The following is a list of films distributed by Warner Bros. in the 2000s. This list does not include direct-to-video releases or films from New Line Cinema prior to its merger with Warner Bros. in 2008, nor does it include third-party films or films WB gained the rights to as a result of mergers or acquisitions.
Release Date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 18, 2000 | The Whole Nine Yards[1] | US and UK distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Franchise Pictures[2] |
February 23, 2000 | Wonder Boys | select international distribution only; produced by Mutual Film Company, Curtis Hanson Productions, Scott Rudin Productions and Tele Munchen Gruppe |
March 3, 2000 | My Dog Skip | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Alcon Entertainment |
March 22, 2000 | Romeo Must Die | co-production with Silver Pictures[3] |
April 7, 2000 | Ready to Rumble | distribution outside France, Germany and Scandinavia only; co-production with Outlaw Productions, Bel Air Entertainment and World Championship Wrestling |
April 21, 2000 | Gossip | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment |
May 12, 2000 | Battlefield Earth | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions, Franchise Pictures and JTP Films |
June 30, 2000 | The Perfect Storm | co-production with Baltimore Pictures and Radiant Productions |
July 19, 2000 | The In Crowd | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
July 21, 2000 | [4] | distribution under Kids' WB only; produced by Nintendo and 4Kids Entertainment |
August 4, 2000 | Space Cowboys | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Malpaso Productions |
August 11, 2000 | The Replacements | distribution outside France, Germany and Scandinavia only; co-production with Bel Air Entertainment |
August 25, 2000 | The Art of War | US and UK distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Franchise Pictures[5] |
September 15, 2000 | Bait | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment and 3 Arts Entertainment |
September 29, 2000 | co-production with Sabine Films and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum | |
Best in Show | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment | |
October 6, 2000 | Get Carter | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions, The Canton Company and Franchise Pictures |
October 20, 2000 | Pay It Forward | distribution outside France, Germany and Scandinavia only; co-production with Bel Air Entertainment[6] |
November 10, 2000 | Red Planet | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and The Mark Canton Company |
December 8, 2000 | Proof of Life | distribution outside France, Germany and Scandinavia only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment and Bel Air Entertainment[7] |
December 22, 2000 | Miss Congeniality | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Fortis Films, NPV Entertainment and Village Roadshow Pictures |
Release Date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 19, 2001 | The Pledge | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Franchise Pictures |
February 2, 2001 | Valentine | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Dylan Sellers Productions; last Warner Bros. Pictures' film under Time Warner Entertainment |
February 16, 2001 | Sweet November | distribution outside France, Germany and Scandinavia only; co-production with Bel Air Entertainment and 3 Arts Entertainment |
February 23, 2001 | 3000 Miles to Graceland | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Franchise Pictures |
March 2, 2001 | See Spot Run | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Robert Simmons Productions |
March 3, 2001 | Chain of Fools | distribution outside France, Germany and Scandinavia only; produced by Bel-Air Entertainment, City Block Films and Lord/Weaver Productions[8] |
March 16, 2001 | Exit Wounds | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Silver Pictures |
April 6, 2001 | distribution under Kids' WB only; produced by Nintendo and 4Kids Entertainment | |
April 27, 2001 | Driven | US and select international distribution only; produced by Franchise Pictures |
May 4, 2001 | The Dish | US distribution only; produced by Distant Horizon |
May 18, 2001 | Angel Eyes | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Franchise Pictures[9] |
June 8, 2001 | Swordfish | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Silver Pictures |
June 15, 2001 | Proximity | international distribution only; produced by Overseas Filmgroup and Zinc Entertainment |
June 29, 2001 | A.I. Artificial Intelligence | Worldwide theatrical and international home media distribution only; co-production with DreamWorks Pictures, Amblin Entertainment and Stanley Kubrick Productions |
July 4, 2001 | Cats & Dogs | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment |
August 10, 2001 | Osmosis Jones | co-production with Warner Bros. Feature Animation and Conundrum Entertainment |
August 17, 2001 | American Outlaws | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
August 24, 2001 | Summer Catch | co-production with Tollin/Robbins Productions |
September 7, 2001 | Rock Star | distribution outside France, Germany and Scandinavia only; co-production with Bel Air Entertainment |
September 28, 2001 | Hearts in Atlantis | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment |
October 4, 2001 | The Little Polar Bear | distribution only |
October 5, 2001 | Training Day | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Outlaw Productions |
October 26, 2001 | Thirteen Ghosts | North American distribution only; co-production with Columbia Pictures and Dark Castle Entertainment |
November 9, 2001 | Heist | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Franchise Pictures |
November 16, 2001 | Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone | Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone outside the U.S; co-production with Heyday Films, 1492 Pictures and Duncan Henderson Productions[10] |
November 30, 2001 | The Affair of the Necklace | US and select international distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment |
December 6, 2001 | Minoes | Dutch and German distribution only; produced by Bos Bros. Film & TV Productions and AVRO |
December 7, 2001 | Ocean's Eleven | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Jerry Weintraub Productions[11] |
December 21, 2001 | The Majestic | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment |
December 28, 2001 | Charlotte Gray | US distribution only; produced by FilmFour, Senator Film and Ecosse Films |
Release Date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 25, 2002 | A Walk to Remember | US distribution only; co-production with Pandora, Gaylord Films, and Di Novi Pictures |
February 8, 2002 | Collateral Damage | distribution outside France and Germany only; co-production with Bel-Air Entertainment |
February 22, 2002 | Queen of the Damned | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Material Productions |
March 8, 2002 | The Time Machine | international distribution only; co-production with DreamWorks Pictures, Parkes, MacDonald Productions and Arnold Leibovit Entertainment |
March 15, 2002 | Showtime | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment, Material Pictures and Tribeca Productions |
March 29, 2002 | Death to Smoochy | distribution outside UK only; produced by FilmFour and Senator International |
April 19, 2002 | My Big Fat Greek Wedding | Philippine/Japanese distribution only; produced by Gold Circle Films, HBO Films, MPH Entertainment and Playtone |
Murder by Numbers | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment | |
April 26, 2002 | The Salton Sea | |
May 24, 2002 | Insomnia | US/France/Germany distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment, Witt/Thomas Productions and Section Eight Productions |
June 7, 2002 | Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood | co-production with Gaylord Films |
June 14, 2002 | Scooby-Doo | co-production with Hanna-Barbera Productions and Mosaic Media Group |
June 21, 2002 | Juwanna Mann | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
July 3, 2002 | The Powerpuff Girls Movie | distribution only; produced by Cartoon Network Studios |
July 17, 2002 | Eight Legged Freaks | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Electric Entertainment |
August 9, 2002 | Blood Work | co-production with Malpaso Productions |
August 16, 2002 | The Adventures of Pluto Nash | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment |
Possession | international distribution only; co-production with USA Films, Baltimore Pictures and Spring Creek Pictures | |
August 30, 2002 | FeardotCom | US/Japan/Thailand distribution only; produced by Franchise Pictures MDP Worldwide, ApolloMedia, Fear Com Productions, and Carousel Film Company |
September 6, 2002 | City by the Sea | US and UK distribution only; produced by Franchise Pictures |
September 20, 2002 | ||
September 27, 2002 | Mondays in the Sun | Spain distribution only |
October 11, 2002 | White Oleander | US distribution only; co-production with Pandora |
October 18, 2002 | Welcome to Collinwood | |
October 25, 2002 | Ghost Ship | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Dark Castle Entertainment |
November 6, 2002 | Femme Fatale | US/UK/Australia distribution only; produced by Quinta Communications and Epsilon Motion Pictures |
November 15, 2002 | Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets | co-production with Heyday Films, 1492 Pictures and Miracle Productions[12] |
December 6, 2002 | Analyze That | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Tribeca Productions |
December 20, 2002 | Two Weeks Notice | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment |
Release Date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 17, 2003 | Kangaroo Jack | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment and Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
February 21, 2003 | Gods and Generals | co-production with Mace Neufeld Productions |
February 28, 2003 | Cradle 2 the Grave | co-production with Silver Pictures |
March 21, 2003 | Dreamcatcher | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Village Roadshow Pictures and NPV Entertainment |
March 28, 2003 | distribution only; produced by Gaylord Films and Pandora | |
April 4, 2003 | What a Girl Wants | co-production with Gaylord Films |
April 16, 2003 | A Mighty Wind | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment |
April 18, 2003 | Malibu's Most Wanted | co-production with Karz Entertainment |
May 15, 2003 | The Matrix Reloaded | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Silver Pictures[13] |
May 23, 2003 | The In-Laws | US and UK distribution only; produced by Franchise Pictures |
June 3, 2003 | The Animatrix | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Silver Pictures, Square Pictures, Studio 4°C, Madhouse and DNA Productions |
June 20, 2003 | Alex & Emma | US and UK distribution only; produced by Franchise Pictures |
July 2, 2003 | North American distribution only; produced by Intermedia Films, IMF and C2 Pictures[14] | |
August 1, 2003 | I'll Be There | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
August 15, 2003 | Grind | |
September 12, 2003 | Matchstick Men | co-production with ImageMovers and Scott Free Productions, the last Warner Bros. Pictures' film under AOL Time Warner. |
October 15, 2003 | Mystic River | nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Malpaso Productions |
November 5, 2003 | The Matrix Revolutions | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Silver Pictures[15] |
November 14, 2003 | co-production with Warner Bros. Feature Animation, Baltimore/Cold Spring Creek Pictures, Goldmann Pictures and Lonely Film Productions CmbH & Co. kg | |
November 21, 2003 | Gothika | North American distribution only; co-production with Columbia Pictures and Dark Castle Entertainment |
December 5, 2003 | The Last Samurai | co-production with Radar Pictures, The Bedford Falls Company and Cruise/Wagner Productions |
December 12, 2003 | Love Don't Cost a Thing | co-production with Alcon Entertainment |
Something's Gotta Give | international distribution only; co-production with Columbia Pictures and Waverly Films | |
Release Date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 9, 2004 | Chasing Liberty | distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment |
January 16, 2004 | Torque | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment and Moritz Original |
January 30, 2004 | The Big Bounce | co-production with Shangri-La Entertainment |
March 3, 2004 | NASCAR 3D | co-production with IMAX |
March 5, 2004 | Starsky & Hutch | US distribution only; co-production with Dimension Films, AR-TL, Weed Road and Red Hour Productions |
March 12, 2004 | Spartan | US/UK/Japan distribution only, produced by Franchise Pictures |
March 19, 2004 | Taking Lives | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and Atmosphere Pictures |
March 26, 2004 | co-production with Hanna-Barbera Productions and Mosaic Media Group | |
April 9, 2004 | The Whole Ten Yards | US/UK/France distribution only; produced by Franchise Pictures and Cheyenne Enterprises |
May 7, 2004 | New York Minute | co-production with Dualstar Productions and Di Novi Pictures |
May 14, 2004 | Troy | co-production with Plan B Entertainment and Radiant Productions |
June 4, 2004 | Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban | co-production with Heyday Films, 1492 Pictures and P of A Productions[16] |
July 16, 2004 | A Cinderella Story | co-production with Dylan Sellers Productions and Clifford Werber Productions |
July 23, 2004 | Catwoman | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures[17] |
August 13, 2004 | [18] | distribution only; co-production with 4Kids Entertainment and Studio Gallop |
August 20, 2004 | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions[19] | |
September 26, 2004 | Laura's Star | co-production with Rothkirch Cartoon Film, MABO Pictures Filmproduktion and Comet Film |
November 10, 2004 | The Polar Express | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Shangri-La Entertainment, ImageMovers and Playtone Entertainment[20] |
November 24, 2004 | Alexander | US/UK/Australia/Italy/Latin America distribution only; co-production with Intermedia Films, Pathé, France 3 Cinema and IMF Productions;[21] |
December 10, 2004 | Ocean's Twelve | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment, Jerry Weintraub Productions and Section Eight Productions[22] |
December 15, 2004 | Million Dollar Baby | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture US distribution only, co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment and Malpaso Productions[23] |
December 25, 2004 | The Aviator | US home media/Canada/Australia/Latin America distribution only; co-production with Miramax Films, Forward Pass, IMD, Initial Entertainment Group and Appian Way Productions[24] |
Release Date | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
January 14, 2005 | Racing Stripes | US distribution only; co-production with Alcon Entertainment[25] | |
January 21, 2005 | The Phantom of the Opera | US distribution only; co-production with Joel Schumacher Productions, Really Useful Films and Scion Films[26] | |
February 18, 2005 | Constantine | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Weed Road Pictures, Vertigo (DC Comics) and The Donners' Company[27] | |
March 24, 2005 | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Fortis Films, and Village Roadshow Pictures[28] | ||
May 6, 2005 | House of Wax | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and Dark Castle Entertainment | |
May 20, 2005 | US and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions | ||
June 1, 2005 | The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants | distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment and Di Novi Pictures | |
June 15, 2005 | Batman Begins | co-production with Legendary Pictures, DC Comics and Syncopy Films[29] | |
July 15, 2005 | Charlie and the Chocolate Factory | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Plan B Entertainment, The Zanuck Company and Theobald Film Productions[30] | |
July 22, 2005 | The Island | international distribution only; co-production with DreamWorks Pictures and Parkes/MacDonald Productions[31] | |
July 29, 2005 | Must Love Dogs | co-production with Team Todd and Ubu Productions | |
August 5, 2005 | The Dukes of Hazzard | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures | |
September 2, 2005 | A Sound of Thunder | US and UK distribution only; produced by Franchise Pictures | |
September 23, 2005 | Corpse Bride | co-production with Tim Burton Productions, Laika Entertainment and Patalex II Productions | |
September 29, 2005 | distribution only | ||
September 30, 2005 | Duma | co-production with Gaylord Films and John Wells Productions | |
October 21, 2005 | North Country | co-production with Participant Media, Industry Entertainment and Nick Wechsler Productions | |
November 11, 2005 | Kiss Kiss Bang Bang | distribution only; produced by Silver Pictures | |
November 18, 2005 | Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire | co-production with Heyday Films and Patalex IV Productions[32] | |
December 9, 2005 | Syriana | co-production with Participant Productions and Section Eight Productions | |
December 25, 2005 | Rumor Has It… | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures |
Release Date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 5, 2006 | The Thief Lord | co-production with Thema Production, Comet Film Produktion GmbH, Delux Productions, Future Films and Arclight Films; US distribution by 20th Century Fox |
February 10, 2006 | Firewall | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and Beacon Communications |
March 3, 2006 | Deep Sea 3D | co-production with IMAX |
16 Blocks | US/UK/Germany distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment, Millennium Films, Emmett/Furla Films, Cheyenne Enterprises, Equity Pictures and The Donners' Company | |
March 17, 2006 | V for Vendetta | co-production with Virtual Studios, Vertigo (DC Comics), Silver Pictures and Anarchos Productions[33] |
March 31, 2006 | ATL | co-production with Overbrook Entertainment |
May 12, 2006 | Poseidon | co-production with Virtual Studios and Weed Road Pictures |
June 16, 2006 | The Lake House | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures |
June 28, 2006 | Superman Returns | co-production with Legendary Pictures, DC Comics, Peters Entertainment and Bad Hat Harry Productions[34] |
July 21, 2006 | Lady in the Water | co-production with Legendary Pictures and Blinding Edge Pictures |
July 28, 2006 | The Ant Bully | co-production with Legendary Pictures, Playtone and DNA Productions |
August 25, 2006 | Beerfest | co-production with Legendary Pictures, Broken Lizard and Gerber Pictures |
September 1, 2006 | The Wicker Man | US and Germany distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment, Millennium Films, Emmett Furla Films, Equity Pictures and Saturn Films |
October 6, 2006 | The Departed | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture US and select international distribution only; co-production with Plan B Entertainment, Initial Entertainment Group, Vertigo Entertainment and Media Asia Films[35] |
October 20, 2006 | The Prestige | international distribution only; co-production with Touchstone Pictures, Newmarket Films and Syncopy Films |
Flags of Our Fathers | international distribution only, distributed in the U.S. by Paramount Pictures; co-production with DreamWorks Pictures, Amblin Entertainment and Malpaso Productions | |
November 17, 2006 | Happy Feet | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Animated Feature; co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Animal Logic and Kennedy-Miller Productions |
November 22, 2006 | The Fountain | North American distribution only; co-production with Regency Enterprises, Protozoa Pictures and Foy, Inc. |
December 8, 2006 | Blood Diamond | co-production with Virtual Studios, Initial Entertainment Group and Bedford Falls Productions |
Unaccompanied Minors | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures | |
December 15, 2006 | The Good German | co-production with Virtual Studios and Section Eight Productions |
December 20, 2006 | Letters from Iwo Jima | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture co-production with DreamWorks Pictures, Amblin Entertainment and Malpaso Productions |
December 22, 2006 | We Are Marshall | co-production with Legendary Pictures, Thunder Road Films and Wonderland Sound and Vision |
Release Date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
February 14, 2007 | Music and Lyrics | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment and Village Roadshow Pictures |
February 23, 2007 | The Astronaut Farmer | distribution only; co-production with Spring Creek Pictures and Polish Brothers Construction |
March 2, 2007 | Zodiac | international distribution only; co-production with Paramount Pictures and Phoenix Pictures |
March 9, 2007 | 300 | co-production with Legendary Pictures, Virtual Studios, Atmosphere Pictures and Hollywood Gang Films |
April 5, 2007 | The Reaping | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and Dark Castle Entertainment |
April 20, 2007 | In the Land of Women | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment |
May 4, 2007 | Lucky You | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures |
June 8, 2007 | Ocean's Thirteen | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Section Eight Productions and Jerry Weintraub Productions[36] |
June 15, 2007 | Nancy Drew | co-production with Virtual Studios and Jerry Weintraub Productions |
July 3, 2007 | License to Wed | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Phoenix Pictures, Robert Simonds Productions, Underground Films and Management and Proposal Productions |
July 11, 2007 | Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix | co-production with Heyday Films[37] |
July 27, 2007 | No Reservations | distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment and Village Roadshow Pictures |
August 17, 2007 | The Invasion | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Silver Pictures and Vertigo Entertainment[38] |
September 14, 2007 | The Brave One | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and Silver Pictures |
September 21, 2007 | The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford | co-production with Virtual Studios, Scott Free Productions and Plan B Entertainment |
October 12, 2007 | Michael Clayton | nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama North American and Turkish distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment, Samuels Media, Mirage Enterprises and Section Eight Productions |
October 16, 2007 | Return to House on Haunted Hill | co-production with Dark Castle Entertainment |
Believers | ||
November 9, 2007 | Fred Claus | co-production with Silver Pictures |
November 16, 2007 | Beowulf | international distribution only; distributed in the U.S. by Paramount Pictures; co-production with Shangri-La Entertainment, ImageMovers and Paramount Pictures |
November 21, 2007 | August Rush | US distribution only; co-production with Odyssey Entertainment, Southpaw Entertainment and CJ Entertainment |
co-production with Warner Home Video, Cartoon Network and Alice and Kicking, Inc. | ||
December 14, 2007 | I Am Legend | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Heyday Films, Weed Road Pictures, Overbrook Entertainment and Original Film[39] |
December 21, 2007 | P.S. I Love You | US distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment |
Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street | international distribution only; distributed in the U.S. by Paramount Pictures; co-production with DreamWorks Pictures, Parkes/MacDonald Productions, The Zanuck Company and Neal Street Productions | |
December 25, 2007 | The Bucket List | co-production with Zadan / Meron Productions and Two Ton Films[40] |
Release Date | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
January 4, 2008 | One Missed Call | US and select international distribution only; produced by Kadokawa Pictures, Intermedia Films and Alcon Entertainment |
February 8, 2008 | Fool's Gold | co-production with De Line Pictures[41] |
March 7, 2008 | 10,000 B.C. | co-production with Legendary Pictures, Centropolis Entertainment and The Mark Gordon Company |
April 25, 2008 | Harold & Kumar Escape from Guantanamo Bay | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema and Mandate Pictures |
May 9, 2008 | Speed Racer | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Silver Pictures, Anarchos Productions, Velocity Productions and Sechste Babelsberg Film |
May 30, 2008 | Sex and the City | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema and HBO Films[42] |
June 20, 2008 | Get Smart | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Mosaic Media Group and Mad Chance Callahan Filmworks |
July 2, 2008 | distribution only; produced by Picturehouse, New Line Cinema, HBO Films and American Girl Films | |
July 11, 2008 | Journey to the Center of the Earth | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema and Walden Media |
July 18, 2008 | The Dark Knight | co-production with Legendary Pictures, DC Comics and Syncopy Films[43] Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2020 |
August 6, 2008 | The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 | distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment, Alloy Entertainment, Di Novi Pictures and Martin Chase Productions |
August 15, 2008 | Star Wars: The Clone Wars | distribution only; produced by Lucasfilm[44] and Lucasfilm Animation |
September 1, 2008 | The Women | co-distribution with New Line Cinema only; produced by Picturehouse, Inferno Distribution, Double Edged Entertainment, Jagged Films and Shukovsky English Entertainment |
September 26, 2008 | Nights in Rodanthe | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures |
October 3, 2008 | Appaloosa | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema, Axiom Films and Groundswell Productions |
October 10, 2008 | Body of Lies | co-production with Scott Free Productions and De Line Pictures[45] |
October 24, 2008 | Pride and Glory | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema, Solaris Entertainment, O'Connor Brothers and Avery Pix |
October 31, 2008 | RocknRolla | co-production with Dark Castle Entertainment |
November 12, 2008 | Slumdog Millionaire | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture co-distributed with Fox Searchlight Pictures in the US; produced by Film4 Productions and Celador Films |
November 26, 2008 | Four Christmases | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema and Spyglass Entertainment |
December 12, 2008 | Gran Torino | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Malpaso Productions and Media Magik Entertainment |
December 19, 2008 | Yes Man | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Heyday Films and The Zanuck Company |
December 25, 2008 | The Curious Case of Benjamin Button | nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama international distribution only; co-production with Paramount Pictures and The Kennedy/Marshall Company |
Release Date | Title | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|
January 23, 2009 | Inkheart | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema | |
February 6, 2009 | The Secret of Moonacre | distribution only | |
He's Just Not That Into You | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema and Flower Films | ||
February 13, 2009 | Friday the 13th | North American distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema, Paramount Pictures and Platinum Dunes | |
Under the Sea 3D | co-production with IMAX | ||
March 6, 2009 | Watchmen | US distribution only; co-production with Paramount Pictures, Legendary Pictures, DC Comics and Lawrence Gordon Productions[46] | |
April 10, 2009 | Observe and Report | co-production with Legendary Pictures and De Line Pictures[47] | |
April 17, 2009 | 17 Again | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema and Offspring Entertainment[48] | |
May 1, 2009 | Ghosts of Girlfriends Past | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema[49] | |
May 21, 2009 | Terminator Salvation | North American distribution only, produced by The Halcyon Company, Wonderland Sound and Vision and Moritz Borman Productions. Columbia Pictures handled international rights[50] | |
June 5, 2009 | The Hangover | co-production with Legendary Pictures and Green Hat Films[51] | |
June 26, 2009 | My Sister's Keeper | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema[52] | |
July 15, 2009 | Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince | co-production with Heyday Films[53] | |
July 24, 2009 | Orphan | co-production with Dark Castle Entertainment and Appian Way Productions[54] | |
August 14, 2009 | The Time Traveler's Wife | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema and Plan B Entertainment[55] | |
August 21, 2009 | Shorts | US and select international distribution only; co-production with Imagenation Abu Dhabi, Media Rights Capital and Troublemaker Studios | |
August 28, 2009 | The Final Destination | distribution only; produced by New Line Cinema[56] | |
September 11, 2009 | Whiteout | co-production with Dark Castle Entertainment | |
September 18, 2009 | The Informant! | co-production with Participant Media, Section Eight Productions and Groundswell Productions[57] | |
October 2, 2009 | The Invention of Lying | US distribution only; produced by Radar Pictures and Media Rights Capital; Focus Features International and Universal Pictures handled international territories | |
October 6, 2009 | Trick 'r Treat | distribution only; co-production Warner Premiere Legendary Pictures and Bad Hat Harry Productions | |
October 16, 2009 | Where the Wild Things Are | co-production with Legendary Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures and Playtone | |
November 6, 2009 | The Box | US distribution only; co-production with Radar Pictures, Darko Entertainment and Media Rights Capital | |
November 20, 2009 | The Blind Side | nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment[58] | |
November 25, 2009 | Ninja Assassin | co-production with Legendary Pictures, Dark Castle Entertainment, Silver Pictures and Anarchos Productions | |
December 11, 2009 | Invictus | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment, Revelations Entertainment, Malpaso Productions and Mace Neufeld Productions[59] | |
December 25, 2009 | Sherlock Holmes | co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and Silver Pictures[60] |