Logo used since 2019 | |
| Company type | Subsidiary |
|---|---|
| Industry | Film |
| Predecessor | De Laurentiis Entertainment Limited |
| Founded | 1989; 36 years ago (1989) |
| Founder | Greg Coote |
| Fate | Chapter 11 bankruptcy; library sold toAlcon Entertainment |
| Successor | Alcon Entertainment (library only) |
| Headquarters | Los Angeles, California,United States |
Area served | Worldwide |
| Products | Motion pictures |
| Parent | Vine Alternative Investments and Falcon Investment Advisors (majority) Village Roadshow (3%) |
| Website | vreg |
Village Roadshow Pictures is an Americanfilm production company founded in 1989. It was a division of Village Roadshow Entertainment Group (VREG), which in turn was majority-owned by Vine Alternative Investments and Falcon Investment Advisors, with the Australian companyVillage Roadshow holding a 3% minority stake.[1][2][3]
The company had produced films, including as co-productions withWarner Bros., such asThe Matrix series,Ocean's series,The Lego Movie,Happy Feet,Mad Max: Fury Road,American Sniper,Sherlock Holmes,Cats & Dogs, andJoker. The films in the Village Roadshow library have achieved 34 No. 1 U.S. box office openings and won 19Academy Awards (from 50 nominations) and sixGolden Globe Awards.[4][5]
Village Roadshow Pictures self-distributed its filmed entertainment through affiliates in several territories around the world, includingAustralia,New Zealand, andSingapore (the latter throughGolden Village).[6]JPMorgan Chase andRabobank also provide funding for the company's film slate with Warner Bros.[7] Village Roadshow Pictures had a second slate co-financing agreement withSony Pictures, which ended in 2016.[8] The company filed forChapter 11 bankruptcy in March 2025, with its library sold toAlcon Entertainment for $417.5 million on 18 June 2025.[9]
Village Roadshow Pictures was founded in 1989 by Greg Coote, who served as president, when it purchased certain assets ofDe Laurentiis Entertainment Group.[10][11][12] The company’s first film wasThe Delinquents and its first hit wasFortress in 1992. In 1993, Village Roadshow Pictures expanded into television production with the launch of its first television seriesParadise Beach.[13]
In 1995, Village Roadshow Pictures launched a television division headed by Jeffrey Hayes.[14][15] Also that year, the company started an international sales division called Village Roadshow Pictures International, which was led by Bobby Myers.[16] In 1996, Village Roadshow Pictures Television andYoram Gross formed a joint venture focused on animation.[17]
In April 1997, Village Roadshow Pictures andIntermedia formed a joint venture called Village Intermedia Pictures.[18] The deal ended several months later when Village Roadshow Pictures and Intermedia decided to cut ties and became independent again.[19][20] In September 1997, the company underwent restructuring with Michael Lake joined the company as managing director.[21] In October 1997, Yoram Gross-Village Roadshow signed a co-production alliance withEM.TV & Merchandising a Munich-based distribution and merchandising company to partner on 10 animated series over the next five years.[22]
In December 1997, Village Roadshow Pictures andWarner Bros. signed an agreement to co-finance and distribute at least 20 movies over the next five years. Under the deal, Village Roadshow would produce the films and Warner Bros. would market and release them worldwide, except in Australia and New Zealand.Bruce Berman, the former Warners’ theatrical production president, signed on as chairman and CEO of the company.[23][24]
In 1998, Village Roadshow Pictures announced that it would sell its television division in a management buyout to Greg Coote and Jeffrey Hayes, who renamed Village Roadshow Pictures Television to Coote/Hayes Productions. Around the same time, the company announced it was shutting down the international sales unit.[25] As part of its exit plan from the sales business, Roadshow sold international rights to its Western productions toIcon Entertainment International and the Australian films toBeyond Films Limited.[26][27] Also that year, Village Roadshow Pictures sold off its 50% stake in the Yoram Gross animated studio venture to EM.TV & Merchandising, which would become Yoram Gross-EM.TV.[17]
In 2006, through a group led byAct III Communications,Norman Lear and his partnerHal Gaba purchased 50% of Village Roadshow Pictures (VRP). Their entity, Crescent Film Group, included long-time colleague Michael Lambert through Lambert Media Group and Clarity Partners as investors.[28] Crescent invested $115 million for its interest in VRP.[29] Village Roadshow Pictures used the $115 million invested by Crescent to repay an inter-company loan of $100 million owed to its parent company, as well as pay a $15 million dividend to the existing VRP shareholders and management.
In 2008,Concord Music Group merged into Village Roadshow Pictures to form Village Roadshow Entertainment Group (VREG). Investors in VREG included the shareholders of Crescent, as shown above, as well as Australia's Village Roadshow Limited and Tailwind Capital.[30][31]
In 2012,Warner Bros. Pictures and Village Roadshow Pictures extended their co-financing first look deal through 2017.[32] In May 2014, VRPG established a supplementary co-financing production deal withSony Pictures Entertainment which commenced with the release ofThe Equalizer andAnnie. A second agreement was made due to the large amount of available capital. In 2013, Concord Music Group was sold to Wood Creek Capital, an affiliate ofMassMutual, for approximately $120 million.[33][34]
In 2015, VREG, the holding company of Village Roadshow Pictures and Village Roadshow Television, was recapitalized with a $480 million investment that included funds from Falcon Investment Advisors and Vine Alternative Investments.[35] Vine Alternative Investments and Falcon Investment Advisors added additional capital in April 2017 to take a controlling stake in the company.[36] This was to fund a new strategic plan for an expanded film slate and add production of television programs and other content offerings.[37]
More recently, Phantom Four Films signed a first look deal with Village Roadshow Pictures.[38] On 27 September 2021, Bruce Berman announced that he would step down as CEO of the company.[39] On 24 December 2021, the company had signed a pact withFox Entertainment to distribute pictures forTubi and partnered with Kevin Garrett to launch Black Noir Cinema.[40][41]
In March 2025, the Village Roadshow Entertainment Group filed forChapter 11 bankruptcy, citing an overly ambitious studio expansion, staff layoffs, and an ongoing arbitration dispute withWarner Bros. for breach of contract over thesimultaneous release ofThe Matrix Resurrections.[42][43] The former Australian parent company had to issue press statements stating it has had no control over the company since 2017, and has since commenced action to revoke VREG of the right to use the company's name and logo.[44] Around the time bankruptcy was filed, Content Partners had reportedly placed astalking horse offer of $353-365 million for the assets of VREG. However, in April 2025,Alcon Entertainment outbid Content Partners with a higher offer of $416.5 million, with the company being approved as the new stalking horse bid by Delaware bankruptcy judge Thomas Horan, who also set a deadline of May 16 for other interested bidders, if any, and a 20 May auction date if more than one party showed up. VREG was to file notice within a day of the bidding deadline whether it would prefer holding an auction for its assets or sell them directly to Alcon, with Horan scheduling the hearing date for the transaction's approval for 11 June.[45] On 18 June 2025, it was announced that Alcon's stalking horse bid worth $417.5 million had succeeded, giving it rights to VREG's library of 108 films, including intellectual properties, distribution rights, cash flows, overall rights and royalties, as well as its development slate of films and television series; distribution rights to titles co-financed with Warner Bros. were retained by the latter.[9][46] On November 5, 2025, Alcon was also awarded derivative rights to most of the titles it had acquired for $18.5 million following a hearing in a Delaware court. Warner Bros. tried matching Alcon's offer, subsequently submitting a revised bid of $19.5 million, and offered to release certain claims from an arbitrary dispute with VREG, only for the latter to make a counterclaim of $30 million in cash and settlement of undisclosed claims from the dispute; Warner Bros. rebuked the counter offer and is considering appealing the Delaware court's decision.[47]
| Title | Distributor | Release date | Notes | Budget | Box office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Delinquents | Warner Bros. Pictures | 21 December 1989 | First film | $9 million | N/A |
| Title | Distributor | Release date | Notes | Budget | Box office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bloodmoon | Carolco Pictures | 22 March 1990 | N/A | $419,769 | |
| Blood Oath | Skouras Pictures | 26 July 1990 | co-production with Sovereign Pictures, Charles Waterstreet Productions and Siege Productions | $10 million | $707,194 |
| Until the End of the World | Warner Bros. | 25 December 1991 | $23 million | $752,856 | |
| Dead Sleep | Vestron Video | 29 January 1992 | N/A | ||
| Hurricane Smith | Warner Bros. | 31 January 1992 | $5 million | $89,467 | |
| The Power of One | 27 March 1992 | co-production withRegency Enterprises,Le Studio Canal+ and Alcor Films | $18 million | $2.8 million | |
| Turtle Beach | 1 May 1992 | co-production withRegency Enterprises andLe Studio Canal+ | N/A | $778,535 | |
| Over the Hill | New Line Home Video | 30 June 1992 | N/A | ||
| Fortress[48] | Dimension Films | 3 September 1993 | co-production withDavis Entertainment | $12 million | $48 million |
| Lightning Jack | Savoy Pictures | 11 March 1994 | co-production with Lightning Ridge Productions | N/A | $25 million |
| The Phantom | Paramount Pictures | 7 June 1996 | co-production withThe Ladd Company | $45 million | $23.5 million |
| Hotel de Love | LIVE Entertainment | 12 September 1996 | co-production with Pratt Films | N/A | $747,372 |
| Bullet | New Line Home Video | 1 October 1996 | co-production with Clipsal Film Partnership | N/A | |
| Paradise Road | Fox Searchlight Pictures | 11 April 1997 | co-production with YTC Pictures and Planet Pictures | $19 million | $4 million |
| Broken English | Sony Pictures Classics | 2 May 1997 | N/A | $541,377 | |
| The Winner | LIVE Entertainment | 25 July 1997 | co-production with Clipsal Film Partnership | N/A | |
| Critical Care | 31 October 1997 | co-production with ASQA Film Partnership and Live Film and Mediaworks | $12 million | $271,000 | |
| Diana & Me | Hollywood Pictures Home Video | 4 December 1997 | N/A | $205,783 | |
| Joey | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer | 26 December 1997 | co-production with Pratt Films | N/A | |
| Tarzan and the Lost City | Warner Bros. | 24 April 1998 | co-production with Clipsal Film Partnership, Dieter Geissler Productions and Alta Vista Productions | $20 million | $2.2 million |
| Disturbing Behavior | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (North America) Sony Pictures Releasing (International) | 24 July 1998 | co-production with Village-Hoyts Film Partnership andBeacon Pictures | $15 million | $17.5 million |
| Practical Magic | Warner Bros. | 16 October 1998 | co-production withFortis Films andDi Novi Pictures | $75 million | $68.3 million |
| Occasional Coarse Language | Roadshow Film Distributors | 26 November 1998 | $40,000 | $909,475 | |
| Analyze This | Warner Bros. | 5 March 1999 | co-production with NPV Entertainment,Baltimore Spring Creek Pictures,Face Productions andTriBeCa Productions | $30 million | $176.9 million |
| The Matrix | 31 March 1999 | co-production withSilver Pictures and Groucho II Film Partnership | $63 million | $467.2 million | |
| A Walk on the Moon | Miramax Films | 2 April 1999 | co-production with Punch Productions and Groucho Film Partnership | $14 million | $4.7 million |
| Love Lies Bleeding | Warner Bros. | 23 June 1999 | N/A | ||
| Deep Blue Sea | 28 July 1999 | co-production with Riche-Ludwig Productions and Groucho II Film Partnership | $60 million | $164.6 million | |
| Three Kings | 1 October 1999 | co-production with Village-A.M. Film Partnership, Coast Ridge Films andAtlas Entertainment | $48 million | $107.7 million | |
| Three to Tango | 22 October 1999 | co-production with Village-Hoyts Film Partnership andOutlaw Productions | $20 million | $10.6 million | |
| Title | Distributor | Release date | Notes | Budget | Box office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eye of the Beholder | Destination Films | 28 January 2000 | co-production with Ambridge Film Partnership,Behaviour Worldwide, Hit & Run Productions and Filmline International | $35 million | $17.6 million |
| Gossip | Warner Bros. Pictures | 21 April 2000 | co-production with NPV Entertainment andOutlaw Productions | $24 million | $12 million |
| Space Cowboys | 4 August 2000 | co-production with Clipsal Films,Mad Chance Productions andMalpaso Productions | $60–65 million | $128.9 million | |
| Red Planet | 10 November 2000 | co-production with NPV Entertainment andThe Canton Company | $80 million | $33.5 million | |
| Miss Congeniality | 22 December 2000 | co-production withFortis Films andCastle Rock Entertainment | $45 million | $212.7 million | |
| Valentine | 2 February 2001 | co-production with NPV Entertainment and Dylan Sellers Productions | $29 million | $36.7 million | |
| Saving Silverman | Sony Pictures Releasing | 9 February 2001 | co-production withColumbia Pictures, NPV Entertainment andOriginal Film | $22 million | $26 million |
| Down to Earth | Paramount Pictures | 16 February 2001 | co-production with NPV Entertainment,3 Arts Entertainment and Alphaville | $30 million | $71.2 million |
| See Spot Run | Warner Bros. Pictures | 2 March 2001 | co-production withRobert Simonds Productions and NPV Entertainment | $16 million | $43 million |
| Exit Wounds | 16 March 2001 | co-production with NPV Entertainment andSilver Pictures | $33 million | $80 million | |
| Swordfish | 8 June 2001 | co-production with NPV Entertainment,Silver Pictures andJonathan D. Krane Productions | $102 million | $147.1 million | |
| Cats & Dogs | 4 July 2001 | co-production with NPV Entertainment,Mad Chance Productions, and Zide/Perry Productions | $60 million | $200.7 million | |
| Don't Say a Word | 20th Century Fox | 28 September 2001 | co-production with NPV Entertainment,Regency Enterprises,Further Films, andKopelson Entertainment | $50 million | $100 million |
| Zoolander | Paramount Pictures | co-production withVH1 Films, NPV Entertainment,Red Hour Films andScott Rudin Productions | $28 million | $60.8 million | |
| Hearts in Atlantis | Warner Bros. Pictures | co-production with NPV Entertainment andCastle Rock Entertainment | $31 million | $30.9 million | |
| Training Day | 5 October 2001 | co-production with NPV Entertainment andOutlaw Productions | $45 million | $104.9 million | |
| Ocean's Eleven | 7 December 2001 | co-production withJerry Weintraub Productions, NPV Entertainment andSection Eight Productions | $85 million | $450.7 million | |
| The Majestic | 21 December 2001 | co-production withCastle Rock Entertainment, NPV Entertainment and Darkwoods Productions | $72 million | $37.3 million | |
| Queen of the Damned | 22 February 2002 | co-production with NPV Entertainment and Material Productions | $35 million | $45.4 million | |
| Showtime | 15 March 2002 | co-production with NPV Entertainment, Material Pictures andTriBeCa Productions | $85 million | $77.7 million | |
| Eight Legged Freaks | 17 July 2002 | co-production with NPV Entertainment andElectric Entertainment | $30 million | $45 million | |
| The Adventures of Pluto Nash | 16 August 2002 | co-production withCastle Rock Entertainment, NPV Entertainment andBregman Productions | $100 million | $7.1 million | |
| Ghost Ship | 25 October 2002 | co-production with NPV Entertainment andDark Castle Entertainment | $20 million | $68.3 million | |
| Analyze That | 6 December 2002 | co-production with NPV Entertainment, Baltimore Spring Creek Pictures,Face Productions andTriBeCa Productions | $60 million | $55 million | |
| Two Weeks Notice | 20 December 2002 | co-production withCastle Rock Entertainment, NPV Entertainment andFortis Films | $60 million | $199 million | |
| Dreamcatcher | 21 March 2003 | co-production withCastle Rock Entertainment, NPV Entertainment, WV Films II andKasdan Pictures | $68 million | $75.7 million | |
| Fat Pizza | Roadshow Films | 10 April 2003 | N/A | $2.1 million | |
| The Matrix Reloaded | Warner Bros. Pictures | 15 May 2003 | co-production with NPV Entertainment andSilver Pictures | $127–150 million | $741.8 million |
| Mystic River | 15 October 2003 | co-production withMalpaso Productions and NPV Entertainment | $25–30 million | $156.6 million | |
| The Matrix Revolutions | 5 November 2003 | co-production with NPV Entertainment andSilver Pictures | $110–150 million | $427.3 million | |
| Torque | 16 January 2004 | co-production withOriginal Film | $40 million | $46.5 million | |
| Taking Lives | 19 March 2004 | co-production withAtmosphere Pictures | $45 million | $65.4 million | |
| Catwoman | 23 July 2004 | co-production withDi Novi Pictures,Frantic Films, Maple Shade Films and Catwoman Films | $100 million | $82.1 million | |
| Ocean's Twelve | 10 December 2004 | co-production withJerry Weintraub Productions andSection Eight Productions | $110 million | $362.9 million | |
| Constantine | 18 February 2005 | co-production withVertigo DC Comics,The Donners' Company,Weed Road Pictures and3 Arts Entertainment | $70–100 million | $230.9 million | |
| Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous | 24 March 2005 | co-production withCastle Rock Entertainment andFortis Films | $45 million | $101.3 million | |
| House of Wax | 6 May 2005 | co-production withDark Castle Entertainment | $40 million | $70.1 million | |
| Charlie and the Chocolate Factory | 15 July 2005 | co-production with Theobald Film Productions,The Zanuck Company andPlan B Entertainment | $150 million | $475 million | |
| The Dukes of Hazzard | 5 August 2005 | co-production withGerber Pictures | $53 million | $109.8 million | |
| Rumor Has It... | 25 December 2005 | co-production withSection Eight Productions andSpring Creek Productions | $70 million | $88.9 million | |
| Firewall | 10 February 2006 | co-production withBeacon Pictures andThunder Road Pictures | $50 million | $82.8 million | |
| The Lake House | 16 June 2006 | co-production withVertigo Entertainment andSidus Pictures | $40 million | $114.8 million | |
| Happy Feet | 17 November 2006 | co-production withAnimal Logic,Kennedy Miller Productions and Kingdom Feature Productions | $100 million | $384.3 million | |
| Unaccompanied Minors | 8 December 2006 | co-production withThe Donners' Company | $25 million | $21.9 million | |
| Music and Lyrics | 14 February 2007 | co-production withReserve Room Productions andCastle Rock Entertainment | $40 million | $145.9 million | |
| The Reaping | 5 April 2007 | co-production withDark Castle Entertainment | $40 million | $62.8 million | |
| Lucky You | 4 May 2007 | co-production with Deuce Three Productions,Flower Films andDi Novi Pictures | $55 million | $8.4 million | |
| Ocean's Thirteen | 8 June 2007 | co-production withJerry Weintraub Productions andSection Eight Productions | $85 million | $311.7 million | |
| License to Wed | 3 July 2007 | co-production withPhoenix Pictures,Robert Simonds Productions, Underground Films and Management and Proposal Productions | $35 million | $70.2 million | |
| No Reservations | 27 July 2007 | co-production withCastle Rock Entertainment | $28 million | $92.6 million | |
| The Invasion | 17 August 2007 | co-production withSilver Pictures andVertigo Entertainment | $65–80 million | $40.2 million | |
| The Brave One | 14 September 2007 | co-production withSilver Pictures | $70 million | $69 million | |
| December Boys | Warner Independent Pictures | co-production withBecker Entertainment | $4 million | $1.2 million | |
| Rogue | Dimension Films | 8 November 2007 | co-production with Emu Creek Productions | $25 million | $4.6 million |
| I Am Legend | Warner Bros. Pictures | 14 December 2007 | co-production withWeed Road Pictures,Overbrook Entertainment,Heyday Films andOriginal Film | $150 million | $585.4 million |
| Speed Racer | 9 May 2008 | co-production withSilver Pictures andAnarchos Productions | $120 million | $93.9 million | |
| Get Smart | 20 June 2008 | co-production withMosaic Media Group,Atlas Entertainment,Mad Chance Productions and Callahan Filmworks | $80 million | $230.7 million | |
| Nights in Rodanthe | 26 September 2008 | co-production withDi Novi Pictures | $30 million | $84.8 million | |
| Gran Torino | 12 December 2008 | co-production with Double Nickel Entertainment andMalpaso Productions | $25–33 million | $270 million | |
| Yes Man | 19 December 2008 | co-production withThe Zanuck Company andHeyday Films | $70 million | $223.2 million | |
| Where the Wild Things Are | 16 October 2009 | co-production withLegendary Pictures,Playtone, Wild Things Productions, KLG Film Invest GmbH and The Worldwide Maurice International Company, Inc. | $100 million | $100.1 million | |
| Sherlock Holmes | 25 December 2009 | co-production withSilver Pictures andWigram Productions | $90 million | $524 million |
| Title | Distributor | Release date | Notes | Budget | Box office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sex and the City 2 | Warner Bros. Pictures | 27 May 2010 | withNew Line Cinema; co-production withHBO Films | $95 million | $294.7 million |
| Cats & Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore | 30 July 2010 | co-production with CD2 Pictures,Mad Chance Productions and Polymorphic Pictures | $85 million | $112.5 million | |
| Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga'Hoole | 24 September 2010 | co-production withAnimal Logic and GOG Productions | $80 million | $140.1 million | |
| Life as We Know It | 8 October 2010 | co-production withGold Circle Films andJosephson Entertainment | $38 million | $105.71 million | |
| Happy Feet Two | 18 November 2011 | co-production withDr. D Studios andKennedy Miller Mitchell | $135 million | $150.4 million | |
| Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows | 16 December 2011 | co-production withSilver Pictures andWigram Productions | $125 million | $543.8 million | |
| The Lucky One | 10 April 2012 | co-production withDi Novi Pictures | $25 million | $99.4 million | |
| Dark Shadows | 11 May 2012 | co-production withInfinitum Nihil,GK Films andThe Zanuck Company | $150 million | $245.5 million | |
| Gangster Squad | 11 January 2013 | co-production withLin Pictures and Kevin McCormick Productions | $60–75 million | $105.2 million | |
| Journey to the West | Huayi Brothers | 10 February 2013 | as Village Roadshow Pictures Asia; co-production with Bingo Movie Development,Chinavision Media Group, Edko Films,China Film Group andHuayi Brothers | N/A | $215 million |
| 101 Proposals | New Classics Media | 12 February 2013 | as Village Roadshow Pictures Asia; co-production with Fuji Television Network,China Film Group and Asia Times Cultural Media | $31.2 million | |
| The Great Gatsby | Warner Bros. Pictures | 10 May 2013 | co-production withA&E Television,Bazmark Productions andRed Wagon Entertainment | $105 million[49] | $353.6 million |
| Man of Tai Chi[50] | RADiUS-TWC (North America) Universal Pictures (International) | 1 November 2013 | as Village Roadshow Pictures Asia; co-production withChina Film Group andWanda Media | $25 million | $5.5 million |
| The Lego Movie | Warner Bros. Pictures | 7 February 2014 | co-production withWarner Animation Group,RatPac-Dune Entertainment,Lego System A/S,Vertigo Entertainment andLin Pictures | $60–65 million | $468.1 million |
| Winter's Tale | 14 February 2014 | co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment,Weed Road Pictures andMarc Platt Productions | $75 million | $30.8 million | |
| Edge of Tomorrow | 6 June 2014 | co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment,3 Arts Entertainment,Viz Productions andTC Productions | $178 million | $370.5 million | |
| Into the Storm | 8 August 2014 | withNew Line Cinema, co-production with Broken Road Productions andRatPac-Dune Entertainment | $50 million | $161.7 million | |
| The Equalizer | Sony Pictures Releasing | 26 September 2014 | co-production withColumbia Pictures,LStar Capital,Escape Artists,Mace Neufeld Productions and Zhiv Productions | $55–73 million | $192.3 million |
| The Judge | Warner Bros. Pictures | 10 October 2014 | co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment,Team Downey andBig Kid Pictures | $45–50 million | $84.4 million |
| Annie | Sony Pictures Releasing | 19 December 2014 | co-production withColumbia Pictures,Overbrook Entertainment,Olive Bridge Entertainment and Marcy Media Films | $65–78 million | $133.8 million |
| American Sniper | Warner Bros. Pictures | 25 December 2014 | co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment,Mad Chance Productions,22nd & Indiana Pictures andMalpaso Productions | $59 million | $547.4 million |
| Jupiter Ascending | 6 February 2015 | co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment andAnarchos Productions | $176–210 million | $183.9 million | |
| Zhong Kui: Snow Girl and the Dark Crystal | Well Go USA Entertainment (United States) Desen International Media (China) Warner Bros. Pictures (Hong Kong) | 19 February 2015 | as Village Roadshow Pictures Asia; co-production with Beijing Enlight Pictures, K. Pictures and Shenzhen Wus Entertainment | $30 million | $64.47 million |
| Mad Max: Fury Road | Warner Bros. Pictures | 15 May 2015 | co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment andKennedy Miller Mitchell | $154.6-185.1 million | $415.2 million |
| San Andreas | 29 May 2015 | withNew Line Cinema; co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment andFlynn Picture Company | $110 million | $474 million | |
| Mountain Cry | Fortissimo Films | 10 October 2015 | as Village Roadshow Pictures Asia; co-production with Beijing Hairun Pictures | N/A | |
| Goosebumps | Sony Pictures Releasing | 16 October 2015 | co-production withColumbia Pictures,Sony Pictures Animation,LStar Capital,Original Film andScholastic Entertainment | $58–84 million | $158.3 million |
| In the Heart of the Sea | Warner Bros. Pictures | 11 December 2015 | co-production withImagine Entertainment,RatPac-Dune Entertainment,Roth Films, COTT Productions, Enelmar Productions A.I.E.,Spring Creek Pictures and Kia Jam | $100 million | $93.9 million |
| Concussion[51] | Sony Pictures Releasing | 25 December 2015 | co-production withColumbia Pictures,LStar Capital andScott Free Productions | $35–57 million | $48.6 million |
| The Brothers Grimsby | 11 March 2016 | co-production withColumbia Pictures.LStar Capital,Four by Two Films,Big Talk Productions andWorking Title Films | $35 million | $28 million | |
| The Legend of Tarzan | Warner Bros. Pictures | 1 July 2016 | co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment,Jerry Weintraub Productions, Riche/Ludwig Productions andBeaglepug Films | $180 million | $356.7 million |
| Ghostbusters | Sony Pictures Releasing | 15 July 2016 | co-production withColumbia Pictures,The Montecito Picture Company,Pascal Pictures,Feigco Entertainment andGhost Corps | $144 million | $229.1 million |
| Sully[52] | Warner Bros. Pictures | 9 September 2016 | co-production with Flashlight Films,The Kennedy/Marshall Company,Malpaso Productions and Orange Corp. | $60 million | $240.8 million |
| The Magnificent Seven[citation needed] | Sony Pictures Releasing | 23 September 2016 | co-production withMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures,Columbia Pictures,LStar Capital,Pin High Productions,Escape Artists andFuqua Films | $90–107 million | $162.4 million |
| Hide and Seek[citation needed] | N/A | 4 November 2016 | as Village Roadshow Pictures Asia; co-production with New Clues Films | N/A | |
| Collateral Beauty[citation needed] | Warner Bros. Pictures | 16 December 2016 | co-production withNew Line Cinema,RatPac-Dune Entertainment,Overbrook Entertainment,Anonymous Content,PalmStar Media andLikely Story | $36–40.3 million | $88.5 million |
| Passengers[citation needed] | Sony Pictures Releasing | 21 December 2016 | co-production withColumbia Pictures,LStar Capital,Wanda Pictures,Original Film, Company Films and Start Motion Pictures | $110–150 million | $303.1 million |
| Fist Fight[53] | Warner Bros. Pictures | 17 February 2017 | co-production withNew Line Cinema,21 Laps Entertainment, Wrigley Pictures andRatPac-Dune Entertainment | $22–25 million | $41.1 million |
| Going in Style[citation needed] | 7 April 2017 | co-production withNew Line Cinema,RatPac-Dune Entertainment andDe Line Pictures | $25 million | $84.9 million | |
| King Arthur: Legend of the Sword[53] | 12 May 2017 | co-production withRatPac-Dune Entertainment,Weed Road Pictures,Safehouse Pictures and Ritchie/Wigram Productions | $175 million | $148.7 million | |
| The House[citation needed] | 30 June 2017 | co-production withNew Line Cinema,Gary Sanchez Productions andGood Universe | $40 million | $34.2 million | |
| Bleeding Steel[citation needed] | Lionsgate Films | 22 December 2017 | as Village Roadshow Pictures Asia; co-production withHeyi Pictures andPerfect World Pictures | $65 million | $48.8 million |
| The 15:17 to Paris[54] | Warner Bros. Pictures | 9 February 2018 | co-production withMalpaso Productions andAccess Entertainment | $30 million | $57.1 million |
| Ready Player One[53] | 29 March 2018 | co-production withAmblin Partners,Amblin Entertainment,Access Entertainment,De Line Pictures and Farah Films & Management | $155–175 million | $592.2 million | |
| Ocean's 8[53] | 8 June 2018 | co-production withSmokehouse Pictures and Larger Than Life Productions | $70 million | $297.8 million | |
| Joker[citation needed] | 4 October 2019 | co-production withBron Creative, Joint Effort, andDC Films | $55–70 million | $1.074 billion | |
| Title | Distributor | Release date | Notes | Budget | Box office |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Matrix Resurrections | Warner Bros. Pictures | 22 December 2021 | co-production with Venus Castina Productions and Deutscher Filmförderfonds | $190 million | $159.2 million |
| Cinnamon | Tubi | 23 June 2023 | co-production withFox Entertainment Studios and Content Cartel Studios | N/A | |
| Murder City | 29 June 2023 | ||||
| Wonka | Warner Bros. Pictures | 15 December 2023 | co-production withHeyday Films and The Roald Dahl Story Company | $125 million | $632.3 million |
| The Gutter[55] | Magnolia Pictures | 1 November 2024 | co-production with Destro Films and ModelBoyz Entertainment | $17 million | $17,750 |
| Title | Distributor | Release date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Belly of the Beast[56] | Lionsgate UK | TBA | co-production withChapel Place |
| Eternal Return[57] | TBA | TBA | co-production with MACRO, BK Studios, Picture Films, New Name Entertainment, Gatherer Entertainment,Little Walnut and The Post Republic |
| Year | Series | Network | Notes | Seasons | Episodes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1993–1994 | Paradise Beach | Nine Network | co-production withGenesis Entertainment | 2 | 260 |
| 1995–1999 | Flipper | Syndication/PAX | first three seasons only; co-production withSamuel Goldwyn Television,Tribune Entertainment andMGM Television | 5 | 61 |
| 1995–1996 | Space: Above and Beyond[58] | Fox | co-production withHard Eight Pictures and20th Century Fox Television | 1 | 23 |
| 1996–1997 | Pacific Drive | Nine Network | co-production withNew World Entertainment | 2 | 390 |
| 1997–1998 | Night Man[59] | Syndication | season 1 only; co-production withProSieben Media,Glen Larson Entertainment Network,Atlantis Films andTribune Entertainment | 1 | 22 |
| 1998–1999 | Tales of the South Seas | Network Ten | co-production withCLT-UFA,Gaumont Télévision andSouth Pacific Pictures | ||
| Skippy: Adventures in Bushtown | Nine Network | co-production withYoram Gross-Village Roadshow,International Tele Images and Videal | 26 | ||
| Dumb Bunnies | CBS | co-production withYoram Gross-Village Roadshow,Nelvana andScottish Television Enterprises |
| Title | Network | Release date | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trapped in Space | Sci-Fi Channel | 19 October 1994 | co-production with CNM Entertainment andWilshire Court Productions |
| Sahara | Showtime | 25 April 1995 | co-production withTriStar Television |
| The Ticket | USA Network | 6 August 1997 | co-production with CNM Entertainment andWilshire Court Productions |
| Meteorites! | 3 June 1998 | co-production withWilshire Court Productions | |
| The Fury Within | 28 October 1998 | ||
| Alien Cargo | UPN | 28 January 1999 | |
| Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World | TNT | 3 April 1999 | pilot movie only; co-production withSt. Clare Entertainment, Telescene and The Fremantle Corporation |
| Monster | UPN | 12 November 1999 | co-production withWilshire Court Productions |
| The Magicians | 10 March 2000 | ||
| Code 11-14 | CBS | 24 August 2003 | co-production withWilshire Court Productions andCarlton America |
| Title | Network | Release date | Notes | Episodes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Thorn Birds: The Missing Years | CBS | 11–13 February 1996 | co-production withThe Wolper Organization andWarner Bros. Television | 2 |
| 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea | ABC | 11–12 May 1997 | co-production with The Frederick S. Pierce Company |