 | |||
High Tide | |||
Ironweed | theatrical distribution only; produced by Taft Entertainment | ||
January 15, 1988 | For Keeps | co-production with ML Delphi Premier Productions | |
March 4, 1988 | Switching Channels | ||
March 18, 1988 | Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
April 1, 1988 | The Seventh Sign | co-production with Interscope Communications and ML Delphi Premier Productions | |
April 29, 1988 | Sunset | co-production with ML Delphi Premier Productions | |
May 25, 1988 | Rambo III | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
June 17, 1988 | Red Heat | ||
July 6, 1988 | Short Circuit 2 | co-production with The Turman-Foster Company | |
August 5, 1988 | The Blob | ||
September 23, 1988 | Sweet Hearts Dance | co-production with ML Delphi Premier Productions | |
October 14, 1988 | The Kiss | co-production with Astral Film Enterprises | |
October 21, 1988 | Bat*21[9] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Vision PDG | |
November 11, 1988 | Iron Eagle II | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
November 18, 1988 | High Spirits | theatrical distribution only; produced by Vision PDG | |
November 30, 1988 | Made in U.S.A. | ||
January 13, 1989 | DeepStar Six | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
February 3, 1989 | Who's Harry Crumb? | ||
February 10, 1989 | Tap | ||
March 10, 1989 | Chances Are | ||
March 17, 1989 | Slaves of New York | ||
March 31, 1989 | Sing | ||
April 28, 1989 | Loverboy | ||
May 12, 1989 | See No Evil, Hear No Evil | ||
May 19, 1989 | Fright Night Part 2 | International distribution only | |
August 4, 1989 | Lock Up | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
September 29, 1989 | Johnny Handsome | ||
October 13, 1989 | Look Who's Talking | ||
October 27, 1989 | The Bear | ||
November 15, 1989 | Steel Magnolias | co-production with Rastar | |
December 15, 1989 | Family Business | co-production with Regency International Pictures and Gordon Company | |
Glory | |||
December 22, 1989 | Music Box | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures |
Release date | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
February 9, 1990 | Loose Cannons | ||
February 23, 1990 | Mountains of the Moon | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
March 16, 1990 | Blind Fury | co-production with Interscope Communications | |
March 30, 1990 | Side Out | co-production with Aurora Productions | |
April 6, 1990 | I Love You to Death | ||
April 27, 1990 | Q & A[10] | theatrical distribution only; produced by Regency International Pictures and Odyssey Distributors | |
June 1, 1990 | Total Recall | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
July 20, 1990 | The Freshman | ||
August 10, 1990 | Air America | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
September 21, 1990 | Narrow Margin | ||
October 5, 1990 | Avalon | co-production with Baltimore Pictures | |
November 2, 1990 | Jacob's Ladder | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
December 14, 1990 | Look Who's Talking Too | ||
February 8, 1991 | L.A. Story | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
March 1, 1991 | The Doors | ||
April 26, 1991 | Toy Soldiers | co-production with Island World | |
May 24, 1991 | Hudson Hawk | co-production with Silver Pictures | |
July 3, 1991 | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2023 | ||
July 26, 1991 | Another You | ||
August 9, 1991 | Bingo | ||
September 20, 1991 | The Fisher King | ||
December 11, 1991 | Hook | co-production with Amblin Entertainment | |
December 20, 1991 | Bugsy | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture co-production with Baltimore Pictures | |
March 20, 1992 | Basic Instinct | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
April 3, 1992 | Thunderheart | co-production with Tribeca Productions | |
April 15, 1992 | City of Joy | co-production with Allied Filmmakers | |
July 10, 1992 | Universal Soldier | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
September 11, 1992 | Wind | co-production with American Zoetrope | |
September 18, 1992 | Husbands and Wives | ||
October 16, 1992 | Candyman[11] | theatrical distribution only; produced by PolyGram Filmed Entertainment and Propaganda Films | |
December 25, 1992 | Chaplin | theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures | |
January 29, 1993 | Sniper | co-production with Baltimore Pictures | |
May 28, 1993 | Cliffhanger | co-production with Carolco Pictures and Le Studio Canal+ | |
June 25, 1993 | Sleepless in Seattle | co-production with Foster Productions | |
July 9, 1993 | Weekend at Bernie's II | ||
July 30, 1993 | So I Married an Axe Murderer | co-production with Fried/Woods Films | |
August 18, 1993 | Manhattan Murder Mystery | co-production with Rollins/Joffe Productions | |
August 20, 1993 | Wilder Napalm | co-production with Baltimore Pictures | |
October 8, 1993 | Mr. Jones | co-production with Rastar | |
October 22, 1993 | Rudy | co-production with Fried/Woods Films | |
November 5, 1993 | Look Who's Talking Now | co-production with Krane Productions | |
December 22, 1993 | Philadelphia | co-production with Clinica Estetico Productions | |
March 11, 1994 | Guarding Tess | co-production with Channel Productions | |
April 8, 1994 | Threesome | co-production with Motion Picture Corporation of America | |
April 15, 1994 | Cops & Robbersons | co-production with Channel Productions | |
May 6, 1994 | 3 Ninjas Kick Back | ||
July 29, 1994 | It Could Happen to You | co-production with Adelson/Baumgarten and Lobell/Bergman Productions | |
August 26, 1994 | Wagons East | ||
September 16, 1994 | Princess Caraboo[12] | US distribution only; co-production with Beacon Pictures | |
October 7, 1994 | Only You | co-production with Fried/Woods Films | |
November 4, 1994 | Mary Shelley's Frankenstein | co-production with American Zoetrope and IndieProd Company Productions | |
December 21, 1994 | Mixed Nuts | co-production with Witt/Thomas Productions | |
December 23, 1994 | Legends of the Fall | co-production with Bedford Falls Productions | |
February 10, 1995 | The Quick and the Dead | co-production with IndieProd Company Productions | |
March 3, 1995 | Hideaway | co-production with S/Q Productions | |
March 10, 1995 | 3 Ninjas Knuckle Up | ||
April 12, 1995 | Jury Duty | co-production with Triumph Films | |
May 26, 1995 | Johnny Mnemonic | co-production with Alliance Communications | |
August 30, 1995 | Magic in the Water | co-production with Triumph Films | |
September 29, 1995 | Devil in a Blue Dress | co-production with Clinica Estetico Productions | |
October 20, 1995 | Never Talk to Strangers | co-production with Alliance Communications | |
December 15, 1995 | Jumanji | co-production with Interscope Communications | |
February 23, 1996 | Mary Reilly | co-production with Channel Productions | |
March 8, 1996 | If Lucy Fell | co-production with Motion Picture Corporation of America | |
March 22, 1996 | Race the Sun | co-production with Morrow/Heus Productions | |
April 19, 1996 | Mrs. Winterbourne | co-production with A&M Records | |
April 26, 1996 | Sunset Park | co-production with Jersey Films | |
August 2, 1996 | Matilda | ||
August 16, 1996 | The Fan | co-production with Mandalay Pictures | |
October 25, 1996 | High School High | co-production with Zucker Productions | |
November 15, 1996 | The Mirror Has Two Faces | co-production with Phoenix Pictures | |
December 13, 1996 | Jerry Maguire | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture co-production with Gracie Films and Vinyl Films | |
January 17, 1997 | Beverly Hills Ninja | co-production with Motion Picture Corporation of America | |
February 7, 1997 | The Pest | co-production with The Bubble Factory | |
February 28, 1997 | Donnie Brasco | co-production with Mandalay Pictures and Baltimore Pictures | |
June 20, 1997 | My Best Friend's Wedding | co-production with Zucker Productions | |
October 3, 1997 | U Turn | ||
October 10, 1997 | Seven Years in Tibet | co-production with Mandalay Pictures | |
November 7, 1997 | Starship Troopers | co-production with Touchstone Pictures | |
December 25, 1997 | As Good as It Gets | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture co-production with Gracie Films | |
January 23, 1998 | Swept from the Sea | co-production with Phoenix Pictures | |
January 30, 1998 | Desperate Measures | co-production with Mandalay Pictures | |
March 6, 1998 | Hush | co-production with Red Wagon Entertainment | |
April 10, 1998 | |||
April 17, 1998 | Homegrown | co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment | |
April 24, 1998 | The Big Hit | co-production with Zide/Perry Productions | |
May 1, 1998 | Dancer, Texas Pop. 81 | co-production with Chase Productions | |
May 20, 1998 | Godzilla | distribution worldwide except for Japan; co-production with Centropolis Entertainment and Toho | |
July 10, 1998 | Madeline | co-production with Jaffilms | |
July 17, 1998 | The Mask of Zorro | co-production with Amblin Entertainment | |
September 4, 1998 | Knock Off | co-production with MDP Worldwide and Film Workshop | |
September 25, 1998 | Urban Legend | co-production with Phoenix Pictures and Original Film | |
October 23, 1998 | Apt Pupil | co-production with Phoenix Pictures and Bad Hat Harry Productions | |
February 19, 1999 | Jawbreaker | co-production with Crossroad Films | |
March 12, 1999 | Baby Geniuses | co-production with Crystal Sky Pictures | |
August 20, 1999 | |||
October 29, 1999 | The Suburbans | co-production with Ignite Entertainment and Motion Picture Corporation of America |
Release date | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
June 22, 2001 | The Trumpet of the Swan | co-production with Nest Family Entertainment and RichCrest Animation Studios | |
April 12, 2002 | New Best Friend | co-production with FGM Entertainment | |
August 23, 2002 | Little Secrets | co-distribution with Samuel Goldwyn Films only | |
August 22, 2003 | The Medallion | theatrical distribution only, produced by Emperor Multimedia Group | |
June 3, 2005 | Lords of Dogtown | co-distribution with Columbia Pictures; co-production with Senator International | |
September 30, 2005 | Oliver Twist | US distribution only; co-production with RP Productions | |
April 21, 2006 | Silent Hill | US distribution only; produced by Davis Films and Konami | |
September 1, 2006 | Crossover | co-production with 360 Pictures | |
October 27, 2006 | Running with Scissors | co-production with Plan B Entertainment | |
March 16, 2007 | Premonition | co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Hyde Park Entertainment and Offspring Entertainment | |
April 27, 2007 | Wind Chill | co-production with Blueprint Pictures and Section Eight Productions | |
July 27, 2007 | I Know Who Killed Me | co-production with 360 Pictures | |
August 8, 2007 | Daddy Day Camp | co-production with Revolution Studios and Davis Entertainment | |
October 5, 2007 | Feel the Noise | co-production with Sony BMG and Nuyorican Productions | |
April 18, 2008 | 88 Minutes | co-production with Millennium Films and Emmett/Furla Films | |
October 24, 2008 | Passengers | ||
December 5, 2008 | Cadillac Records | co-production with Sony Music and Parkwood Entertainment | |
August 14, 2009 | District 9 | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture co-production with QED International and WingNut Films | |
November 20, 2009 | Planet 51 | US distribution only; co-production with Ilion Animation Studios and HandMade Films |
Release date | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
November 24, 2010 | Faster | International distribution only; co-production with CBS Films, Castle Rock Entertainment and State Street Pictures | |
April 8, 2011 | Soul Surfer | co-production with FilmDistrict, Enticing Entertainment, Island Film Group, Affirm Films, Brookwell McNamara Entertainment, Life's a Beach Entertainment and Mandalay Vision | |
May 6, 2011 | Jumping the Broom | co-production with Stage 6 Films and Our Stories Films | |
August 26, 2011 | Colombiana | US distribution only; co-production with Stage 6 Films, EuropaCorp, TF1 Films Production, Grive Productions and Canal+ | |
September 30, 2011 | Courageous | co-production with Sherwood Pictures, Provident Films, Affirm Films and Kendrick Brothers Productions | |
August 17, 2012 | Sparkle | co-production with Stage 6 Films | |
September 28, 2012 | Looper | co-production with FilmDistrict, Endgame Entertainment and DMG Entertainment | |
March 15, 2013 | The Call | co-production with Stage 6 Films, Troika Pictures, WWE Studios, Amasia Entertainment and Apotheosis Media Group | |
April 5, 2013 | Evil Dead | co-production with FilmDistrict and Ghost House Pictures | |
August 9, 2013 | Elysium | co-production with Media Rights Capital and QED International | |
February 21, 2014 | Pompeii | US co-distribution with FilmDistrict; co-production with Constantin Film and Impact Pictures | |
April 16, 2014 | Heaven Is for Real | co-production with Roth Films | |
May 9, 2014 | Moms' Night Out | co-production with Affirm Films, Provident Films, Pure Flix Entertainment and Four Boys Entertainment | |
August 22, 2014 | When the Game Stands Tall | co-production with Affirm Films and Mandalay Pictures | |
August 7, 2015 | Ricki and the Flash | co-production with LStar Capital, Marc Platt Productions and Badwill Entertainment | |
August 28, 2015 | War Room | co-production with Provident Films, Affirm Films and Kendrick Brothers Productions | |
September 30, 2015 | The Walk | co-production with LStar Capital and ImageMovers | |
May 13, 2016 | Money Monster | co-production with LStar Capital, Smokehouse Pictures and The Allegiance Theater | |
November 11, 2016 | Billy Lynn's Long Halftime Walk | co-production with Studio 8, LStar Capital, Film4 Productions, Bona Film Group, The Ink Factory and Marc Platt Productions | |
March 17, 2017 | T2 Trainspotting | British film; distribution only; produced by Film4, Creative Scotland, Cloud Eight Films, DNA Films and Decibel Films | |
June 28, 2017 | Baby Driver | co-production with MRC, Working Title Films and Big Talk Productions | |
December 29, 2017 | All the Money in the World | US and UK distribution only; co-production with Imperative Entertainment, Scott Free Productions and RedRum Films | |
November 22, 2019 | A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood | co-production with Tencent Pictures, Big Beach and Youree Henley Productions |
Release date | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
September 11, 2020 | The Broken Hearts Gallery | co-production with Stage 6 Films and No Trace Camping[13] | |
November 25, 2020 | Happiest Season | International distribution only; co-production with Temple Hill Entertainment and Entertainment One; distributed in the US by Hulu[14] | |
September 16, 2022 | The Woman King | co-production with Entertainment One, JuVee Productions and Welle Entertainment[15] | |
December 9, 2022 | Matilda The Musical | UK distribution only; co-production with Working Title Films and The Roald Dahl Story Company; distributed worldwide by Netflix[16] | |
December 23, 2022 | co-production with Black Label Media, Compelling Pictures, Muse of Fire Productions, Primary Wave Entertainment and West Madison Entertainment[17] | ||
November 17, 2023 | Thanksgiving | co-production with Spyglass Media Group, Dragonfly Entertainment and Electromagnetic Productions[18] | |
January 12, 2024 | The Book of Clarence | co-production with Legendary Entertainment and Kilburn Lane[19] |
Release date | Title | Notes | Production status |
---|---|---|---|
2025 | co-production with Spyglass Media Group, Dragonfly Entertainment and Electromagnetic Productions[22] | Pre-production | |
TBA | |||
Eleanor the Great | co-distribution with Sony Pictures Classics; co-production with These Pictures, Maven Screen Media, Wayfarer Studios and Content Engineers[23] | Post-production | |
The Nightingale | co-production with The Cantillon Company | In development |
Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|
Abbi and the Eighth Wonder | co-production with 21 Laps Entertainment[24] | |
The Alchemist | co-production with Legendary Entertainment and Palmstar Media[25] | |
District 10 | [26] | |
Guys and Dolls | [27] | |
The Last Human | co-production with Lord Miller Productions[28] | |
Man's Best Friend | co-production with Temple Hill Entertainment and Shoe’s Off Productions[29] | |
Nothing, Except Everything | co-production with Protozoa Pictures[30] | |
The Toymaker's Secret | [31] | |
Untitled buddy comedy film | co-production with Hoorae Media, ColorCreative, Big Boss and Macro Film Studios[32] | |
The Wedding People | co-production with Speck + Gordon Inc. and Concordia Studio[33] |