This page is a list of films released by Touchstone Pictures.
Contents |
Title | US release | Genre | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Stella | February 2, 1990 | Drama | John Erman | co-production with The Samuel Goldwyn Company (North America distribution only) |
Where the Heart Is | February 23, 1990 | Romantic comedy | John Boorman | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Pretty Woman | March 23, 1990 | Romantic comedy | Garry Marshall | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Ernest Goes to Jail | April 6, 1990 | Comedy | John R. Cherry III | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Spaced Invaders | April 27, 1990 | Sci-Fi comedy | Patrick Read Johnson | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Fire Birds | May 25, 1990 | Action adventure | David Green | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Dick Tracy | June 15, 1990 | Pulp action | Warren Beatty | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV Academy Award for Best Art Direction Academy Award for Best Makeup Academy Award for Best Original Song Nomination, Best Cinematography Nomination, Best Sound Nomination, Academy Award for Costume Design Nomination, Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor |
Betsy's Wedding | June 22, 1990 | Comedy | Alan Alda | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Mr. Destiny | October 12, 1990 | Comedy fantasy | James Orr | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Three Men and a Little Lady | November 21, 1990 | Comedy | Emile Ardolino | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Green Card | December 23, 1990 | Romantic comedy | Peter Weir | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Scenes from a Mall | February 22, 1991 | Comedy | Paul Mazursky | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Oscar | April 26, 1991 | Crime comedy | John Landis | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
What About Bob? | May 17, 1991 | Comedy | Frank Oz | co-production with Touchwood Pacific Partners |
The Doctor | July 24, 1991 | Drama | Randa Haines | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
True Identity | August 23, 1991 | Comedy | Charles Lane | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Paradise | September 18, 1991 | Drama | Mary Agnes Donoghue | co-production with Touchwood Pacific Partners |
Deceived | September 27, 1991 | Mystery thiller | Damian Harris | co-production with Silver Screen Partners IV |
Ernest Scared Stupid | October 11, 1991 | Comedy | John R. Cherry III | co-production with Touchwood Pacific Partners |
Billy Bathgate | November 1, 1991 | Crime drama | Robert Benton | co-production with Touchwood Pacific Partners |
Father of the Bride | December 20, 1991 | Comedy | Charles Shyer | co-production with Sandollar Productions and Touchwood Pacific Partners |
Noises Off | March 20, 1992 | Comedy | Peter Bogdanovich | co-production with Amblin Entertainment and Touchwood Pacific Partners |
Sister Act | May 29, 1992 | Musical comedy | Emile Ardolino | - |
3 Ninjas | August 7, 1992 | Martial arts comedy | Jon Turteltaub | - |
The Gun in Betty Lou's Handbag | August 21, 1992 | Screwball comedy | Allan Moyle | - |
Crossing the Bridge | September 11, 1992 | Drama comedy | Mike Binder | - |
Captain Ron | September 18, 1992 | Comedy | Thom Eberhardt | co-production with Touchwood Pacific Partners |
Alive | January 15, 1993 | Adventure drama | Frank Marshall | co-production with Paramount Pictures and The Kennedy/Marshall Company (North America distribution only) |
The Cemetery Club | February 3, 1993 | Comedy drama | Bill Duke | - |
Indian Summer | April 23, 1993 | Comedy drama | Mike Binder | - |
Life with Mikey | June 4, 1993 | Comedy | James Lapine | - |
What's Love Got to Do with It | June 9, 1993 | Biographical drama | Brian Gibson | - |
Another Stakeout | July 23, 1993 | Action comedy | John Badham | - |
My Boyfriend's Back | August 6, 1993 | Romantic black comedy/horror/fantasy | Bob Balaban | - |
The Program | September 24, 1993 | Sports drama | David S. Ward | - |
The Nightmare Before Christmas | October 29, 1993 | Animated musical fantasy | Henry Selick | - Since 2006, it has been re-released and re-branded by Walt Disney Pictures |
Sister Act 2: Back in the Habit | December 10, 1993 | Musical comedy | Bill Duke | - |
Cabin Boy | January 7, 1994 | Comedy fantasy | Adam Resnick | - |
My Father the Hero | February 4, 1994 | Romantic comedy | Steve Miner | - |
The Ref | March 9, 1994 | Black comedy | Ted Demme | in association with Don Simpson and Jerry Bruckheimer |
The Inkwell | April 22, 1994 | Romantic comedy drama | Matty Rich | - |
When a Man Loves a Woman | April 29, 1994 | Romantic drama | Luis Mandoki | - |
Renaissance Man | June 3, 1994 | Comedy drama | Penny Marshall | co-production with Cinergi Pictures |
I Love Trouble | June 29, 1994 | Romantic comedy | Charles Shyer | co-production with Caravan Pictures |
It's Pat | August 25, 1994 | Comedy | Adam Bernstein | - |
A Simple Twist of Fate | September 2, 1994 | Drama | Gillies MacKinnon | - |
Ed Wood | September 30, 1994 | Biographical comedy drama | Tim Burton | - |
Bad Company | January 20, 1995 | Neo-noir thriller | Damian Harris | - |
Jerky Boys: The Movie | February 3, 1995 | Crime comedy | James Melkonian | Uncredited, co-production with and distributed by Caravan Pictures |
Two Much | March 15, 1995 | Romantic screwball comedy | Fernando Trueba | co-production with Interscope Communications/Polygram Filmed Entertainment |
Jefferson in Paris | March 31, 1995 | Historical drama | James Ivory | in association with Merchant Ivory Productions |
Die Hard with a Vengeance | May 19, 1995 | Action | John McTiernan | produced by 20th Century Fox and Cinergi Pictures (International distribution only) |
Mad Love | May 26, 1995 | Romantic drama | Antonia Bird | - |
Feast of July | October 13, 1995 | Mystery drama | Christopher Menaul | in association with Merchant Ivory Productions |
Father of the Bride Part II | December 8, 1995 | Comedy | Charles Shyer | co-production with Sandollar Productions and The Meyers/Shyer Company |
Mr. Wrong | February 16, 1996 | Romantic comedy | Nick Castle | - |
Up Close & Personal | March 1, 1996 | Romantic drama | Jon Avnet | co-production with Cinergi Pictures (North America distribution only) |
An Indian in the City | March 22, 1996 | Comedy | Hervé Palud | U.S. release of a 1994 French film from Canal+/TF1 |
Last Dance | May 3, 1996 | Drama thriller | Bruce Beresford | - |
Boys | May 10, 1996 | Suspense drama | Stacy Cochran | co-production with Interscope Communications/PolyGram Filmed Entertainment |
Phenomenon | July 3, 1996 | Romantic fantasy drama | Jon Turteltaub | - |
Kazaam | July 17, 1996 | Comedy fantasy | Paul Michael Glaser | co-production with Interscope Communications/PolyGram Filmed Entertainment (North America distribution only) |
Ransom | November 8, 1996 | Action thriller | Ron Howard | in association with Imagine Entertainment |
The War at Home | November 20, 1996 | Drama | Emilio Estevez | - |
The Preacher's Wife | December 13, 1996 | Romantic comedy drama | Penny Marshall | in association with The Samuel Goldwyn Company |
Metro | January 17, 1997 | Action comedy | Thomas Carter | co-production with Caravan Pictures |
The 6th Man | March 28, 1997 | Supernatural sports comedy | Randall Miller | - |
Romy and Michele's High School Reunion | April 25, 1997 | Comedy | David Mirkin | - |
Con Air | June 6, 1997 | Action thriller | Simon West | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
Face/Off | June 27, 1997 | Action thriller | John Woo | co-production with Paramount Pictures (International distribution only) |
Nothing to Lose | July 18, 1997 | Comedy | Steve Oedekerk | - |
Air Force One | July 25, 1997 | Action | Wolfgang Petersen | co-production with Beacon Communications and Columbia Pictures (International distribution only) |
A Thousand Acres | September 19, 1997 | Drama | Jocelyn Moorhouse | presentation of a Beacon Communications/PolyGram Filmed Entertainment production |
Playing God | October 17, 1997 | Action thriller | Andy Wilson | co-production with Beacon Communications |
Starship Troopers | November 7, 1997 | Sci-Fi thriller | Paul Verhoeven | co-production with TriStar Pictures (International distribution only) |
Kundun | December 25, 1997 | Biographical historical drama | Martin Scorsese | - |
Bad Day on the Block | January 2, 1998 | Psychological crime thriller | Craig R. Baxley | produced by Largo Entertainment (distribution only) |
Krippendorf's Tribe | February 27, 1998 | Comedy | Todd Holland | - |
He Got Game | May 1, 1998 | Sports drama | Spike Lee | co-production with 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks |
The Horse Whisperer | May 15, 1998 | Drama | Robert Redford | - |
Six Days Seven Nights | June 12, 1998 | Romantic adventure comedy | Ivan Reitman | - co-production with Caravan Pictures |
Armageddon | July 1, 1998 | Sci-Fi action adventure | Michael Bay | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films and Valhalla Motion Pictures |
Basil | July 22, 1998 | Historical drama | Radha Bharadwaj | - |
Jane Austen's Mafia! | July 24, 1998 | Comedy spoof | Jim Abrahams | - |
Snake Eyes | August 7, 1998 | Action thriller | Brian De Palma | co-production with Paramount Pictures (International distribution only) |
Holy Man | October 9, 1998 | Comedy drama | Stephen Herek | - co-production with Caravan Pictures |
Beloved | October 16, 1998 | Mystery drama | Jonathan Demme | in association with Harpo Productions |
The Waterboy | November 6, 1998 | Sports comedy | Frank Coraci | - |
Enemy of the State | November 20, 1998 | Spy-action thriller | Tony Scott | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
A Civil Action | December 25, 1998 | Drama | Steven Zaillian | co-production with Paramount Pictures and Scott Rudin Productions (North America distribution only) |
Rushmore | February 5, 1999 | Comedy drama | Wes Anderson | - |
The Other Sister | February 26, 1999 | Romantic comedy | Garry Marshall | - |
10 Things I Hate About You | March 31, 1999 | Romantic teen comedy | Gil Junger | - |
Instinct | June 4, 1999 | Drama thriller | Jon Turteltaub | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment |
Summer of Sam | July 2, 1999 | Crime drama | Spike Lee | co-production with 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks |
Runaway Bride | July 30, 1999 | Romantic comedy | Garry Marshall | co-production with Paramount Pictures (International distribution only) |
The 13th Warrior | August 27, 1999 | Historical action adventure | John McTiernan | - |
Mumford | September 24, 1999 | Comedy drama | Lawrence Kasdan | - |
Bringing Out the Dead | October 22, 1999 | Drama thriller | Martin Scorsese | co-production with Paramount Pictures (International distribution only) |
The Insider | November 5, 1999 | Biographical drama thriller | Michael Mann | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment |
Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo | December 10, 1999 | Comedy | Mike Mitchell | in association with Happy Madison |
Cradle Will Rock | December 10, 1999 | Drama | Tim Robbins | - |
Bicentennial Man | December 17, 1999 | Sci-Fi drama | Chris Columbus | co-production with Columbia Pictures and 1492 Pictures (North America distribution only) |
Title | US release | Genre | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Play It to the Bone | January 21, 2000 | Sports comedy drama | Ron Shelton | - |
Mission to Mars | March 10, 2000 | Sci-Fi adventure | Brian De Palma | - |
High Fidelity | March 31, 2000 | Comedy drama | Stephen Frears | in association with Working Title Films |
Keeping the Faith | April 14, 2000 | Romantic comedy | Edward Norton | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment |
Shanghai Noon | May 19, 2000 | Western martial arts comedy | Tom Dey | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment |
Gone in 60 Seconds | June 9, 2000 | Action | Dominic Sena | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
Coyote Ugly | August 4, 2000 | Romantic comedy drama | David McNally | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
The Crew | September 25, 2000 | Black crime comedy | Michael Dinner | - |
Unbreakable | November 22, 2000 | Superhero mystery drama | M. Night Shayamalan | in association with Barry Mendel Productions |
O Brother, Where Art Thou? | December 22, 2000 | Comedy drama | Joel Coen | co-production with Universal Pictures, Working Title Films and Studio Canal (North America distribution only) |
Double Take | January 12, 2001 | Action comedy | George Gallo | - |
Pearl Harbor | May 25, 2001 | Historical war drama | Michael Bay | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films Academy Award for Best Sound Editing |
Crazy/Beautiful | June 29, 2001 | Romantic drama | John Stockwell | - |
High Heels and Low Lifes | October 26, 2001 | Action comedy drama | Mel Smith | - |
Bubble Boy | August 24, 2001 | Comedy | Blair Hayes | - |
New Port South | September 7, 2001 | Drama | Kyle Cooper | - |
Corky Romano | October 12, 2001 | Crime comedy | Rob Pritts | - |
Out Cold | November 21, 2001 | Comedy | Brendan Malloy Emmett Malloy |
co-production with Spyglass Entertainment and Donner's Company |
The Royal Tenenbaums | December 14, 2001 | Comedy drama | Wes Anderson | - |
The Count of Monte Cristo | January 25, 2002 | Romantic adventure | Kevin Reynolds | - |
Dragonfly | February 22, 2002 | Romantic mystery fantasy drama | Tom Shadyac | co-production with Universal Pictures and Spyglass Entertainment (International distribution only) |
Sorority Boys | March 22, 2002 | Comedy | Wallace Wolodarsky | in association with MBST Entertainment |
Big Trouble | April 5, 2002 | Crime comedy | Barry Sonnenfeld | - |
Ultimate X: The Movie | May 6, 2002 | Documentary | Bruce Hendricks | in association with ESPN |
Bad Company | June 7, 2002 | Action comedy | Joel Schumacher | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
Reign of Fire | July 12, 2002 | Action adventure fantasy | Rob Bowman | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment |
Signs | August 2, 2002 | Sci-Fi thriller | M. Night Shayamalan | in association with The Kennedy/Marshall Company |
Moonlight Mile | October 4, 2002 | Romantic drama | Brad Silberling | - |
Abandon | October 18, 2002 | Mystery thriller | Stephen Gaghan | co-production with Paramount Pictures and Spyglass Entertainment (International distribution only) |
Sweet Home Alabama | September 27, 2002 | Romantic comedy | Andy Tennant | - |
The Hot Chick | December 13, 2002 | Comedy | Tom Brady | co-production with Happy Madison |
25th Hour | January 10, 2003 | Drama | Spike Lee | co-production with 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks |
The Recruit | January 31, 2003 | Spy-action thriller | Roger Donaldson | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment |
Shanghai Knights | February 7, 2003 | Action comedy | David Dobkin | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment |
Bringing Down the House | March 7, 2003 | Romantic comedy | Adam Shankman | - |
Bruce Almighty | May 23, 2003 | Comedy | Tom Shadyac | co-production with Universal Pictures and Spyglass Entertainment (International distribution only) |
Open Range | August 15, 2003 | Western | Kevin Costner | co-production with Beacon Communications |
Calendar Girls | September 2, 2003 | Comedy | Nigel Cole | - |
Hope Springs | September 5, 2003 | Romantic comedy | Mark Herman | - |
Cold Creek Manor | September 19, 2003 | Psychological drama thriller | Mike Figgis | - |
Under the Tuscan Sun | September 26, 2003 | Romantic comedy drama | Audrey Wells | - |
Veronica Guerin | October 17, 2003 | Biographical crime drama | Joel Schumacher | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
Hidalgo | February 17, 2004 | Adventure drama | Joe Johnston | - |
The Ladykillers | March 26, 2004 | Black comedy | Ethan Coen Joel Coen |
- |
The Alamo | April 9, 2004 | Historical war drama | John Lee Hancock | in association with Imagine Entertainment |
Raising Helen | May 28, 2004 | Comedy drama | Garry Marshall | co-production with Beacon Communications |
King Arthur | July 7, 2004 | Historical action adventure | Antoine Fuqua | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
The Village | July 30, 2004 | Mystery thriller fantasy | M. Night Shayamalan | in association with Scott Rudin Productions |
Mr. 3000 | September 17, 2004 | Sports comedy | Charles Stone III | co-production with Dimension Films, Spyglass Entertainment and The Kennedy/Marshall Company |
The Last Shot | September 24, 2004 | Action comedy | Jeff Nathanson | in association with MBST Entertainment |
National Treasure | November 19, 2004 | Mystery adventure | Jon Turteltaub | taken over by Walt Disney Pictures |
Ladder 49 | October 1, 2004 | Action drama thriller | Jay Russell | co-production with Beacon Communications |
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou | December 25, 2004 | Drama comedy | Wes Anderson | in association with Scott Rudin Productions |
A Lot Like Love | April 22, 2005 | Romantic comedy drama | Nigel Cole | co-production with Beacon Communications |
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy | April 29, 2005 | Sci-Fi adventure comedy | Garth Jennings | co-production with Spyglass Entertainment |
Cinderella Man | June 3, 2005 | Biographical sports drama | Ron Howard | co-production with Universal Pictures, Miramax Films and Imagine Entertainment (International distribution only) |
Dark Water | July 8, 2005 | Horror thriller | Walter Sallas | - |
Flightplan | September 23, 2005 | Mystery thriller | Robert Schwentke | in association with Imagine Entertainment |
Shopgirl | October 21, 2005 | Romantic drama | Anand Tucker | - |
Casanova | December 25, 2005 | Romantic drama comedy | Lasse Hallström | - |
Annapolis | January 27, 2006 | Drama | Justin Lin | - |
Kinky Boots | April 14, 2006 | Comedy drama | Julian Jarrold | co-production with Miramax Films |
Stick It | April 28, 2006 | Comedy drama | Jessica Bendinger | in association with Spyglass Entertainment |
Goal! The Dream Begins | May 12, 2006 | Sports drama | Danny Cannon | in association with Lawrence Bender Productions |
Step Up | August 19, 2006 | Romantic musical drama | Anne Fletcher | in association with Summit Entertainment |
The Guardian | September 26, 2006 | Action adventure drama | Andrew Davis | co-production with Beacon Communications |
The Prestige | October 20, 2006 | Mystery thriller | Christopher Nolan | co-production with Warner Bros. and Newmarket Films (North America distribution only) |
Deja Vu | November 22, 2006 | Sci-Fi crime thriller | Tony Scott | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
Apocalypto | December 8, 2006 | Historical action adventure | Mel Gibson | presentation of an Icon Entertainment production |
Wild Hogs | March 2, 2007 | Action adventure comedy | Walt Becker | - |
Dan in Real Life | October 26, 2007 | Comedy drama | Peter Hedges | co-production with Focus Features |
Step Up 2: The Streets | February 14, 2008 | Romantic musical drama | Jon Chu | co-production with Summit Entertainment |
Swing Vote | August 1, 2008 | Comedy drama | Joshua Michael Stern | co-production with Tree House Films |
Miracle at St. Anna | September 26, 2008 | War drama | Spike Lee | co-procuction with 40 Acres & A Mule Filmworks and On My Own and Rai Cinema |
Confessions of a Shopaholic | February 13, 2009 | Romantic comedy | P. J. Hogan | in association with Jerry Bruckheimer Films |
The Proposal | June 19, 2009 | Romantic comedy | Anne Fletcher | co-production with Kurtzman/Orci and Mandeville Films |
Surrogates | September 25, 2009 | Sci-Fi action | Jonathan Mostow | in association with Mandeville Films and Road Rebel |
Title | US release release | Genre | Director | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
When in Rome | January 29, 2010 | Romantic comedy | Mark Steven Johnson | in association with Krasnoff Foster Productions |
The Last Song | March 31, 2010 | Coming-of-age drama Adaptation |
Julie Anne Robinson | co-production with Offspring Entertainment |
Step Up 3D | August 6, 2010 | Romantic musical drama | Jon Chu | co-production with Summit Entertainment |
You Again | September 24, 2010 | Comedy | Andy Fickman | co-production with Frontier Pictures |
The Tempest | December 10, 2010 | Drama thriller fantasy | Julie Taymor | co-production with Miramax Films |
Gnomeo & Juliet | February 11, 2011 | Animated romantic fantasy comedy | Kelly Asbury | co-production with Rocket Pictures, and Starz Animation |
I Am Number Four | February 18, 2011 | Sci-Fi thriller | D. J. Caruso | part of the 30-picture distribution deal with DreamWorks co-production with Reliance BIG Entertainment and Bay Films |
The Help | August 10, 2011 | Drama | Tate Taylor | part of the 30-picture distribution deal with DreamWorks co-production with Participant Media, Imagenation Abu Dhabi, Reliance BIG Entertainment and 1492 Pictures |
Fright Night | August 19, 2011 | Horror comedy | Craig Gillespie | part of the 30-picture distribution deal with DreamWorks co-production with Reliance BIG Entertainment |
Real Steel | October 7, 2011 | Sci-Fi action | Shawn Levy | part of the 30-picture distribution deal with DreamWorks co-production with Reliance BIG Entertainment |
War Horse | December 25, 2011 | War drama | Steven Spielberg | part of the 30-picture distribution deal with DreamWorks co-production with Amblin Entertainment and The Kennedy/Marshall Company |
Who Framed Roger Rabbit 2 | 2012 | Live action/animated | Robert Zemeckis | co-production with Amblin Entertainment |
Robopocalypse[1] | July 3, 2013[2] | Sci-Fi action drama | Steven Spielberg | part of the 30-picture distribution deal with DreamWorks U.S. distribution only; co-production with 20th Century Fox and Amblin Entertainment. |
Gotti | 2013 | Live action | Barry Levinson | USA distribution only, co-production with Paramount Pictures |
The 39 Clues | 2014 | Adventure | Brett Ratner | part of the 30-picture distribution deal with DreamWorks International distribution only; co-production with Universal Studios, Walden Media and Amblin Entertainment |
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