American film production company founded in 1995
This article is about the film studio which was formerly called "Mandalay Entertainment". For the privately held company, see
Mandalay Entertainment .
Mandalay Pictures (formerly known as Mandalay Entertainment ) is an American independent film production company founded on May 27, 1995, which is part of producer and businessman Peter Guber 's Mandalay Entertainment . From 1997 until 2002, Lions Gate Entertainment owned a stake in Mandalay Pictures before selling it. The company's mascot is a tiger.[ 1]
Mandalay Pictures was formed at the same time as the parent company Mandalay Entertainment in 1995 by Peter Guber, who was formerly head of Sony Pictures Entertainment and The Guber-Peters Company . At first, it struck an exclusive film and television deal with Sony Pictures Entertainment , which was releasing its films through the Columbia and TriStar distribution labels.[ 2] [ 3]
In 1998, Mandalay Pictures moved over from Sony to Paramount Pictures .[ 4] At the same time, Mandalay struck a partnership with Lions Gate Entertainment to acquire the assets of Mandalay Entertainment.[ 5] The deal did not include the television division , which remained with Columbia TriStar Television .[ 6] In September 1998, Mandalay signed a distribution deal with Canal+ and Pathé joint-venture C+P to handle distribution of Mandalay's films in the United Kingdom, France and Belgium/Luxembourg.[ 7]
In 2002, the deal was transferred from Paramount Pictures to Universal Pictures , and launched its international sales division.[ 8] In November 2002, it was separated from Lions Gate Entertainment .[ 9]
In 2004, Ori Marmur left Mandalay Pictures, and decided to join Original Film . Ironically Original Film is producing the I Know What You Did Last Summer movies for Mandalay Pictures.[ 10]
In 2007, it launched a division Mandalay Independent Pictures, and it was to focus on making independent pictures.[ 11] In 2010, it became Mandalay Vision[ 12] and Matthew Rhodes was appointed president in 2011.[ 13]
Here are the films produced by Mandalay.
Release Date
Title
Notes
Budget
Gross (worldwide)
August 16, 1996
The Fan
co-production with Scott Free Productions and TriStar Pictures
$55 million
$18.6 million
February 28, 1997
Donnie Brasco
co-production with Baltimore Pictures and Mark Johnson Productions ; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the TriStar Pictures label
$35 million
$124.9 million
April 4, 1997
Double Team
co-production with Cine Story Pictures; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the Columbia Pictures label
$30 million
$11.5 million
October 10, 1997
Seven Years in Tibet
co-production with Reperage Productions, Vanguard Films and Applecross Productions; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the TriStar Pictures label
$70 million
$131.5 million
October 17, 1997
I Know What You Did Last Summer
co-production with Original Film ; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the Columbia Pictures label
$17 million
$125.2 million
January 30, 1998
Desperate Measures
co-production with Eaglepoint Productions; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the TriStar Pictures label
$50 million
$13.8 million
March 20, 1998
Wild Things
distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the Columbia Pictures label
$20 million
$56 million
May 1, 1998
Les Miserables
co-production with Sarah Radclyffe Productions and James Gorman Productions; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the Columbia Pictures label
N/A
$14.1 million
August 21, 1998
Dance with Me
co-production with Weissman/Egawa Productions; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the Columbia Pictures label
$15.9 million
November 13, 1998
I Still Know What You Did Last Summer
co-production with Original Film ; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the Columbia Pictures label
$24 million
$84 million
January 22, 1999
Gloria
co-production with Eagle Point Productions; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the Columbia Pictures label
$30 million
$4.2 million
March 12, 1999
The Deep End of the Ocean
co-production with Via Rosa Productions ; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing under the Columbia Pictures label
$38 million
$28.1 million
November 19, 1999
Sleepy Hollow
co-production with Scott Rudin Productions , American Zoetrope and Tim Burton Productions ; distributed by Paramount Pictures
$70 million
$207 million
Release Date
Title
Notes
Budget
Gross (worldwide)
July 30, 2010
The Kids Are All Right
as Mandalay Vision; co-production with Gilbert Films, Saint Aire Productions, Artist International, 10th Hole Productions and Antidote Films ; distributed by Focus Features
$4 million
$34.7 million
February 18, 2011
Vanishing on 7th Street
as Mandalay Vision; co-production with Herrick Entertainment; distributed by Magnet Releasing
$10 million
$1.06 million
April 8, 2011
Soul Surfer
as Mandalay Vision; co-production with TriStar Pictures , FilmDistrict , Brookwell McNamara Entertainment , Island Film Group, Enticing Entertainment, Affirm Films and Life's a Beach Entertainment; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing
$18 million
$47.1 million
April 27, 2012
Bernie
as Mandalay Vision; co-production with Castle Rock Entertainment , Wind Dancer Films, Detour Filmproduction, Collins House Productions and Horsethief Pictures; distributed by Millennium Entertainment
$6 million
$10.1 million
August 22, 2014
When the Game Stands Tall
co-production with TriStar Pictures and Affirm Films ; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing
$15 million
$30.1 million
October 6, 2014
Horns
co-production with Red Granite Pictures ; distributed by Dimension Films and RADiUS-TWC
N/A
$3.9 million
February 6, 2015
The Voices
as Mandalay Vision; co-production with 1984 Private Defense Contractors, Babelsberg Studio and Vertigo Entertainment , distributed by Lionsgate Entertainment
$11 million
$444,196
August 7, 2015
Dark Places
co-production with Exclusive Media Group and Denver and Delilah Productions ; distributed by A24
$20 million
$3.5 million
October 7, 2016
The Birth of a Nation
co-production with Bron Studios , Phantom Four and Tiny Giant Entertainment ; distributed by Fox Searchlight Pictures
$8.5 million
$16.8 million
September 29, 2017
Mark Felt: The Man Who Brought Down the White House
co-production with Endurance Media Ventures, Torridon Films, Riverstone Pictures, MadRiver Pictures, Scott Free Productions and Cara Films; distributed by Sony Pictures Classics
N/A
$1.8 million
March 23, 2018
Paul, Apostle of Christ
co-production with Affirm Films and ODB Films; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing
$5 million
$25.5 million
Direct-to-video and streaming films [ edit ]
Release Date
Title
Notes
June 1, 2010
Wild Things: Foursome
co-production with Stage 6 Films and RCR Media Group; released by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
September 13, 2011
Never Back Down 2: The Beatdown
co-production with Stage 6 Films ; released by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
June 7, 2016
Never Back Down: No Surrender
co-production with Destination Films ; released by Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
March 10, 2017
Burning Sands
co-production with Homegrown Pictures, Hudlin Entertainment and Freedom Road Productions, released by Netflix
September 1, 2017
Little Evil
co-production with Bluegrass Films ; released by Netflix
April 6, 2018
Amateur
released by Netflix
January 18, 2019
Io
co-production with Sunset Junction Entertainment, Untitled Entertainment and Great Point Media, released by Netflix
March 8, 2019
Juanita
co-production with Homegrown Pictures; released by Netflix
August 2, 2019
Otherhood
co-production with Welle Entertainment; released by Netflix
Release Date
Title
Notes
2016
Choke
co-production with Hermano Films
^ "Lions Gate sells stake in Mandalay Pictures" . broadcastermagazine.com . Retrieved 24 January 2015 .
^ Weinraub, Bernard (1995-12-07). "THE MEDIA BUSINESS;Behind Sony Ouster, One Excess Too Many" . The New York Times . ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ "Sony reworking Guber deal: report" . UPI . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ "On the Road: Mandalay Pictures Moves to Paramount From Sony" . Los Angeles Times . 1998-03-10. Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ Cox, Dan; Carver, Benedict (1998-02-06). "Mandalay on move" . Variety . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ Littleton, Cynthia (1999-07-21). "Mandalay, Col TriStar extend pact" . Variety . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ Hindes, Andrew (1998-09-16). "Mandalay seals distrib deal" . Variety . Retrieved 2024-06-28 .
^ Goodridge, Mike (2002-07-12). "Mandalay lands at Universal, launches new international sales offensive" . Screen . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ "Lions Gate dumps stake in Mandalay" . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ LaPorte, Nicole; Brodesser, Claude (2004-02-24). "Mandalay's Marmur at Original" . Variety . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ Gilstrap, Peter (2007-04-19). "Schulman pumps up Mandalay" . Variety . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ "Mandalay Vision to finance indie films" . The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved 2020-04-29 .
^ Shaw, Lucas (2014-05-14). " 'Drive' Producer Hires Indie Veteran Matt Rhodes to Run Film Division" . TheWrap . Retrieved 2024-02-07 .
^ Stephan, Katcy (February 8, 2024). "Denzel Washington and Spike Lee Reuniting to Remake Kurosawa's High and Low With A24 and Apple" . Variety . Retrieved 23 August 2024 .
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