List of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films
This is a list of feature films originally released and/or distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (to include MGM/UA Entertainment Co., MGM/UA Communications Co., MGM-Pathé Communications Co. and MGM/UA Distribution Co.).
This list does not include films from United Artists before MGM distributed their films (except for co-productions), nor does it include films originally released by other companies (e.g. Orion Pictures, Cannon Films) which MGM has subsequently bought and/or acquired distribution rights to.
Please note that the vast majority of pre-May 1986 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer titles are currently the property of Turner Entertainment and are thus currently distributed by their Time Warner sister company Warner Bros..
1920s
1924
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
April 14, 1924 | Mademoiselle Midnight | Distribution only; produced by Tiffany Productions The first film released by MGM. April 14, 1924 |
April 21, 1924 | Sherlock Jr. | Distribution only; produced by Joseph M. Schenck |
June 23, 1924 | Revelation | |
July 21, 1924 | The Arab | |
August 3, 1924 | Broken Barriers | |
August 4, 1924 | Bread | |
August 11, 1924 | Tess of the d'Urbervilles | |
August 25, 1924 | Little Robinson Crusoe | |
September 1, 1924 | Sinners in Silk | |
September 8, 1924 | The Red Lily | |
September 15, 1924 | Wine of Youth | |
September 29, 1924 | His Hour | |
September 29, 1924 | One Night in Rome | |
October 6, 1924 | The Beauty Prize | |
October 6, 1924 | Circe, the Enchantress | Distribution only; produced by Tiffany Productions |
October 13, 1924 | The Navigator | Distribution only; presented by Joseph M. Schenck |
October 20, 1924 | The Bandolero | |
October 27, 1924 | Married Flirts | |
November 3, 1924 | Along Came Ruth | |
November 9, 1924 | He Who Gets Slapped | The first film made completely by MGM[1] |
November 19, 1924 | The Snob | |
November 24, 1924 | The Silent Accuser | |
November 24, 1924 | So This Is Marriage? | |
December 1, 1924 | The Wife of the Centaur | |
December 4, 1924 | Greed | |
December 6, 1924 | Romola | Distribution only; produced by Inspiration Pictures |
December 8, 1924 | Janice Meredith | Distribution only; produced by William Randolph Hearst |
December 29, 1924 | The Dixie Handicap | |
1925
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 19, 1925 | Excuse Me | |
February 9, 1925 | Cheaper to Marry | |
February 10, 1925 | Chu-Chin-Chow | US distribution only; made in the UK by Graham-Wilcox Productions |
February 15, 1925 | The Great Divide | |
February 16, 1925 | The Rag Man | |
February 23, 1925 | Lady of the Night | |
February 23, 1925 | The Prairie Wife | Distribution only; produced by Eastern Productions |
March 11, 1925 | Seven Chances | Distribution only; produced by Buster Keaton Productions, presented by Joseph M. Schenck |
March 16, 1925 | The Monster | |
March 22, 1925 | The Denial | |
March 29, 1925 | Daddy's Gone A-Hunting | |
March 29, 1925 | The Way of a Girl | |
March 30, 1925 | Confessions of a Queen | |
April 13, 1925 | The Sporting Venus | |
April 20, 1925 | Man and Maid | |
April 27, 1925 | Proud Flesh | |
May 2, 1925 | Zander the Great | Distribution only; produced by William Randolph Hearst for the Cosmopolitan Corporation |
May 4, 1925 | The White Desert | |
August 16, 1925 | The Unholy Three | remade in 1930 |
August 26, 1925 | The Merry Widow | remade in 1934 |
September 6, 1925 | Pretty Ladies | |
September 13, 1925 | Never the Twain Shall Meet | Distribution only; produced by William Randolph Hearst for Cosmopolitan |
September 20, 1925 | Sun-Up | |
September 22, 1925 | The Circle | |
September 23, 1925 | A Slave of Fashion | |
September 27, 1925 | The Mystic | |
October 4, 1925 | Exchange of Wives | |
October 4, 1925 | The Midshipman | Produced under the supervision of the U. S. Navy Department |
October 11, 1925 | The Tower of Lies | |
November 1, 1925 | Go West | Distribution only; produced by Buster Keaton Productions |
November 5, 1925 | The Big Parade | |
November 8, 1925 | Lights of Old Broadway | A Cosmopolitan production |
November 8, 1925 | Time, the Comedian | |
November 9, 1925 | Old Clothes | |
November 15, 1925 | Bright Lights | |
November 15, 1925 | Don't | |
November 22, 1925 | The Only Thing | |
December 6, 1925 | His Secretary | |
December 13, 1925 | The Masked Bride | |
December 20, 1925 | Soul Mates | |
December 27, 1925 | The Great Love | |
December 27, 1925 | Sally, Irene and Mary | |
December 30, 1925 | Ben-Hur | partial Technicolor; remade in 1959, remade again in 2016 |
1926
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 4, 1926 | Dance Madness | |
January 11, 1926 | The Blackbird | |
January 11, 1926 | Mike | |
February 1, 1926 | The Auction Block | |
February 15, 1926 | The Devil's Circus | |
February 15, 1926 | Mare Nostrum | |
February 21, 1926 | Torrent | A Cosmopolitan production |
February 24, 1926 | La Bohème | |
March 1, 1926 | Monte Carlo | |
March 28, 1926 | The Exquisite Sinner | |
April 19, 1926 | Beverly of Graustark | A Cosmopolitan production |
May 2, 1926 | Brown of Harvard | |
May 10, 1926 | Money Talks | |
May 17, 1926 | The Boob | |
May 21, 1926 | The Barrier | |
May 24, 1926 | Paris | |
June 26, 1926 | Lovey Mary | |
June 28, 1926 | The Road to Mandalay | |
July 25, 1926 | A Waltz Dream | US distribution; made in Germany by UFA |
August 9, 1926 | The Scarlet Letter | |
August 14, 1926 | The Boy Friend | |
September 4, 1926 | Battling Butler | A Buster Keaton production |
September 5, 1926 | The Waning Sex | |
September 26, 1926 | Blarney | |
September 30, 1926 | Bardelys the Magnificent | |
October 10, 1926 | The Temptress | A Cosmopolitan production |
October 10, 1926 | War Paint | |
October 17, 1926 | The Gay Deceiver | |
October 24, 1926 | The Magician | |
November 7, 1926 | Upstage | |
November 14, 1926 | The Desert's Toll | |
November 14, 1926 | Exit Smiling | |
November 21, 1926 | The Flaming Forest | A Cosmopolitan production |
November 28, 1926 | There You Are! | |
November 28, 1926 | Tin Hats | |
December 4, 1926 | Love's Blindness | |
December 5, 1926 | Faust | US distribution; made in Germany by UFA |
December 18, 1926 | Valencia | |
December 20, 1926 | The Fire Brigade | |
December 23, 1926 | Tell It to the Marines | |
December 25, 1926 | Flesh and the Devil | |
1927
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 1, 1927 | A Little Journey | |
January 15, 1927 | Johnny Get Your Hair Cut | |
January 22, 1927 | The Show | |
January 27, 1927 | Winners of the Wilderness | |
January 29, 1927 | The Red Mill | A Cosmopolitan production |
February 5, 1927 | Altars of Desire | |
February 5, 1927 | The Taxi Dancer | |
February 12, 1927 | Women Love Diamonds | |
February 19, 1927 | The Demi-Bride | |
February 19, 1927 | The Valley of Hell | Presented by the Big Horn Ranch |
February 26, 1927 | The Understanding Heart | A Cosmopolitan production |
March 12, 1927 | Slide, Kelly, Slide | |
March 15, 1927 | Heaven on Earth | |
March 26, 1927 | Mr. Wu | |
April 2, 1927 | Frisco Sally Levy | |
April 30, 1927 | Rookies | |
May 1, 1927 | Lovers? | |
May 7, 1927 | California | |
May 11, 1927 | Annie Laurie | |
May 14, 1927 | Captain Salvation | |
May 21, 1927 | Tillie the Toiler | A Cosmopolitan production |
June 4, 1927 | The Unknown | |
June 11, 1927 | The Frontiersman | |
June 18, 1927 | The Callahans and the Murphys | |
June 25, 1927 | On Ze Boulevard | |
July 9, 1927 | Twelve Miles Out | |
August 6, 1927 | The Bugle Call | |
August 13, 1927 | Mockery | |
August 20, 1927 | After Midnight | |
August 27, 1927 | Adam and Evil | |
September 2, 1927 | The Garden of Allah | |
September 3, 1927 | Foreign Devils | |
September 21, 1927 | The Student Prince in Old Heidelberg | |
October 1, 1927 | Body and Soul | |
October 1, 1927 | The Fair Co-Ed | A Marion Davies production |
October 9, 1927 | The Road to Romance | |
October 13, 1927 | The Thirteenth Hour | |
October 22, 1927 | Spring Fever | |
October 29, 1927 | Tea for Three | |
November 1, 1927 | Quality Street | |
November 12, 1927 | Becky | A Cosmopolitan production |
November 19, 1927 | Man, Woman and Sin | |
November 20, 1927 | In Old Kentucky | |
November 29, 1927 | Love | |
December 3, 1927 | London After Midnight | |
December 8, 1927 | The Enemy | |
December 10, 1927 | Spoilers of the West | |
December 17, 1927 | The Lovelorn | A Cosmopolitan production |
December 24, 1927 | Buttons | |
1928
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 8, 1928 | Baby Mine | |
January 8, 1928 | West Point | Produced by permission of the War Department with cooperation of the U. S. Military Academy |
January 14, 1928 | The Divine Woman | |
January 21, 1928 | The Law of the Range | |
January 28, 1928 | Wickedness Preferred | |
February 4, 1928 | The Latest from Paris | |
February 11, 1928 | Rose-Marie | |
February 18, 1928 | The Crowd | |
March 4, 1928 | The Smart Set | |
March 17, 1928 | Bringing Up Father | |
March 20, 1928 | The Trail of '98 | |
March 24, 1928 | The Big City | |
March 24, 1928 | Under the Black Eagle | |
March 24, 1928 | Wyoming | |
March 31, 1928 | Circus Rookies | |
April 7, 1928 | Across to Singapore | |
April 14, 1928 | Laugh, Clown, Laugh | |
April 21, 1928 | Riders of the Dark | |
April 22, 1928 | The Patsy | |
April 28, 1928 | The Actress | |
May 5, 1928 | Diamond Handcuffs | |
May 19, 1928 | A Certain Young Man | |
June 9, 1928 | Detectives | |
June 16, 1928 | Forbidden Hours | |
June 23, 1928 | The Cossacks | |
June 30, 1928 | Mademoiselle from Armentieres | US distribution; made in the UK by Gaumont British |
June 30, 1928 | Telling the World | |
July 14, 1928 | The Adventurer | |
July 26, 1928 | Skirts | US distribution; made in the UK by British International Pictures |
August 4, 1928 | The Mysterious Lady | |
August 11, 1928 | Four Walls | |
August 15, 1928 | Beau Broadway | |
September 1, 1928 | Our Dancing Daughters | |
September 2, 1928 | The Cardboard Lover | |
September 8, 1928 | Excess Baggage | |
September 15, 1928 | Beyond the Sierras | |
September 15, 1928 | While the City Sleeps | |
September 22, 1928 | The Cameraman | |
September 27, 1928 | The Baby Cyclone | |
October 26, 1928 | Shadows of the Night | |
November 2, 1928 | The Viking | Presented by Herbert T. Kalmus First color feature with a soundtrack |
November 10, 1928 | White Shadows in the South Seas | |
November 15, 1928 | Alias Jimmy Valentine | |
November 17, 1928 | The Bushranger | |
November 17, 1928 | The Masks of the Devil | |
November 20, 1928 | Show People | |
November 23, 1928 | The Wind | |
November 24, 1928 | West of Zanzibar | |
December 1, 1928 | Dream of Love | |
December 1, 1928 | A Lady of Chance | |
December 15, 1928 | A Woman of Affairs | |
December 23, 1928 | Brotherly Love | |
December 29, 1928 | Honeymoon | |
1929
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 5, 1929 | Morgan's Last Raid | |
January 12, 1929 | A Single Man | |
January 19, 1929 | The Flying Fleet | Produced with the sanction of the U. S. Navy |
January 23, 1929 | The Bellamy Trial | A Hearst News Service production |
February 1, 1929 | The Broadway Melody | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture; the first MGM film to win Best Picture |
February 9, 1929 | All at Sea | |
February 11, 1929 | Napoleon | US distribution; made in France by the Films Abel Gance (a Gaumont-Metro presentation) |
February 16, 1929 | Casanova/The Loves of Casanova | US distribution; made in France by the Société des Cinéromans |
February 23, 1929 | Wild Orchids | |
March 2, 1929 | The Overland Telegraph | |
March 4, 1929 | Spies | US distribution; made in Germany by UFA |
March 16, 1929 | The Duke Steps Out | |
March 23, 1929 | Tide of Empire | |
March 29, 1929 | Desert Nights | |
March 30, 1929 | The Bridge of San Luis Rey | |
April 6, 1929 | Spite Marriage | |
April 13, 1929 | The Voice of the City | A Cosmopolitan production |
April 20, 1929 | Sioux Blood | |
April 27, 1929 | The Pagan | |
May 4, 1929 | Where East is East | |
May 11, 1929 | The Desert Rider | |
May 25, 1929 | A Man's Man | |
May 28, 1929 | China Bound | |
June 8, 1929 | The Trial of Mary Dugan | |
June 15, 1929 | The Idle Rich | |
July 8, 1929 | Thunder | |
July 13, 1929 | Wonder of Women | |
July 26, 1929 | The Last of Mrs. Cheyney | |
July 27, 1929 | The Single Standard | |
August 17, 1929 | Madame X | |
August 20, 1929 | Hallelujah | |
August 24, 1929 | Marianne | A Marion Davies production |
August 24, 1929 | Our Modern Maidens | |
August 31, 1929 | The Girl in the Show | |
September 7, 1929 | Speedway | |
September 14, 1929 | The Unholy Night | |
September 21, 1929 | Wise Girls | |
September 28, 1929 | His Glorious Night | |
October 5, 1929 | The Mysterious Island | |
October 19, 1929 | The Thirteenth Chair | |
November 8, 1929 | So This Is College | |
November 16, 1929 | The Kiss | MGM's last silent film |
November 23, 1929 | The Hollywood Revue of 1929 | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 23, 1929 | Untamed | |
December 6, 1929 | It's a Great Life | |
December 20, 1929 | Navy Blues | |
December 27, 1929 | Devil-May-Care | |
December 27, 1929 | Their Own Desire | |
1930s
1930
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 3, 1930 | The Bishop Murder Case | |
January 24, 1930 | The Woman Racket | |
January 31, 1930 | They Learned About Women | |
January 31, 1930 | The Ship from Shanghai | |
February 2, 1930 | Not So Dumb | |
February 21, 1930 | Anna Christie | |
February 23, 1930 | Chasing Rainbows | |
February 28, 1930 | Lord Byron of Broadway | |
February 28, 1930 | A Lady to Love | |
March 15, 1930 | The Girl Said No | |
March 20, 1930 | Montana Moon | |
March 22, 1930 | Free and Easy | |
April 12, 1930 | This Mad World | |
April 19, 1930 | The Divorcee | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 26, 1930 | Children of Pleasure | |
May 2, 1930 | Redemption | |
May 3, 1930 | Strictly Unconventional | |
May 10, 1930 | Caught Short | A Cosmopolitan production |
May 10, 1930 | The Rogue Song | MGM's first all-color talkie |
May 17, 1930 | In Gay Madrid | |
May 24, 1930 | The Lady of Scandal | |
May 30, 1930 | The Florodora Girl | A Marion Davies production |
June 14, 1930 | The Big House | A Cosmopolitan production Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
June 21, 1930 | One Embarrassing Night | US distribution; a Herbert Wilcox production for the British & Dominions Film Corporation |
June 28, 1930 | The Sins of the Children | A Cosmopolitan production |
July 5, 1930 | The Sea Bat | |
July 7, 1930 | Estrellados | Spanish-language version of Free and Easy |
July 12, 1930 | The Unholy Three | |
July 19, 1930 | Our Blushing Brides | |
August 2, 1930 | Way Out West | |
August 9, 1930 | Let Us Be Gay | |
August 16, 1930 | Call of the Flesh | |
August 23, 1930 | Good News | |
August 26, 1930 | Romance | |
August 30, 1930 | Doughboys | |
September 6, 1930 | Love in the Rough | |
September 20, 1930 | Madam Satan | |
September 27, 1930 | Men of the North | |
October 10, 1930 | Olimpia | Spanish-language version of His Glorious Night |
October 11, 1930 | Those Three French Girls | A Cosmopolitan production |
October 18, 1930 | Billy the Kid | |
November 1, 1930 | Way for a Sailor | |
November 8, 1930 | A Lady's Morals | |
November 14, 1930 | El presidio | Spanish-language version of The Big House |
November 15, 1930 | Remote Control | |
November 22, 1930 | War Nurse | |
November 29, 1930 | Min and Bill | |
December 6, 1930 | Passion Flower | |
December 18, 1930 | Wu Li Chang | Spanish-language version of Mr. Wu |
December 28, 1930 | New Moon | |
December 30, 1930 | Paid | |
1931
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 3, 1931 | Reducing | |
January 5, 1931 | Anna Christie | German-language version |
January 10, 1931 | The Bachelor Father | |
January 16, 1931 | Monsieur Le Fox | Spanish-language version of Men of the North |
January 23, 1931 | De frente, marchen | Spanish-language version of Doughboys |
January 24, 1931 | The Great Meadow | |
January 31, 1931 | Inspiration | |
February 7, 1931 | Dance, Fools, Dance | |
February 7, 1931 | The Easiest Way | |
February 21, 1931 | Si l'empereur savait ça | French-language version of His Glorious Night |
February 21, 1931 | The Prodigal | |
February 28, 1931 | Parlor, Bedroom and Bath | |
March 7, 1931 | Gentleman's Fate | |
March 13, 1931 | La fruta amarga | Spanish-language version of Min and Bill |
March 14, 1931 | Men Call It Love | |
March 27, 1931 | En cada puerto un amor | Spanish-language version of Way for a Sailor |
March 28, 1931 | A Tailor Made Man | |
April 3, 1931 | La mujer X | Spanish-language version of Madame X |
April 4, 1931 | Strangers May Kiss | |
April 11, 1931 | Stepping Out | A Hal Roach Comedy |
April 11, 1931 | It's a Wise Child | |
April 18, 1931 | The Secret Six | A George Hill-Cosmopolitan production |
April 25, 1931 | Shipmates | |
May 2, 1931 | Daybreak | |
May 16, 1931 | Never the Twain Shall Meet | |
May 23, 1931 | Trader Horn | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 30, 1931 | Laughing Sinners | |
June 6, 1931 | Just a Gigolo | |
June 13, 1931 | Five and Ten | |
June 20, 1931 | A Free Soul | |
June 26, 1931 | El proceso de Mary Dugan | Spanish-language version of The Trial of Mary Dugan |
July 4, 1931 | The Man in Possession | |
July 17, 1931 | Su última noche | Spanish-language remake of The Gay Deceiver |
July 18, 1931 | The Great Lover | |
July 25, 1931 | Politics | |
August 1, 1931 | Son of India | |
August 8, 1931 | Sporting Blood | |
August 15, 1931 | Pardon Us | A Hal Roach Feature |
August 22, 1931 | Guilty Hands | |
August 29, 1931 | This Modern Age | |
September 5, 1931 | The Squaw Man | |
September 12, 1931 | The Phantom of Paris | |
September 26, 1931 | Sidewalks of New York | |
October 2, 1931 | Cheri-Bibi | Spanish-language version of The Phantom of Paris |
October 3, 1931 | New Adventures of Get Rich Quick Wallingford | |
October 10, 1931 | Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise) | |
October 24, 1931 | The Sin of Madelon Claudet | |
November 7, 1931 | The Guardsman | |
November 9, 1931 | The Champ | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 14, 1931 | Flying High | |
November 21, 1931 | Possessed | |
November 28, 1931 | West of Broadway | |
December 5, 1931 | The Cuban Love Song | |
December 12, 1931 | Private Lives | |
December 26, 1931 | Mata Hari | |
1932
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 2, 1932 | Emma | |
January 16, 1932 | Hell Divers | |
January 23, 1932 | Lovers Courageous | |
February 6, 1932 | The Passionate Plumber | |
February 13, 1932 | The Beast of the City | |
February 20, 1932 | Freaks | |
February 27, 1932 | Polly of the Circus | |
March 5, 1932 | Arsene Lupin | |
March 25, 1932 | Tarzan the Ape Man | |
March 26, 1932 | The Wet Parade | |
April 9, 1932 | But the Flesh Is Weak | |
April 24, 1932 | Are You Listening | |
April 30, 1932 | When a Feller Needs a Friend | |
May 14, 1932 | Huddle | |
May 14, 1932 | Letty Lynton | |
May 28, 1932 | As You Desire Me | |
June 4, 1932 | New Morals for Old | |
June 4, 1932 | Night Court | |
June 25, 1932 | Red-Headed Woman | |
July 2, 1932 | Unashamed | |
July 9, 1932 | The Washington Masquerade | |
July 16, 1932 | Skyscraper Souls | |
August 6, 1932 | Downstairs | |
August 13, 1932 | Speak Easily | |
August 27, 1932 | Divorce in the Family | |
September 1, 1932 | Blondie of the Follies | |
September 11, 1932 | Grand Hotel | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
September 17, 1932 | Pack Up Your Troubles | Presented by Hal Roach (A Hal Roach Comedy) |
September 24, 1932 | Smilin’ Through | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
October 1, 1932 | Kongo | |
October 15, 1932 | Faithless | |
October 22, 1932 | Red Dust | |
November 5, 1932 | The Mask of Fu Manchu | |
November 7, 1932 | Payment Deferred | |
November 18, 1932 | Prosperity | |
December 8, 1932 | Flesh | |
December 16, 1932 | Fast Life | |
December 23, 1932 | The Son-Daughter | |
December 23, 1932 | Rasputin and the Empress | |
December 30, 1932 | Strange Interlude | |
1933
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 20, 1933 | The Outsider | US distribution; presented in the UK by Eric Hakim |
January 21, 1933 | Whistling in the Dark | |
February 3, 1933 | The Secret of Madame Blanche | |
February 10, 1933 | What! No Beer? | |
February 17, 1933 | Men Must Fight | |
February 24, 1933 | Clear All Wires! | |
March 10, 1933 | Fast Workers | |
March 31, 1933 | Gabriel Over the White House | A Cosmopolitan production |
April 14, 1933 | Today We Live | |
April 14, 1933 | The White Sister | |
April 28, 1933 | Looking Forward | |
May 5, 1933 | The Devil's Brother | |
May 12, 1933 | The Barbarian | |
May 19, 1933 | Made on Broadway | |
May 26, 1933 | Peg o' My Heart | A Cosmopolitan production |
June 2, 1933 | The Nuisance | |
June 9, 1933 | Hell Below | |
June 16, 1933 | Reunion in Vienna | |
June 23, 1933 | When Ladies Meet | A Cosmopolitan production |
June 30, 1933 | Midnight Mary | |
July 7, 1933 | Hold Your Man | |
July 14, 1933 | Storm at Daybreak | |
July 28, 1933 | Another Language | |
July 28, 1933 | The Stranger's Return | |
August 4, 1933 | Tugboat Annie | |
August 25, 1933 | Turn Back the Clock | |
August 29, 1933 | Dinner at Eight | |
September 1, 1933 | Beauty for Sale | |
September 8, 1933 | Penthouse | |
September 15, 1933 | Broadway to Hollywood | |
September 22, 1933 | The Solitaire Man | |
September 29, 1933 | Stage Mother | |
October 6, 1933 | Night Flight | |
October 13, 1933 | Bombshell | |
October 20, 1933 | Meet the Baron | |
October 27, 1933 | Day of Reckoning | |
November 3, 1933 | The Chief | |
November 10, 1933 | The Prizefighter and the Lady | |
November 14, 1933 | Eskimo | |
November 17, 1933 | Christopher Bean | |
November 24, 1933 | Dancing Lady | |
December 1, 1933 | Should Ladies Behave | |
December 8, 1933 | The Women in His Life | |
December 22, 1933 | Going Hollywood | |
December 26, 1933 | Queen Christina | |
December 29, 1933 | Sons of the Desert | A Hal Roach Comedy |
1934
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 5, 1934 | Fugitive Lovers | |
January 26, 1934 | You Can't Buy Everything | A Cosmopolitan production |
February 2, 1934 | This Side of Heaven | |
February 16, 1934 | The Cat and the Fiddle | |
February 23, 1934 | The Mystery of Mr. X | |
March 9, 1934 | The Show-Off | |
March 16, 1934 | Lazy River | |
March 30, 1934 | Riptide | |
April 6, 1934 | Men in White | A Cosmopolitan production |
April 10, 1934 | Viva Villa! | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 13, 1934 | Laughing Boy | |
April 16, 1934 | Tarzan and His Mate | |
May 4, 1934 | Manhattan Melodrama | A Cosmopolitan production |
May 9, 1934 | Sadie McKee | |
May 25, 1934 | The Thin Man | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
June 1, 1934 | Hollywood Party | |
June 8, 1934 | Operator 13 | A Cosmopolitan production |
June 29, 1934 | Murder in the Private Car | |
July 13, 1934 | Stamboul Quest | |
July 27, 1934 | Paris Interlude | |
August 3, 1934 | The Girl from Missouri | |
August 10, 1934 | Straight Is the Way | |
August 17, 1934 | Treasure Island | |
August 24, 1934 | Hide-Out | |
September 1, 1934 | Chained | |
September 7, 1934 | Have a Heart | |
September 14, 1934 | Death on the Diamond | |
September 21, 1934 | The Barretts of Wimpole Street | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Remade in 1956 |
September 28, 1934 | Outcast Lady | |
October 5, 1934 | Student Tour | |
October 19, 1934 | What Every Woman Knows | |
November 2, 1934 | The Merry Widow | |
November 9, 1934 | Evelyn Prentice | A Cosmopolitan production |
November 23, 1934 | The Painted Veil | |
December 7, 1934 | A Wicked Woman | |
December 14, 1934 | Babes in Toyland | A Hal Roach production |
December 14, 1934 | The Gay Bride | |
December 21, 1934 | The Band Plays On | |
December 22, 1934 | Sequoia | |
December 23, 1934 | Forsaking All Others | A W. S. Van Dyke production |
1935
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 4, 1935 | Biography of a Bachelor Girl | |
January 11, 1935 | The Night Is Young | |
January 19, 1935 | David Copperfield | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
January 25, 1935 | Society Doctor | |
February 8, 1935 | The Winning Ticket | |
February 15, 1935 | Shadow of Doubt | |
February 22, 1935 | After Office Hours | |
March 1, 1935 | Vanessa: Her Love Story | |
March 3, 1935 | One New York Night | |
March 8, 1935 | Times Square Lady | |
March 15, 1935 | The Casino Murder Case | |
March 22, 1935 | Naughty Marietta | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
March 23, 1935 | West Point of the Air | |
April 12, 1935 | Baby Face Harrington | |
April 19, 1935 | Reckless | |
April 26, 1935 | Mark of the Vampire | |
May 3, 1935 | Vagabond Lady | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
May 10, 1935 | Age of Indiscretion | |
May 17, 1935 | The Flame Within | |
May 27, 1935 | Murder in the Fleet | |
May 31, 1935 | Public Hero No. 1 | |
June 14, 1935 | No More Ladies | |
June 28, 1935 | Calm Yourself | |
July 6, 1935 | Escapade | A Robert Z. Leonard production |
July 12, 1935 | Mad Love | |
July 12, 1935 | The Murder Man | |
August 2, 1935 | Woman Wanted | |
August 9, 1935 | China Seas | |
August 9, 1935 | Pursuit | |
August 23, 1935 | Bonnie Scotland | Presented by Hal Roach |
August 30, 1935 | Anna Karenina | |
August 30, 1935 | Here Comes the Band | |
September 13, 1935 | The Bishop Misbehaves | |
September 18, 1935 | Broadway Melody of 1936 | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
September 27, 1935 | O'Shaughnessy's Boy | |
October 4, 1935 | I Live My Life | |
October 11, 1935 | It's in the Air | |
October 23, 1935 | Rendezvous | |
November 8, 1935 | Mutiny on the Bounty | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Remade in 1962 |
November 15, 1935 | A Night at the Opera | |
November 22, 1935 | The Perfect Gentleman | |
December 6, 1935 | Ah, Wilderness! | |
December 6, 1935 | Kind Lady | |
December 18, 1935 | Whipsaw | |
December 20, 1935 | Last of the Pagans | |
December 27, 1935 | A Tale of Two Cities | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
1936
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 3, 1936 | Riffraff | |
January 10, 1936 | Three Live Ghosts | |
January 17, 1936 | Exclusive Story | |
January 24, 1936 | Tough Guy | |
February 1, 1936 | Rose Marie | |
February 14, 1936 | The Bohemian Girl | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
February 15, 1936 | The Voice of Bugle Ann | |
February 21, 1936 | The Garden Murder Case | |
February 28, 1936 | Wife vs. Secretary | |
March 6, 1936 | Three Godfathers | |
March 17, 1936 | Robin Hood of El Dorado | |
March 20, 1936 | Petticoat Fever | |
March 27, 1936 | Moonlight Murder | |
April 4, 1936 | The Unguarded Hour | |
April 8, 1936 | The Great Ziegfeld | A Robert Z. Leonard production Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
April 10, 1936 | Small Town Girl | |
April 24, 1936 | Absolute Quiet | |
May 8, 1936 | Speed | |
May 9, 1936 | Neighborhood House | A Hal Roach Comedy |
May 15, 1936 | The Three Wise Guys | |
May 22, 1936 | Trouble for Two | |
May 29, 1936 | Fury | Fritz Lang's first American film |
June 19, 1936 | We Went to College | |
June 26, 1936 | San Francisco | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
July 10, 1936 | The Devil-Doll | |
July 20, 1936 | Suzy | |
July 31, 1936 | Women Are Trouble | |
August 7, 1936 | His Brother's Wife | |
August 14, 1936 | Piccadilly Jim | |
August 20, 1936 | Romeo and Juliet | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
August 21, 1936 | Kelly the Second | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
August 28, 1936 | The Gorgeous Hussy | A Clarence Brown production |
September 11, 1936 | Sworn Enemy | |
September 18, 1936 | The Devil Is a Sissy | |
September 25, 1936 | Old Hutch | |
October 2, 1936 | The Longest Night | |
October 9, 1936 | Libeled Lady | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
October 16, 1936 | All American Chump | |
October 23, 1936 | Mr. Cinderella | Presented by Hal Roach Studios |
October 30, 1936 | Our Relations | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
November 6, 1936 | Tarzan Escapes | |
November 13, 1936 | Mad Holiday | |
November 20, 1936 | Love on the Run | |
November 27, 1936 | Born to Dance | |
December 11, 1936 | General Spanky | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
December 12, 1936 | Camille | |
December 18, 1936 | Sinner Take All | |
December 25, 1936 | After the Thin Man | |
1937
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 8, 1937 | Under Cover of Night | |
January 22, 1937 | Dangerous Number | |
January 26, 1937 | April Blossoms/April Romance | US distribution only; produced in the UK by Alliance Films |
January 29, 1937 | The Good Earth | Presented by The Theatre Guild Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
January 29, 1937 | Man of the People | |
February 5, 1937 | Mama Steps Out | |
February 19, 1937 | The Last of Mrs. Cheyney | |
February 26, 1937 | Espionage | |
March 12, 1937 | A Family Affair | 1st entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
March 19, 1937 | Personal Property | |
March 26, 1937 | Maytime | A Robert Z. Leonard production |
April 2, 1937 | Song of the City | |
April 9, 1937 | Aldebaran | US distribution; produced in Italy by Manenti Film |
April 16, 1937 | Way Out West | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy, presented by Hal Roach Studios |
April 23, 1937 | The Good Old Soak | |
April 23, 1937 | Nobody's Baby | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
April 30, 1937 | Night Must Fall | |
May 7, 1937 | They Gave Him a Gun | |
May 7, 1937 | The Thirteenth Chair | |
May 11, 1937 | Captains Courageous | A Victor Fleming production Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 21, 1937 | Pick a Star | A Hal Roach comedy – an Edward Sedgwick production |
June 4, 1937 | Parnell | |
June 11, 1937 | A Day at the Races | |
June 18, 1937 | Married Before Breakfast | |
July 2, 1937 | The Emperor's Candlesticks | |
July 9, 1937 | Between Two Women | |
July 16, 1937 | Topper | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
July 23, 1937 | Saratoga | |
July 30, 1937 | London by Night | |
August 20, 1937 | Broadway Melody of 1938 | |
August 27, 1937 | Bad Guy | |
September 1, 1937 | The Firefly | A Robert Z. Leonard production |
September 3, 1937 | Big City | A Frank Borzage production |
September 10, 1937 | The Women Men Marry | |
September 17, 1937 | My Dear Miss Aldrich | |
October 1, 1937 | Madame X | |
October 15, 1937 | The Bride Wore Red | |
October 15, 1937 | Double Wedding | |
October 22, 1937 | Conquest | A Clarence Brown production |
October 29, 1937 | Live, Love and Learn | |
November 12, 1937 | The Last Gangster | |
November 19, 1937 | Navy Blue and Gold | A Sam Wood production |
December 3, 1937 | Beg, Borrow or Steal | |
December 3, 1937 | Thoroughbreds Don't Cry | |
December 10, 1937 | You're Only Young Once | 2nd entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
December 14, 1937 | Mannequin | A Frank Borzage production |
December 24, 1937 | Rosalie | |
December 31, 1937 | The Bad Man of Brimstone | |
1938
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 7, 1938 | Man-Proof | |
January 14, 1938 | Love Is a Headache | |
February 4, 1938 | Everybody Sing | |
February 11, 1938 | Of Human Hearts | |
February 15, 1938 | Paradise for Three | |
February 18, 1938 | A Yank at Oxford | Made by the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios |
February 25, 1938 | Arsène Lupin Returns | |
March 4, 1938 | Merrily We Live | Presented by Hal Roach (A Hal Roach Feature Comedy) |
March 12, 1938 | The First Hundred Years | |
March 18, 1938 | The Girl of the Golden West | |
March 26, 1938 | Judge Hardy's Children | 3rd entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
April 22, 1938 | Test Pilot | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 13, 1938 | Hold That Kiss | |
May 19, 1938 | Yellow Jack | |
May 20, 1938 | Swiss Miss | Presented by Hal Roach Studios |
June 2, 1938 | Three Comrades | |
June 10, 1938 | The Toy Wife | |
June 17, 1938 | Lord Jeff | |
June 24, 1938 | Woman Against Woman | |
July 1, 1938 | Port of Seven Seas | |
July 5, 1938 | Fast Company | |
July 8, 1938 | Marie Antoinette | |
July 15, 1938 | The Shopworn Angel | |
July 22, 1938 | Love Finds Andy Hardy | 4th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
July 29, 1938 | The Chaser | |
August 5, 1938 | The Crowd Roars | |
August 12, 1938 | Rich Man, Poor Girl | |
August 19, 1938 | Block-Heads | A Hal Roach Feature Comedy |
September 2, 1938 | Three Loves Has Nancy | |
September 9, 1938 | Boys Town | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
September 16, 1938 | Too Hot to Handle | |
September 30, 1938 | Vacation from Love | |
October 7, 1938 | Stablemates | |
October 14, 1938 | Young Dr. Kildare | 1st entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
October 18, 1938 | Listen, Darling | |
October 29, 1938 | The Citadel | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 4, 1938 | The Great Waltz | |
November 11, 1938 | Spring Madness | |
November 18, 1938 | The Shining Hour | A Frank Borzage production |
November 25, 1938 | Out West with the Hardys | |
December 2, 1938 | Flirting with Fate | Distribution only; produced by David Loew Productions |
December 8, 1938 | Pygmalion | US distribution; produced in the UK by Gabriel Pascal Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 9, 1938 | Dramatic School | |
December 16, 1938 | A Christmas Carol | |
December 22, 1938 | Sweethearts | MGM's first three-strip Technicolor film; first feature film appearance of Tanner the Lion |
December 23, 1938 | The Girl Downstairs | |
1939
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 6, 1939 | Stand Up and Fight | |
January 13, 1939 | Burn 'Em Up O'Connor | |
January 27, 1939 | Idiot's Delight | |
January 27, 1939 | Four Girls in White | |
February 3, 1939 | Honolulu | |
February 10, 1939 | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn | Remade in 1960 |
February 17, 1939 | Fast and Loose | |
February 24, 1939 | Let Freedom Ring | |
March 10, 1939 | The Ice Follies of 1939 | |
March 17, 1939 | Within the Law | |
March 21, 1939 | Society Lawyer | |
March 24, 1939 | Sergeant Madden | |
April 7, 1939 | Broadway Serenade | |
April 14, 1939 | The Kid from Texas | |
April 21, 1939 | The Hardys Ride High | 6th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
April 28, 1939 | Calling Dr. Kildare | 2nd entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
May 5, 1939 | Lucky Night | |
May 12, 1939 | Tell No Tales | |
May 15, 1939 | Goodbye, Mr. Chips | A Sam Wood production Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Remade as musical in 1969 |
May 19, 1939 | It's a Wonderful World | |
May 26, 1939 | Bridal Suite | |
June 9, 1939 | 6,000 Enemies | |
June 15, 1939 | Land of Liberty | Distribution only; produced by Motion Picture Producers & Distributors of America A compilation film for the Golden Gate International Exposition and the 1939 New York World's Fair |
June 16, 1939 | Tarzan Finds a Son! | |
June 22, 1939 | Maisie | |
June 30, 1939 | Stronger Than Desire | |
July 6, 1939 | On Borrowed Time | |
July 21, 1939 | Andy Hardy Gets Spring Fever | 7th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
August 4, 1939 | They All Come Out | |
August 10, 1939 | Miracles for Sale | |
August 11, 1939 | Lady of the Tropics | |
August 15, 1939 | The Wizard of Oz | A Victor Fleming production Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
August 18, 1939 | These Glamour Girls | |
August 29, 1939 | Ask a Policeman | US distribution only; made in the UK by Gainsborough Pictures |
September 1, 1939 | The Women | |
September 8, 1939 | Blackmail | |
September 15, 1939 | Thunder Afloat | |
September 29, 1939 | Dancing Co-Ed | |
October 6, 1939 | Fast and Furious | |
October 13, 1939 | Babes in Arms | |
October 20, 1939 | At the Circus | |
October 27, 1939 | Bad Little Angel | |
November 9, 1939 | Ninotchka | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Remade as musical in 1957 |
November 17, 1939 | Another Thin Man | 3rd entry in the Thin Man film series |
November 24, 1939 | The Secret of Dr. Kildare | 3rd entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
December 1, 1939 | Joe and Ethel Turp Call on the President | |
December 8, 1939 | Henry Goes Arizona | |
December 13, 1939 | Nick Carter, Master Detective | |
December 15, 1939 | Balalaika | |
December 19, 1939 | Gone with the Wind | Distribution only; produced by Selznick International Pictures Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 19, 1939 | Remember? | |
December 22, 1939 | Judge Hardy and Son | |
1940s
1940
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 5, 1940 | The Earl of Chicago | |
January 12, 1940 | The Shop Around the Corner | |
January 19, 1940 | Congo Maisie | |
January 26, 1940 | The Lambeth Walk | Distribution; presented by CAPAD: A Pinebrook production |
February 2, 1940 | I Take This Woman | |
February 9, 1940 | Broadway Melody of 1940 | |
February 16, 1940 | The Man from Dakota | |
February 23, 1940 | Northwest Passage | |
March 1, 1940 | Strange Cargo | A Frank Borzage production |
March 1, 1940 | The Ghost Comes Home | |
March 15, 1940 | Young Tom Edison | |
April 5, 1940 | And One Was Beautiful | |
April 12, 1940 | Dr. Kildare's Strange Case | 4th entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
April 19, 1940 | Two Girls on Broadway | |
April 26, 1940 | Forty Little Mothers | |
May 3, 1940 | 20 Mule Team | |
May 10, 1940 | Edison, the Man | |
May 17, 1940 | Waterloo Bridge | A Mervyn LeRoy production |
June 5, 1940 | Florian | |
June 7, 1940 | Susan and God | |
June 7, 1940 | Phantom Raiders | A Nick Carter adventure |
June 14, 1940 | The Mortal Storm | |
June 21, 1940 | The Captain Is a Lady | |
July 5, 1940 | Andy Hardy Meets Debutante | 9th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
July 12, 1940 | Sporting Blood | |
July 19, 1940 | New Moon | |
July 19, 1940 | We Who Are Young | |
July 26, 1940 | Pride and Prejudice | |
July 26, 1940 | Gold Rush Maisie | |
August 9, 1940 | I Love You Again | |
August 16, 1940 | The Golden Fleecing | |
August 30, 1940 | Boom Town | |
September 6, 1940 | Dr. Kildare Goes Home | 5th entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
September 13, 1940 | Wyoming | |
September 20, 1940 | Haunted Honeymoon | Made by the MGM-British Studios |
September 27, 1940 | Strike Up the Band | |
September 27, 1940 | Sky Murder | A Nick Carter adventure |
October 4, 1940 | Dulcy | |
October 11, 1940 | Third Finger, Left Hand | |
October 25, 1940 | Hullabaloo | |
November 1, 1940 | Escape | |
November 8, 1940 | Bitter Sweet | |
November 15, 1940 | Gallant Sons | |
November 22, 1940 | Little Nellie Kelly | |
November 29, 1940 | Dr. Kildare's Crisis | |
December 6, 1940 | Go West | |
December 13, 1940 | Comrade X | A King Vidor production |
December 26, 1940 | The Philadelphia Story | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Remade as High Society in 1956 |
December 27, 1940 | Flight Command | Presented with the cooperation of the United States Navy |
December 27, 1940 | Keeping Company | |
1941
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 10, 1941 | Maisie Was a Lady | |
January 24, 1941 | The Wild Man of Borneo | |
January 31, 1941 | Come Live with Me | |
February 7, 1941 | Blonde Inspiration | |
February 14, 1941 | The Trial of Mary Dugan | |
February 21, 1941 | Andy Hardy's Private Secretary | 10th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
February 28, 1941 | Free and Easy | |
March 7, 1941 | Rage in Heaven | |
March 14, 1941 | The Penalty | |
March 28, 1941 | The Bad Man | |
April 7, 1941 | Barnacle Bill | |
April 11, 1941 | Men of Boys Town | |
April 18, 1941 | Washington Melodrama | |
April 25, 1941 | Ziegfeld Girl | |
May 2, 1941 | The People vs. Dr. Kildare | 7th entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
May 16, 1941 | I'll Wait for You | |
May 23, 1941 | A Woman's Face | |
May 23, 1941 | Love Crazy | |
May 30, 1941 | Billy the Kid | |
June 13, 1941 | The Get-Away | |
June 20, 1941 | The Big Store | |
June 27, 1941 | They Met in Bombay | A Clarence Brown production |
July 23, 1941 | The Stars Look Down | US distribution; a Grafton Film |
July 25, 1941 | Blossoms in the Dust | A Mervyn LeRoy production Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
July 30, 1941 | Down in San Diego | |
August 1, 1941 | Ringside Maisie | |
August 8, 1941 | Whistling in the Dark | |
August 12, 1941 | Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde | |
August 15, 1941 | Life Begins for Andy Hardy | 11th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
August 22, 1941 | Dr. Kildare's Wedding Day | 8th entry in the Dr. Kildare film series |
August 29, 1941 | When Ladies Meet | |
September 1, 1941 | Lady Be Good | |
September 12, 1941 | The Feminine Touch | |
October 1, 1941 | Honky Tonk | |
October 16, 1941 | Married Bachelor | |
October 31, 1941 | The Chocolate Soldier | |
October 1941 | Smilin' Through | |
November 11, 1941 | Design for Scandal | |
November 21, 1941 | Shadow of the Thin Man | |
November 30, 1941 | Two-Faced Woman | |
November 1941 | Unholy Partners | A Mervyn LeRoy production |
December 1, 1941 | Tarzan's Secret Treasure | |
December 9, 1941 | Johnny Eager | |
December 18, 1941 | H. M. Pulham, Esq. | |
December 18, 1941 | Kathleen | |
December 31, 1941 | Babes on Broadway | |
1942
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 6, 1942 | Joe Smith, American | |
January 19, 1942 | Woman of the Year | A George Stevens production |
January 21, 1942 | Nazi Agent | |
January 23, 1942 | The Vanishing Virginian | A Frank Borzage production |
January 23, 1942 | Mr. and Mrs. North | |
January 29, 1942 | A Yank on the Burma Road | |
January 30, 1942 | The Bugle Sounds | |
February 4, 1942 | Dr. Kildare's Victory | 9th, and final, entry in the Dr. Kildare film series with Lew Ayres as Dr. Kildare |
February 11, 1942 | The Courtship of Andy Hardy | 12th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
February 18, 1942 | Born to Sing | |
March 1942 | This Time for Keeps | |
April 17, 1942 | Kid Glove Killer | |
April 22, 1942 | Fingers at the Window | |
April 30, 1942 | We Were Dancing | |
April 1942 | Rio Rita | |
April 1942 | Mokey | |
May 8, 1942 | Sunday Punch | |
May 21, 1942 | Tortilla Flat | |
May 21, 1942 | Pacific Rendezvous | |
May 23, 1942 | Grand Central Murder | |
May 1942 | Tarzan's New York Adventure | |
May 1942 | Ship Ahoy | |
June 4, 1942 | Mrs. Miniver | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
June 21, 1942 | The Affairs of Martha | |
June 24, 1942 | Apache Trail | |
June 1942 | Maisie Gets Her Man | |
July 1, 1942 | Jackass Mail | |
July 9, 1942 | I Married an Angel | |
July 9, 1942 | Calling Dr. Gillespie | |
July 16, 1942 | Her Cardboard Lover | |
July 23, 1942 | Crossroads | |
July 29, 1942 | Pierre of the Plains | |
August 7, 1942 | The War Against Mrs. Hadley | |
August 17, 1942 | Cairo | |
August 17, 1942 | Somewhere I'll Find You | |
September 17, 1942 | Tish | |
September 1942 | The Omaha Trail | |
September 1942 | A Yank at Eton | |
October 1, 1942 | Panama Hattie | |
October 16, 1942 | Eyes in the Night | |
October 21, 1942 | For Me and My Gal | |
November 12, 1942 | Dr. Gillespie's New Assistant | |
November 13, 1942 | Seven Sweethearts | A Frank Borzage production |
November 30, 1942 | Talk About Jacqueline | Distribution only; an Excelsior Films production Released in the US in 1944 |
December 1, 1942 | Northwest Rangers | |
December 12, 1942 | White Cargo | |
December 17, 1942 | Journey for Margaret | |
December 17, 1942 | Random Harvest | A Mervyn LeRoy production Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 21, 1942 | Keeper of the Flame | |
December 25, 1942 | Reunion in France | |
December 31, 1942 | Whistling in Dixie | |
December 31, 1942 | Stand by for Action | |
1943
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 12, 1943 | Tennessee Johnson | |
February 11, 1943 | Andy Hardy's Double Life | 13th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
February 26, 1943 | The Youngest Profession | |
March 2, 1943 | The Human Comedy | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
March 11, 1943 | Assignment in Brittany | |
March 17, 1943 | Harrigan's Kid | |
April 1, 1943 | Slightly Dangerous | |
April 4, 1943 | Air Raid Wardens | |
April 9, 1943 | Cabin in the Sky | |
April 29, 1943 | Presenting Lily Mars | |
April 1943 | A Stranger in Town | Never copyrighted |
May 5, 1943 | Du Barry Was a Lady | |
May 8, 1943 | Dr. Gillespie's Criminal Case | |
May 21, 1943 | Three Hearts for Julia | |
June 3, 1943 | Bataan | |
June 10, 1943 | Hitler's Madman | |
June 24, 1943 | Pilot No. 5 | |
August 2, 1943 | Young Ideas | |
August 4, 1943 | The Man from Down Under | |
August 5, 1943 | Above Suspicion | |
August 30, 1943 | Salute to the Marines | |
September 13, 1943 | Thousands Cheer | |
September 24, 1943 | The Adventures of Tartu | Made by the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios |
September 1943 | I Dood It | |
October 1, 1943 | Swing Shift Maisie | |
October 7, 1943 | Lassie Come Home | |
October 8, 1943 | Best Foot Forward | |
November 1, 1943 | Swing Fever | |
November 12, 1943 | The Cross of Lorraine | |
November 23, 1943 | Cry "Havoc" | |
November 26, 1943 | Girl Crazy | |
December 16, 1943 | Madame Curie | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 23, 1943 | Lost Angel | |
December 24, 1943 | A Guy Named Joe | |
December 1943 | Whistling in Brooklyn | |
1944
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 19, 1944 | Broadway Rhythm | |
February 10, 1944 | Song of Russia | |
March 18, 1944 | See Here, Private Hargrove | |
March 23, 1944 | The Heavenly Body | |
March 24, 1944 | Rationing | |
April 1, 1944 | Tunisian Victory | US distribution only; produced by British and American service film units |
May 4, 1944 | Gaslight | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
May 4, 1944 | Andy Hardy's Blonde Trouble | 14th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
May 11, 1944 | The White Cliffs of Dover | A Clarence Brown production |
May 25, 1944 | 3 Men in White | |
June 1, 1944 | Meet the People | |
June 14, 1944 | Two Girls and a Sailor | |
June 27, 1944 | Bathing Beauty | |
July 20, 1944 | Dragon Seed | |
July 24, 1944 | The Seventh Cross | |
July 28, 1944 | The Canterville Ghost | |
August 22, 1944 | Kismet | |
August 23, 1944 | Marriage Is a Private Affair | |
September 11, 1944 | Maria Candelaria | Distribution of the 1948 dubbed US re-release only |
September 28, 1944 | Barbary Coast Gent | |
September 28, 1944 | Maisie Goes to Reno | |
October 11, 1944 | An American Romance | |
October 12, 1944 | Mrs. Parkington | |
November 8, 1944 | Lost in a Harem | |
November 15, 1944 | Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo | A Mervyn LeRoy production |
November 28, 1944 | Meet Me in St. Louis | |
December 5, 1944 | Blonde Fever | |
December 6, 1944 | Nothing But Trouble | |
December 14, 1944 | National Velvet | A Clarence Brown production |
December 18, 1944 | Music for Millions | A Henry Koster production |
1945
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 4, 1945 | This Man's Navy | |
January 12, 1945 | Main Street After Dark | |
January 25, 1945 | The Thin Man Goes Home | |
March 3, 1945 | The Picture of Dorian Gray | |
March 8, 1945 | Keep Your Powder Dry | |
March 22, 1945 | Without Love | |
March 28, 1945 | Between Two Women | |
April 20, 1945 | Son of Lassie | |
May 3, 1945 | The Valley of Decision | |
May 4, 1945 | Gentle Annie | |
May 23, 1945 | Thrill of a Romance | |
May 25, 1945 | The Clock | |
May 31, 1945 | Twice Blessed | |
June 7, 1945 | Dangerous Partners | |
July 4, 1945 | Bewitched | |
July 14, 1945 | Anchors Aweigh | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
August 13, 1945 | Ziegfeld Follies | |
August 22, 1945 | Abbott and Costello in Hollywood | |
August 31, 1945 | The Hidden Eye | |
September 6, 1945 | Our Vines Have Tender Grapes | |
September 11, 1945 | Her Highness and the Bellboy | |
October 4, 1945 | Week-End at the Waldorf | A Robert Z. Leonard production |
November 1, 1945 | Perfect Strangers | Co-production with London Film Productions |
November 4, 1945 | She Went to the Races | |
November 20, 1945 | Yolanda and the Thief | |
November 21, 1945 | What Next, Corporal Hargrove? | |
November 27, 1945 | The Last Chance | Presented by MGM International Films Corporation – A Praesens-Film production |
December 20, 1945 | They Were Expendable | A John Ford production |
December 21, 1945 | It Happened at the Inn | US distribution only; produced in France by Les Films Minerva |
December 28, 1945 | The Sailor Takes a Wife | |
December 28, 1945 | Adventure | |
1946
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1946 | The Great Morgan | A compilation film; released overseas only |
January 18, 1946 | The Harvey Girls | |
January 28, 1946 | A Letter for Evie | |
February 1, 1946 | Up Goes Maisie | |
April 4, 1946 | The Hoodlum Saint | |
May 2, 1946 | The Postman Always Rings Twice | |
May 22, 1946 | Bad Bascomb | |
June 4, 1946 | Two Smart People | |
June 6, 1946 | Two Sisters from Boston | A Henry Koster production |
June 10, 1946 | Little Mister Jim | |
June 15, 1946 | Stormy Waters | US distribution only; produced in France by SEDIF |
July 4, 1946 | The Green Years | |
July 25, 1946 | Easy to Wed | |
July 18, 1946 | Boys' Ranch | |
August 4, 1946 | Piccadilly Incident | US distribution only; produced in the UK by Herbert Wilcox Productions |
August 15, 1946 | Holiday in Mexico | |
August 22, 1946 | Faithful in My Fashion | |
September 26, 1946 | Three Wise Fools | |
October 3, 1946 | No Leave, No Love | |
October 24, 1946 | The Cockeyed Miracle | |
November 8, 1946 | Courage of Lassie | |
November 28, 1946 | Undercurrent | |
December 5, 1946 | Till the Clouds Roll By | |
December 5, 1946 | Gallant Bess | |
December 18, 1946 | The Yearling | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 25, 1946 | The Secret Heart | |
December 25, 1946 | Love Laughs at Andy Hardy | 15th entry in the Andy Hardy film series |
December 1946 | The Show-Off | |
1947
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 2, 1947 | The Mighty McGurk | |
January 23, 1947 | Lady in the Lake | |
February 4, 1947 | My Brother Talks to Horses | |
February 13, 1947 | The Arnelo Affair | |
February 19, 1947 | The Beginning or the End | |
March 1, 1947 | Undercover Maisie | |
March 11, 1947 | High Barbaree | |
April 7, 1947 | It Happened in Brooklyn | |
April 25, 1947 | The Sea of Grass | |
June 10, 1947 | Living in a Big Way | |
June 12, 1947 | Fiesta | |
June 25, 1947 | Dark Delusion | |
August 4, 1947 | The Romance of Rosy Ridge | |
August 27, 1947 | The Hucksters | |
August 28, 1947 | Song of the Thin Man | |
August 29, 1947 | Cynthia | |
September 19, 1947 | The Unfinished Dance | |
October 9, 1947 | Song of Love | |
October 11, 1947 | Merton of the Movies | |
October 17, 1947 | This Time for Keeps | |
October 24, 1947 | Killer McCoy | |
October 31, 1947 | Desire Me | |
November 5, 1947 | Green Dolphin Street | |
November 6, 1947 | Cass Timberlane | |
December 17, 1947 | High Wall | |
December 26, 1947 | Good News | |
December 26, 1947 | If Winter Comes | |
1948
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 3, 1948 | Alias a Gentleman | |
February 20, 1948 | Tenth Avenue Angel | |
March 3, 1948 | The Bride Goes Wild | |
March 5, 1948 | Three Daring Daughters | |
March 25, 1948 | Big City | |
March 26, 1948 | The Search | Produced by Praesens-Film, Zurich for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Portions of the film were produced in the U. S occupied Zone of Germany through the permission of the U. S. Army and the cooperation of I. R. O. |
April 2, 1948 | B.F.'s Daughter | |
April 16, 1948 | Summer Holiday | |
April 29, 1948 | Homecoming | |
April 30, 1948 | State of the Union | Distribution only; produced by Liberty Films[N 1] |
May 3, 1948 | On an Island with You | |
June 11, 1948 | The Pirate | |
July 8, 1948 | Easter Parade | |
July 29, 1948 | A Date with Judy | |
August 5, 1948 | A Southern Yankee | |
August 8, 1948 | Julia Misbehaves | |
September 9, 1948 | Luxury Liner | |
October 20, 1948 | The Three Musketeers | |
October 22, 1948 | The Secret Land | |
November 12, 1948 | No Minor Vices | Distribution only; produced by The Enterprise Studio and Niagara Enterprises |
November 18, 1948 | The Kissing Bandit | |
November 25, 1948 | Hills of Home | |
December 1, 1948 | 3 Godfathers | Made by Argosy Pictures Corporation |
December 21, 1948 | Act of Violence | |
December 25, 1948 | Command Decision | |
December 25, 1948 | Force of Evil | Distribution only; produced by Roberts Production An MGM and The Enterprise Studios presentation[N 2] |
December 31, 1948 | Words and Music | |
1949
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 3, 1949 | The Bribe | |
February 17, 1949 | Caught | Distribution only; produced by The Enterprise Studios[N 2] |
March 3, 1949 | Tale of the Navajos | Feature-length documentary |
March 10, 1949 | Little Women | |
April 12, 1949 | Big Jack | |
April 13, 1949 | Take Me Out to the Ball Game | |
April 30, 1949 | The Secret Garden | |
May 4, 1949 | The Barkleys of Broadway | |
May 12, 1949 | The Sun Comes Up | |
May 12, 1949 | The Stratton Story | |
June 2, 1949 | Edward, My Son | |
June 9, 1949 | Neptune's Daughter | |
June 29, 1949 | The Great Sinner | |
July 15, 1949 | Any Number Can Play | |
July 28, 1949 | Scene of the Crime | |
July 29, 1949 | In the Good Old Summertime | |
August 25, 1949 | Madame Bovary | |
September 22, 1949 | That Midnight Kiss | |
September 29, 1949 | The Doctor and the Girl | |
October 14, 1949 | The Red Danube | |
October 28, 1949 | Border Incident | |
October 31, 1949 | Challenge to Lassie | |
November 3, 1949 | That Forsyte Woman | |
November 9, 1949 | Battleground | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
November 18, 1949 | Adam's Rib | |
November 22, 1949 | Intruder in the Dust | |
November 23, 1949 | Tension | |
December 22, 1949 | East Side, West Side | |
December 27, 1949 | Malaya | |
December 30, 1949 | On the Town | |
1950s
1950
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 13, 1950 | Ambush | |
February 2, 1950 | Key to the City | |
March 1, 1950 | The Outriders | |
March 10, 1950 | Nancy Goes to Rio | |
March 12, 1950 | Black Hand | |
March 24, 1950 | Conspirator | |
April 7, 1950 | The Yellow Cab Man | |
May 5, 1950 | The Reformer and the Redhead | |
May 11, 1950 | Stars In My Crown | |
May 12, 1950 | Please Believe Me | |
May 17, 1950 | Annie Get Your Gun | |
May 19, 1950 | Shadow on the Wall | |
May 23, 1950 | The Asphalt Jungle | |
May 23, 1950 | Side Street | |
May 26, 1950 | The Big Hangover | |
June 16, 1950 | Father of the Bride | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
June 29, 1950 | The Skipper Surprised His Wife | |
June 29, 1950 | The Next Voice You Hear... | |
July 7, 1950 | Crisis | |
July 7, 1950 | The Happy Years | |
July 12, 1950 | Three Little Words | |
July 14, 1950 | Duchess of Idaho | |
July 28, 1950 | Mystery Street | |
August 3, 1950 | A Lady Without Passport | |
August 24, 1950 | The Toast of New Orleans | |
August 31, 1950 | Summer Stock | |
September 1, 1950 | A Life of Her Own | |
September 15, 1950 | Devil's Doorway | |
October 6, 1950 | Right Cross | |
October 13, 1950 | To Please a Lady | |
October 26, 1950 | The Miniver Story | |
November 3, 1950 | Dial 1119 | |
November 10, 1950 | Two Weeks with Love | |
November 24, 1950 | King Solomon's Mines | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture. |
December 7, 1950 | Kim | |
December 8, 1950 | Mrs. O'Malley and Mr. Malone | |
December 11, 1950 | Watch the Birdie | |
December 29, 1950 | Pagan Love Song | |
1951
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 18, 1951 | The Magnificent Yankee | |
January 19, 1951 | Grounds for Marriage | |
February 4, 1951 | Vengeance Valley | |
March 1, 1951 | Three Guys Named Mike | |
March 2, 1951 | Mr. Imperium | |
March 12, 1951 | The Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Story | A compilation film |
March 15, 1951 | Inside Straight | |
March 16, 1951 | The Red Badge of Courage | |
March 23, 1951 | Royal Wedding | |
March 29, 1951 | Soldiers Three | |
March 30, 1951 | Cause for Alarm! | |
April 5, 1951 | Teresa | |
April 16, 1951 | The Great Caruso | |
April 27, 1951 | Father's Little Dividend | sequel to Father of the Bride |
May 4, 1951 | The Painted Hills | |
May 18, 1951 | Home Town Story | |
May 24, 1951 | Go for Broke! | |
June 8, 1951 | Night into Morning | |
June 15, 1951 | No Questions Asked | |
June 20, 1951 | Kind Lady | |
June 29, 1951 | Excuse My Dust | |
July 3, 1951 | Strictly Dishonorable | |
July 9, 1951 | Rich, Young and Pretty | |
July 20, 1951 | The Law and the Lady | |
August 17, 1951 | The Tall Target | |
August 1951 | The Strip | |
September 1, 1951 | The People Against O'Hara | |
September 24, 1951 | Show Boat | |
October 5, 1951 | Texas Carnival | |
October 12, 1951 | Bannerline | |
October 15, 1951 | Pandora and the Flying Dutchman | US distribution only; produced by Dorkay Productions |
October 19, 1951 | Angels in the Outfield | |
October 23, 1951 | Across the Wide Missouri | |
November 11, 1951 | An American in Paris | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
November 15, 1951 | Callaway Went Thataway | |
November 16, 1951 | The Unknown Man | |
November 20, 1951 | It's a Big Country | |
November 22, 1951 | Too Young to Kiss | |
November 27, 1951 | The Man with a Cloak | |
December 14, 1951 | Calling Bulldog Drummond | |
December 25, 1951 | Quo Vadis | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
December 31, 1951 | Westward the Women | |
1952
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 16, 1952 | The Light Touch | |
January 29, 1952 | Invitation | |
February 8, 1952 | Lone Star | |
February 22, 1952 | The Belle of New York | |
February 23, 1952 | Love Is Better Than Ever | |
February 27, 1952 | Just This Once | |
March 22, 1952 | The Wild North | |
April 11, 1952 | Singin' in the Rain | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
April 18, 1952 | Talk About a Stranger | |
April 24, 1952 | Carbine Williams | |
May 2, 1952 | Young Man with Ideas | |
May 11, 1952 | When in Rome | |
May 23, 1952 | The Girl in White | |
May 28, 1952 | Skirts Ahoy! | |
May 29, 1952 | Lovely to Look At | |
May 30, 1952 | The Sellout | |
June 6, 1952 | Glory Alley | |
June 13, 1952 | Pat and Mike | |
June 27, 1952 | Scaramouche | |
July 18, 1952 | Washington Story | |
July 18, 1952 | You for Me | |
July 18, 1952 | Shadow in the Sky | |
July 25, 1952 | Holiday for Sinners | |
July 31, 1952 | Ivanhoe | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
August 15, 1952 | Fearless Fagan | |
September 5, 1952 | The Merry Widow | |
September 5, 1952 | My Man and I | |
September 19, 1952 | The Devil Makes Three | |
September 25, 1952 | Because You're Mine | |
September 25, 1952 | Apache War Smoke | |
October 31, 1952 | Everything I Have Is Yours | |
November 14, 1952 | The Prisoner of Zenda | |
November 19, 1952 | Desperate Search | |
November 21, 1952 | The Hour of 13 | |
November 28, 1952 | Plymouth Adventure | |
December 4, 1952 | Million Dollar Mermaid | |
December 5, 1952 | The Hoaxters | Documentary feature |
December 12, 1952 | Sky Full of Moon | |
December 25, 1952 | The Bad and the Beautiful | |
1953
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 2, 1953 | Above and Beyond | |
January 16, 1953 | The Clown | |
February 6, 1953 | The Naked Spur | |
February 13, 1953 | Rogue's March | |
March 6, 1953 | Battle Circus | |
March 13, 1953 | Confidentially Connie | |
March 20, 1953 | I Love Melvin | |
March 26, 1953 | The Story of Three Loves | |
March 27, 1953 | The Girl Who Had Everything | |
March 30, 1953 | Jeopardy | |
April 10, 1953 | Small Town Girl | |
April 17, 1953 | Bright Road | |
April 22, 1953 | Sombrero | |
April 24, 1953 | Code Two | |
May 1, 1953 | Never Let Me Go | |
May 8, 1953 | Cry of the Hunted | |
May 15, 1953 | Remains to Be Seen | |
May 17, 1953 | Scandal at Scourie | |
May 22, 1953 | Fast Company | |
May 29, 1953 | Young Bess | |
June 4, 1953 | Julius Caesar | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
June 5, 1953 | A Slight Case of Larceny | |
June 19, 1953 | Dream Wife | |
June 24, 1953 | Arena | MGM's first 3D film |
July 3, 1953 | Dangerous When Wet | |
July 10, 1953 | Lili | |
July 14, 1953 | Terror on a Train | |
July 17, 1953 | Ride, Vaquero! | |
August 7, 1953 | The Band Wagon | |
August 14, 1953 | The Affairs of Dobie Gillis | |
August 19, 1953 | Big Leaguer | |
August 28, 1953 | Latin Lovers | |
September 4, 1953 | Half a Hero | |
September 25, 1953 | The Actress | |
October 1, 1953 | Torch Song | |
October 9, 1953 | Mogambo | |
October 13, 1953 | Main Street to Broadway | Distribution only; produced by Cinema Productions |
October 30, 1953 | Take the High Ground! | |
November 13, 1953 | All the Brothers Were Valiant | |
November 26, 1953 | Kiss Me Kate | MGM's second 3D film |
December 3, 1953 | Give a Girl a Break | |
December 4, 1953 | Escape from Fort Bravo | |
December 25, 1953 | Easy to Love | |
December 30, 1953 | Saadia | |
1954
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 15, 1954 | Knights of the Round Table | MGM's first CinemaScope film |
January 29, 1954 | The Great Diamond Robbery | |
February 18, 1954 | The Long, Long Trailer | |
March 5, 1954 | Tennessee Champ | |
April 1, 1954 | Rose Marie | |
April 2, 1954 | Gypsy Colt | |
April 16, 1954 | Rhapsody | |
May 4, 1954 | Prisoner of War | |
May 5, 1954 | Flame and the Flesh | |
May 6, 1954 | Executive Suite | |
May 7, 1954 | Men of the Fighting Lady | |
June 15, 1954 | The Student Prince | |
July 22, 1954 | Seven Brides for Seven Brothers | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture |
July 23, 1954 | Valley of the Kings | |
August 11, 1954 | Her Twelve Men | |
September 7, 1954 | Betrayed | |
September 8, 1954 | Brigadoon | |
September 17, 1954 | Rogue Cop | |
October 6, 1954 | Beau Brummell | |
November 4, 1954 | Athena | |
November 18, 1954 | The Last Time I Saw Paris | |
December 6, 1954 | Crest of the Wave | |
December 24, 1954 | Deep in My Heart | |
December 29, 1954 | Green Fire | |
1955
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 7, 1955 | Bad Day at Black Rock | |
February 4, 1955 | Many Rivers to Cross | |
February 18, 1955 | Jupiter's Darling | |
March 4, 1955 | Hit the Deck | |
March 24, 1955 | The Glass Slipper | |
March 25, 1955 | Blackboard Jungle | |
April 28, 1955 | Bedevilled | |
May 5, 1955 | Interrupted Melody | |
May 6, 1955 | The Prodigal | |
May 20, 1955 | The Marauders | |
June 7, 1955 | The Cobweb | |
June 10, 1955 | Love Me or Leave Me | |
June 24, 1955 | Moonfleet | |
June 24, 1955 | Svengali | US distribution only; produced in the UK by Alderdale Films |
July 29, 1955 | The Scarlet Coat | |
August 5, 1955 | The King's Thief | |
September 2, 1955 | It's Always Fair Weather | |
October 7, 1955 | Trial | |
October 8, 1955 | Kismet | |
November 3, 1955 | Guys and Dolls | Distribution only, produced by Samuel Goldwyn Productions[N 3] |
November 4, 1955 | The Tender Trap | |
November 23, 1955 | Quentin Durward | |
December 23, 1955 | It's a Dog's Life | |
December 25, 1955 | I'll Cry Tomorrow | |
1956
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 12, 1956 | Diane | |
January 24, 1956 | Ransom! | |
February 9, 1956 | Forever, Darling | Co-production with Zanra Productions |
March 9, 1956 | Meet Me in Las Vegas | |
March 15, 1956 | Forbidden Planet | |
March 30, 1956 | Tribute to a Bad Man | |
April 26, 1956 | The Swan | |
April 30, 1956 | The Last Hunt | |
May 1, 1956 | Bhowani Junction | |
May 9, 1956 | Gaby | |
May 15, 1956 | Invitation to the Dance | |
May 17, 1956 | The Wedding in Monaco | A Citel Monaco production made by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (feature documentary) Produced with the cooperation of Compagnie Francaise de Films |
June 14, 1956 | The Catered Affair | |
July 5, 1956 | Somebody Up There Likes Me | |
July 12, 1956 | The Fastest Gun Alive | |
July 17, 1956 | High Society | Co-production with Sol C. Siegel Productions and Bing Crosby Productions Musical remake of The Philadelphia Story |
August 17, 1956 | These Wilder Years | |
September 17, 1956 | Lust for Life | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
September 26, 1956 | The Power and the Prize | |
September 27, 1956 | Tea and Sympathy | |
October 17, 1956 | Julie | Co-production with Arwin Productions |
October 26, 1956 | The Opposite Sex | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
November 2, 1956 | The Rack | |
November 25, 1956 | Friendly Persuasion | Nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture Foreign distribution only;[2] US distribution by Allied Artists |
November 28, 1956 | The Great American Pastime | |
November 29, 1956 | The Teahouse of the August Moon | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
1957
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 7, 1957 | The Iron Petticoat | Distribution only; produced by Hope Records and Benhar Productions Presented by Harry Saltzman in association with Remus Films |
January 16, 1957 | The Barretts of Wimpole Street | |
January 18, 1957 | Slander | |
January 29, 1957 | Edge of the City | |
February 22, 1957 | The Wings of Eagles | |
February 1957 | Hot Summer Night | |
April 3, 1957 | Ten Thousand Bedrooms | |
April 4, 1957 | Lizzie | Co-production with Bryna Productions |
April 12, 1957 | Tarzan and the Lost Safari | Distribution only; produced by Sol Lesser Productions |
May 2, 1957 | The Living Idol | |
May 3, 1957 | The Little Hut | Distribution only; produced by Herbson, S.A. of Switzerland |
May 8, 1957 | The Vintage | |
May 10, 1957 | Something of Value | |
May 14, 1957 | This Could Be the Night | |
May 16, 1957 | Designing Woman | |
June 20, 1957 | The Happy Road | Distribution only; produced by Kerry Productions |
June 28, 1957 | The Seventh Sin | |
July 12, 1957 | Decision Against Time | Distribution only; produced by Ealing Films |
July 18, 1957 | Silk Stockings | Co-production with Arthur Freed Productions Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy Musical remake of Ninotchka First film to use the current MGM lion. |
July 19, 1957 | Gun Glory | |
August 22, 1957 | Man on Fire | Co-production with Sol C. Siegel Productions and Bing Crosby Productions |
August 30, 1957 | Action of the Tiger | Distribution only; produced by Claridge Film Productions and Van Johnson Enterprises |
September 6, 1957 | Tip on a Dead Jockey | |
September 12, 1957 | House of Numbers | |
September 20, 1957 | The Hired Gun | Co-production with Calhoun-Orsatti Enterprises (A Rorvic presentation) |
October 3, 1957 | Les Girls | Co-production with Sol C. Siegel Productions Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
October 8, 1957 | Until They Sail | |
October 25, 1957 | The Invisible Boy | Co-production with Pan Productions |
November 8, 1957 | Jailhouse Rock | Co-production with Avon Productions |
November 14, 1957 | Don't Go Near the Water | Co-production with Avon Productions Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
December 20, 1957 | Raintree County | |
December 21, 1957 | All at Sea | Distribution only; produced by Ealing Films |
1958
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 30, 1958 | Seven Hills of Rome | Co-production with St. Cloud Productions and Gregor Productions |
February 14, 1958 | Underwater Warrior | Co-production with Ivan Tors Pictures and Hunterhaven; made by Underwater Productions |
February 20, 1958 | The Brothers Karamazov | Co-production with Avon Productions |
March 5, 1958 | I Accuse! | |
March 20, 1958 | Saddle the Wind | |
April 4, 1958 | Merry Andrew | Co-production with Sol C. Siegel Productions and Danny Kaye |
April 18, 1958 | Handle with Care | |
May 2, 1958 | Cry Terror! | Co-production with Andrew L. Stone, Inc. |
May 7, 1958 | The Sheepman | |
May 15, 1958 | Gigi | Co-production with Arthur Freed Productions Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical |
May 16, 1958 | The High Cost of Loving | |
June 6, 1958 | The Law and Jake Wade | |
June 13, 1958 | High School Confidential | Co-production with Albert Zugsmith Productions[N 2] |
July 3, 1958 | The Haunted Strangler | Distribution only; made in the UK by Amalgamated Productions |
July 3, 1958 | Fiend Without a Face | Distribution only; made in the UK by Amalgamated Productions |
August 14, 1958 | The Reluctant Debutante | Co-production with Avon Productions |
August 15, 1958 | Tarzan's Fight for Life | Distribution only; produced by Sol Lesser Productions |
August 20, 1958 | Imitation General | |
September 3, 1958 | The Badlanders | Co-production with Arcola Pictures Corporation |
September 10, 1958 | Dunkirk | Distribution only; produced by Ealing Films |
September 20, 1958 | Cat on a Hot Tin Roof | Co-production with Avon Productions Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
October 1, 1958 | The Safecracker | Distribution only; produced in the UK by Coronado Productions |
October 10, 1958 | The Decks Ran Red | Co-production with Andrew L. Stone, Inc. |
October 24, 1958 | Torpedo Run | |
October 28, 1958 | Party Girl | Co-production with Euterpe |
November 21, 1958 | The Tunnel of Love | Distribution only; produced by Fields Productions and Arwin Productions |
December 17, 1958 | The Doctor's Dilemma | Distribution only; produced by Comet Film Productions |
December 18, 1958 | Some Came Running | Co-production with Sol C. Siegel Productions |
December 22, 1958 | tom thumb | Distribution only; produced by Galaxy Pictures Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical |
December 22, 1958 | Andy Hardy Comes Home | 16th, and final, entry in the Andy Hardy film series Co-production with Fryman Enterprises |
1959
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1959 | Frontier Rangers | Composed of episodes of the TV series Northwest Passage; only released theatrically overseas |
February 19, 1959 | The Journey | Co-production with Alby Productions |
February 27, 1959 | First Man Into Space | Distribution only; made by Amalgamated Productions |
March 4, 1959 | Night of the Quarter Moon | Co-production with Albert Zugsmith Productions |
March 11, 1959 | Nowhere to Go | Distribution only; produced in the UK by Ealing Films |
March 19, 1959 | Green Mansions | |
April 23, 1959 | Count Your Blessings | |
April 29, 1959 | The Mating Game | |
May 15, 1959 | The Mysterians | US distribution only; made in Japan by Toho and copyrighted in the US by RKO Teleradio Pictures |
May 20, 1959 | The World, the Flesh, and the Devil | Co-production with Sol C. Siegel Productions and Harbel Productions |
May 21, 1959 | Ask Any Girl | Co-production with Euterpe |
July 1, 1959 | Watusi | |
July 3, 1959 | The Beat Generation | Co-production with Albert Zugsmith Productions[N 2] |
July 17, 1959 | North by Northwest | |
July 29, 1959 | The Angry Hills | Distribution only; produced by Raymond Productions |
August 6, 1959 | The Scapegoat | Distribution only; produced in the UK by Du Maurier-Guinness, Ltd. |
August 26, 1959 | For the First Time | Co-production with Corona Filmproduktion and Orion Films |
August 1959 | The Big Operator | Co-production with Albert Zugsmith Productions and Fryman Enterprises |
September 4, 1959 | It Started with a Kiss | Co-production with Arcola Pictures Corporation |
October 5, 1959 | Girls Town | Co-production with Albert Zugsmith Productions |
October 23, 1959 | Libel | |
October 29, 1959 | The House of the Seven Hawks | Distribution only; produced in the UK by Coronado Productions |
October 1959 | Tarzan, the Ape Man | |
November 6, 1959 | The Wreck of the Mary Deare | Co-production with Julian Blaustein Productions and Baroda Productions |
November 18, 1959 | Ben-Hur | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama Remake of the 1925 film |
December 7, 1959 | Never So Few | Co-production with Canterbury Productions |
December 18, 1959 | The Gazebo | Co-production with Avon Productions |
1960s
1960
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 19, 1960 | The Last Voyage | co-production with Andrew L. Stone, Inc. |
March 3, 1960 | Home from the Hill | co-production with Sol C. Siegel Productions |
March 31, 1960 | Please Don't Eat the Daisies | co-production with Euterpe |
May 13, 1960 | Platinum High School | co-production with Albert Zugsmith Productions and Fryman Enterprises |
May 25, 1960 | The Giant of Marathon | |
June 23, 1960 | The Subterraneans | co-production with Arthur Freed Productions |
June 23, 1960 | Bells Are Ringing | co-production with Arthur Freed Procutions Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical |
August 3, 1960 | The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn | co-production with Formosa Productions |
August 17, 1960 | The Time Machine | co-production with Galaxy Films |
September 4, 1960 | The Day They Robbed the Bank of England | Distribution only; produced by Summit Film Productions, Ltd. |
September 22, 1960 | All the Fine Young Cannibals | co-production with Avon Productions |
September 28, 1960 | The Angel Wore Red | |
October 6, 1960 | Key Witness | co-production with Avon Productions |
November 4, 1960 | BUtterfield 8 | co-production with Afton-Linebrook Productions |
November 11, 1960 | Where the Hot Wind Blows! | US distribution only; made in France by Cité Films |
December 5, 1960 | Cimarron | |
December 7, 1960 | Village of the Damned | |
December 28, 1960 | Where the Boys Are | co-production with Euterpe |
1961
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1961 | The Murder Men | Made for TV; never released in theaters |
January 20, 1961 | Don Quixote | US distribution only; produced in the Soviet Union by Lenfilm |
March 10, 1961 | Go Naked in the World | co-production with Arcola Pictures Corporation |
March 15, 1961 | The Secret Partner | |
March 29, 1961 | Gorgo[N 4] | US distribution only; produced by King Brothers Productions |
April 20, 1961 | The Green Helmet | Made by the MGM-British Studios |
May 3, 1961 | Atlantis, the Lost Continent | co-production with Galaxy Productions |
June 14, 1961 | Ring of Fire | co-production with Andrew L. Stone, Inc. |
June 21, 1961 | Two Loves | co-production with Julian Blaustein Productions |
June 22, 1961 | Magic Boy | A Toei Motion Picture Company production |
June 22, 1961 | The Secret of Monte Cristo | US distribution only; produced by Mid Century Film Productions |
July 6, 1961 | Morgan, the Pirate | US distribution only; produced by Lux Film and Adelphia Cinematografica |
August 10, 1961 | The Thief of Baghdad | US distribution only; produced by Titanus |
August 16, 1961 | The Honeymoon Machine | co-production with Avon Productions |
August 25, 1961 | Ada | co-production with Avon Productions and Chalmar, Inc. |
September 26, 1961 | A Thunder of Drums | co-production with Robert J. Enders |
October 17, 1961 | Bridge to the Sun | A Cité Films production |
October 30, 1961 | King of Kings | co-production with Samuel Bronston Productions |
November 1, 1961 | Bachelor in Paradise | co-production with Ted Richmond Productions |
December 10, 1961 | Invasion Quartet | |
December 13, 1961 | The Wonders of Aladdin | Distribution only; produced by Embassy International Pictures Corporation |
December 14, 1961 | The Colossus of Rhodes | A Procusa and Cineproduzioni Associates production |
1962
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1962 | Private Potter | Made by the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios; not released in the US |
January 7, 1962 | Murder, She Said | Made by the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer British Studios |
February 7, 1962 | The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse | co-production with Julian Blaustein Productions |
February 9, 1962 | The Light in the Piazza | co-production with Arthur Freed Productions |
March 21, 1962 | Sweet Bird of Youth | co-production with Roxbury Productions |
March 1962 | World in My Pocket | US distribution; a Corona Film production in association with Criterion C. C. C. Film |
April 11, 1962 | All Fall Down | co-production with John Houseman Productions |
April 18, 1962 | The Horizontal Lieutenant | co-production with Euterpe |
June 12, 1962 | Lolita | Distribution only; produced by A. A. Productions, Ltd. Presented by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer with Seven Arts Productions. An Anya Production S.A., Transworld Pictures S.A. production |
June 20, 1962 | Ride the High Country | |
June 20, 1962 | The Tartars | US distribution; A Lux Film production |
June 21, 1962 | Boys' Night Out | co-production with Kimco Pictures Corporation Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Comedy |
July 17, 1962 | The Counterfeiters of Paris | US distribution only; made in France by Cité Films |
July 24, 1962 | A Matter of WHO | A Herts-Lion distribution |
July 1962 | Tarzan Goes to India | Distribution only; an Allfin production |
August 7, 1962 | The Wonderful World of the Brothers Grimm | co-production with Cinerama and Gallen Films Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical |
August 17, 1962 | Two Weeks in Another Town | co-production with John Houseman Productions |
September 5, 1962 | Damon and Pythias | |
September 14, 1962 | I Thank a Fool | co-production with Eaton Productions |
September 28, 1962 | A Very Private Affair | US distribution; a Christine Gouze-Rénal production |
October 1, 1962 | The Savage Guns | Distribution only; produced by Capricorn Productions in association with TECISA, an American-Spanish co-production |
October 31, 1962 | Escape from East Berlin | A Walter Wood production |
October 31, 1962 | Period of Adjustment | co-production with Marten Productions Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Comedy |
November 8, 1962 | Mutiny on the Bounty | co-production with Arcola Pictures Corporation Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
November 12, 1962 | Kill or Cure | Made by the MGM-British Studios |
November 16, 1962 | The Dock Brief/Trial and Error | Distribution only; produced by Anatole de Grunwald, Ltd. |
November 1962 | The Main Attraction | Distribution only; produced by Seven Arts Productions |
December 5, 1962 | Swordsman of Siena | US distribution; a CIPRA production |
December 6, 1962 | Billy Rose's Jumbo | co-production with Euterpe Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical |
December 21, 1962 | Arturo's Island | US distribution; made by Compagnia Cinematografica Champion |
December 21, 1962 | The Password Is Courage | co-production with Andrew L. Stone, Inc. |
1963
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 30, 1963 | A Monkey in Winter | |
February 15, 1963 | The Hook | co-production with Perlberg-Seaton Productions |
February 20, 1963 | How the West Was Won | co-production with Cinerama |
February 27, 1963 | Follow the Boys | |
March 19, 1963 | The Four Days of Naples | A Titanus-Metro production |
March 27, 1963 | The Courtship of Eddie's Father | co-production with Euterpe and Venice Productions |
March 27, 1963 | Come Fly with Me | |
March 1963 | Seven Seas to Calais | |
April 3, 1963 | It Happened at the World's Fair | co-production with Ted Richmond Productions |
April 29, 1963 | Black Fox: The Rise and Fall of Adolf Hitler | |
May 15, 1963 | Drums of Africa | co-production with Zimbalist-Krasne Productions |
May 29, 1963 | The Slave | |
May 29, 1963 | In the Cool of the Day | co-production with John Houseman Productions |
May 1963 | Dime with a Halo | |
June 5, 1963 | Corridors of Blood | US distribution; made in the UK by Amalgamated Productions |
June 5, 1963 | Lycanthropus | |
June 19, 1963 | Captain Sindbad | Distribution only; produced by King Brothers Productions |
June 24, 1963 | Murder at the Gallop | |
June 1963 | Tarzan's Three Challenges | |
July 31, 1963 | Cattle King | co-production with Missouri Productions |
August 14, 1963 | Flipper | co-production with Ivan Tors Films |
August 18, 1963 | Hootenanny Hoot | co-production with Four Leaf Productions |
August 18, 1963 | A Ticklish Affair | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
August 21, 1963 | Cairo | |
August 1963 | The Young and The Brave | |
September 18, 1963 | The Haunting | co-production with Argyle Enterprises |
September 19, 1963 | The V.I.P.s | |
October 8, 1963 | Any Number Can Win | |
October 16, 1963 | Twilight of Honor | |
November 11, 1963 | Family Diary | A Titanus production |
November 13, 1963 | Sunday in New York | |
November 14, 1963 | The Wheeler Dealers | |
December 8, 1963 | Square of Violence | |
December 25, 1963 | The Prize | |
1964
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1964 | Duke of the Derby | US distribution; a Franco-Italian CIPRA-CCM production |
January 29, 1964 | Children of the Damned | Made by the MGM-British Studios |
January 30, 1964 | A Global Affair | A Seven Arts production |
February 19, 1964 | The Day and the Hour | A Franco-Italian CIPRA-CCM production |
February 28, 1964 | Two Are Guilty | US distribution; a Franco-Italian Gaumont, Trianon Productions and Ultra Films production |
March 6, 1964 | Kissin' Cousins | co-production with Four Leaf Productions |
March 11, 1964 | Mail Order Bride | |
March 18, 1964 | 7 Faces of Dr. Lao | |
March 18, 1964 | Night Must Fall | |
April 1, 1964 | Gunfighters of Casa Grande | A Gregor production, in association with Tecisa |
May 3, 1964 | Tamahine | |
May 7, 1964 | Gladiators 7 | US distribution |
May 20, 1964 | Viva Las Vegas | |
May 20, 1964 | Rhino! | |
May 1964 | The Golden Arrow | US distribution; a Titanus production |
June 3, 1964 | Honeymoon Hotel | co-production with Pandro S. Berman Productions |
June 10, 1964 | Advance to the Rear | co-production with Ted Richmond Productions |
June 11, 1964 | The Unsinkable Molly Brown | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
June 24, 1964 | Flipper's New Adventure | co-production with Ivan Tors Films |
June 1964 | Gold for the Caesars | US distribution |
August 5, 1964 | Looking for Love | |
August 6, 1964 | The Night of the Iguana | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
September 3, 1964 | The Big Parade of Comedy | |
September 22, 1964 | Murder Ahoy! | |
September 23, 1964 | Of Human Bondage | |
September 1964 | Murder Most Foul | |
October 5, 1964 | Quick, Before It Melts | |
October 8, 1964 | The Outrage | |
October 27, 1964 | The Americanization of Emily | A Filmways picture |
November 4, 1964 | Your Cheatin' Heart | |
November 12, 1964 | The Young Lovers | |
November 1964 | Joy House | US distribution |
December 10, 1964 | The Golden Head | Produced by the Hunnia Filmstúdió; unreleased in the US |
December 18, 1964 | Get Yourself a College Girl | co-production with Four Leaf Productions |
1965
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1965 | Wild, Wild Planet | |
January 29, 1965 | Guns of Diablo | Expanded version of the last episode of The Travels of Jaimie McPheeters; not released theatrically in the US |
February 19, 1965 | 36 Hours | |
March 5, 1965 | The Rounders | |
March 17, 1965 | Vice and Virtue | |
March 22, 1965 | Young Cassidy | |
April 1, 1965 | Operation Crossbow | |
April 14, 1965 | Girl Happy | co-production with Euterpe |
April 1965 | Hysteria | Distribution only; produced by Hammer Film Productions |
May 5, 1965 | Joy in the Morning | |
May 13, 1965 | Hercules, Samson and Ulysses | US distribution |
May 13, 1965 | The Yellow Rolls-Royce | |
May 19, 1965 | Signpost to Murder | |
May 1965 | Sandokan the Great | |
June 9, 1965 | She | |
June 23, 1965 | The Sandpiper | |
June 1965 | Zebra in the Kitchen | |
August 4, 1965 | Clarence, the Cross-Eyed Lion | co-production with Ivan Tors Enterprises |
August 18, 1965 | Murder at 45 R.P.M. | |
September 8, 1965 | Once a Thief | |
October 3, 1965 | The Hill | Distribution only; made by Seven Arts Productions |
October 10, 1965 | When the Boys Meet the Girls | |
October 11, 1965 | The Loved One | |
October 15, 1965 | The Cincinnati Kid | A Filmways-Solar picture |
November 3, 1965 | The Secret of My Success | |
November 17, 1965 | Laurel and Hardy's Laughing 20's | |
November 24, 1965 | Harum Scarum | co-production with Four Leaf Productions |
December 10, 1965 | A Patch of Blue | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
December 31, 1965 | Doctor Zhivago | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
1966
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 5, 1966 | 7 Women | |
January 19, 1966 | To Trap a Spy | |
January 26, 1966 | Where the Spies Are | |
February 2, 1966 | The Money Trap | |
February 9, 1966 | Made in Paris | |
March 9, 1966 | The Spy with My Face | |
April 2, 1966 | The Singing Nun | |
April 1966 | The Secret Seven | |
May 17, 1966 | The Alphabet Murders | Made by the MGM-British Studios |
May 18, 1966 | Lady L | |
May 1966 | Son of a Gunfighter | |
June 9, 1966 | The Glass Bottom Boat | An Arwin-Reame picture |
June 22, 1966 | Maya | |
June 22, 1966 | Hold On! | co-production with Four Leaf Productions |
June 22, 1966 | Around the World Under the Sea | co-production with Ivan Tors Enterprises |
June 1966 | Tiko and the Shark | |
October 11, 1966 | Mister Buddwing | |
October 14, 1966 | Hotel Paradiso | |
October 28, 1966 | The Liquidator | |
November 10, 1966 | Penelope | |
November 23, 1966 | Spinout | |
December 7, 1966 | One Spy Too Many | |
December 14, 1966 | Marco the Magnificent | |
December 18, 1966 | Blowup | Distributed by Premier Productions, an MGM shell company |
December 21, 1966 | Grand Prix | co-production with Joel Productions; presented by Joel Productions and Cherokee Productions |
December 1966 | One of Our Spies Is Missing | |
1967
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 18, 1967 | The Venetian Affair | |
January 27, 1967 | Hot Rods to Hell | co-production with Four Leaf Productions |
January 29, 1967 | Return of the Gunfighter | |
February 3, 1967 | The Spy in the Green Hat | |
February 16, 1967 | The 25th Hour | |
April 5, 1967 | Double Trouble | A B.C.W. picture |
April 7, 1967 | The Karate Killers | Feature film version of two episodes of The Man from U.N.C.L.E.; theatrical release overseas only |
May 1, 1967 | Welcome to Hard Times | |
May 10, 1967 | Doctor, You've Got to Be Kidding! | A Trident production |
May 24, 1967 | Three Bites of the Apple | |
June 15, 1967 | The Dirty Dozen | |
June 20, 1967 | Don't Make Waves | A Filmways-Reynard picture |
August 30, 1967 | Point Blank | |
September 1, 1967 | The Fastest Guitar Alive | co-production with Four Leaf Productions |
October 9, 1967 | Our Mother's House | |
October 18, 1967 | Far from the Madding Crowd | A Joseph Janni-Vic Films production Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
October 31, 1967 | The Comedians | |
October 1967 | The Girl and the General | US distribution |
November 1, 1967 | More than a Miracle | |
November 10, 1967 | Jack of Diamonds | A Harris Associates production |
November 13, 1967 | The Fearless Vampire Killers | |
December 6, 1967 | Eye of the Devil | Made by the MGM-British Studios |
December 27, 1967 | The Last Challenge | |
1968
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1968 | Too Many Thieves | |
1968 | A Man Called Dagger | |
1968 | Hate for Hate | US distribution |
1968 | Revenge for Revenge | |
January 1968 | Mrs. Brown, You've Got a Lovely Daughter | |
January 17, 1968 | The Biggest Bundle of Them All | |
February 7, 1968 | Sol Madrid | |
February 21, 1968 | The Power | |
March 1, 1968 | Day of the Evil Gun | |
March 6, 1968 | The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich | |
March 8, 1968 | Stay Away, Joe | |
March 20, 1968 | Guns for San Sebastian | A CIPRA films, Ernesto Enríquez and Filmes Cinematográfica production |
April 6, 1968 | 2001: A Space Odyssey | |
April 24, 1968 | A Stranger in Town | US distribution; made by Infascelli in Italy |
May 15, 1968 | Battle Beneath the Earth | A Reynolds-Vetter production |
June 12, 1968 | Speedway | |
June 19, 1968 | Where Were You When the Lights Went Out? | |
June 21, 1968 | The Helicopter Spies | Film version of a two-part episode of The Man from U.N.C.L.E.; released theatrically overseas only |
July 3, 1968 | Dark of the Sun | |
July 29, 1968 | Kiss the Other Sheik | US distribution |
August 15, 1968 | A Time to Sing | |
August 21, 1968 | The Legend of Lylah Clare | |
August 1968 | A Man, a Horse, a Gun | |
September 11, 1968 | The Young Runaways | |
September 19, 1968 | Hot Millions | |
October 13, 1968 | The Subject Was Roses | |
October 23, 1968 | Live a Little, Love a Little | |
October 23, 1968 | Ice Station Zebra | A Filmways production |
November 4, 1968 | The Split | |
November 14, 1968 | The Shoes of the Fisherman | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
December 5, 1968 | The Impossible Years | A Marten production |
December 8, 1968 | The Fixer | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama |
1969
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1969 | The Appointment | A Marpol production; US opening only in 1970 |
1969 | The Wolf Men | |
January 15, 1969 | The Extraordinary Seaman | Made by John Frankenheimer Productions and Edward Lewis Productions |
January 22, 1969 | Ghosts - Italian Style | US distribution; a C. C. Champion and Les Films Concordia production |
February 13, 1969 | Mayerling | |
March 7, 1969 | How to Steal the World | Film version of the final two episodes of The Man from U.N.C.L.E.; theatrical release overseas only |
March 12, 1969 | Where Eagles Dare | |
April 23, 1969 | Kenner | |
May 21, 1969 | The Green Slime | A Ram films production; produced in association with Toei Company |
June 11, 1969 | Heaven with a Gun | A King Brothers production |
June 18, 1969 | The Maltese Bippy | |
July 30, 1969 | The Best House in London | |
August 22, 1969 | A Place for Lovers | |
August 28, 1969 | The Gypsy Moths | |
September 3, 1969 | The Trouble with Girls | |
October 8, 1969 | Alfred the Great | Made by Bernard Smith Films and the MGM-British Studios |
October 31, 1969 | Marlowe | |
November 5, 1969 | Goodbye, Mr. Chips | An Apjac production |
November 10, 1969 | Flareup | A GMF production |
1970s
1970
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 9, 1970 | ...tick...tick...tick... | |
February 9, 1970 | Zabriskie Point | |
February 20, 1970 | The Five Man Army | |
April 22, 1970 | Brotherly Love | |
April 27, 1970 | Zig Zag | |
May 13, 1970 | My Lover My Son | |
May 26, 1970 | The Magic Garden of Stanley Sweetheart | |
June 10, 1970 | The Walking Stick | |
June 15, 1970 | The Strawberry Statement | |
June 23, 1970 | Kelly's Heroes | |
July 1970 | The Moonshine War | |
September 9, 1970 | House of Dark Shadows | |
October 1, 1970 | The Traveling Executioner | |
October 7, 1970 | Captain Nemo and the Underwater City | |
October 23, 1970 | No Blade of Grass | |
November 7, 1970 | The Phantom Tollbooth | |
November 9, 1970 | Ryan's Daughter | |
November 11, 1970 | Elvis: That's the Way It Is | |
November 18, 1970 | Dirty Dingus Magee | |
November 1970 | The Bushbaby | |
December 5, 1970 | Brewster McCloud | |
December 22, 1970 | Alex in Wonderland | |
1971
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
1971 | Freelance | |
February 1, 1971 | The Sidelong Glances of a Pigeon Kicker | |
February 24, 1971 | The Body | |
March 3, 1971 | Percy | |
March 18, 1971 | Get Carter | |
March 29, 1971 | Mad Dogs & Englishmen | |
April 22, 1971 | The Enchanted Years | |
April 28, 1971 | Pretty Maids All in a Row | |
May 12, 1971 | The Night Digger | |
May 26, 1971 | Villain | |
June 15, 1971 | Fortune and Men's Eyes | |
June 23, 1971 | Wild Rovers | |
June 30, 1971 | The Tales of Beatrix Potter | U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by EMI Films |
July 2, 1971 | Shaft | |
July 7, 1971 | The Last Run | |
August 4, 1971 | Night of Dark Shadows | |
August 1971 | Clay Pigeon | |
October 1, 1971 | Catlow | |
December 1, 1971 | Going Home | |
December 1, 1971 | Chandler | |
December 8, 1971 | Believe in Me | |
December 16, 1971 | The Boy Friend | co-production with EMI Films Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
December 22, 1971 | The Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight | |
1972
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 2, 1972 | The Jerusalem File | |
March 22, 1972 | Cool Breeze | |
March 29, 1972 | The Carey Treatment | |
March 1972 | Corky | |
May 24, 1972 | Skyjacked | |
June 7, 1972 | Black Belly of the Tarantula | |
June 7, 1972 | The Weekend Murders[N 5] | Distribution only |
June 14, 1972 | Every Little Crook and Nanny | |
June 18, 1972 | Shaft's Big Score | |
June 19, 1972 | Sitting Target | |
June 19, 1972 | One Is a Lonely Number | Also known as Two Is a Happy Number |
July 14, 1972 | The Wrath of God | |
August 2, 1972 | Kansas City Bomber | |
August 16, 1972 | Melinda | |
September 1972 | Savage Messiah | |
September 1972 | Private Parts | |
October 4, 1972 | Night of the Lepus | |
November 1, 1972 | Elvis on Tour | |
November 1, 1972 | The Great Waltz | |
November 22, 1972 | They Only Kill Their Masters | |
December 17, 1972 | Travels with My Aunt | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
December 20, 1972 | Hit Man | |
1973
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 21, 1973 | Lolly-Madonna XXX | |
March 7, 1973 | Slither | |
March 8, 1973 | Ludwig | |
May 9, 1973 | Soylent Green | |
May 23, 1973 | Pat Garrett and Billy the Kid | |
May 25, 1973 | Sweet Jesus, Preacherman | |
June 13, 1973 | Wicked, Wicked | |
June 14, 1973 | Shaft in Africa | |
June 28, 1973 | The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing | |
June 1973 | Trader Horn | |
July 25, 1973 | Deaf Smith & Johnny Ears | |
September 26, 1973 | Deadly China Doll | |
September 26, 1973 | The Slams |
October 1973 | The Outfit | |
November 21, 1973 | Westworld | |
1974
1975
1976
1977
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
April 8, 1977 | Demon Seed | |
November 30, 1977 | The Goodbye Girl | International distribution only; co-production with Warner Bros. Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture. Winner of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. |
December 16, 1977 | Telefon | |
1978
1979
1980s
(company known as Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Film Co., MGM/UA Entertainment Co., MGM Entertainment Co. and MGM/UA Communications Co.)
1980
1981
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 27, 1981 | Sunday Lovers | |
March 20, 1981 | The Postman Always Rings Twice[3] | co-production with Lorimar |
June 12, 1981 | Clash of the Titans | |
July 24, 1981 | Tarzan, the Ape Man | |
October 9, 1981 | Rich and Famous | |
October 16, 1981 | ...All the Marbles | |
December 2, 1981 | Whose Life Is It Anyway? | |
December 11, 1981 | Buddy Buddy | |
December 11, 1981 | Pennies from Heaven | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
1982
|
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
MGM | January 22, 1982 | A Stranger Is Watching | |
MGM | February 12, 1982 | Cannery Row | |
MGM | February 19, 1982 | Shoot the Moon | |
MGM | March 5, 1982 | Diner | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
MGM | March 19, 1982 | Victor/Victoria | distribution only, produced by Ladbrokes Entertainment Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
UA | April 1982 | Pandemonium | United Artists |
UA | April 2, 1982 | Penitentiary II | |
UA | April 23, 1982 | National Lampoon's Movie Madness | |
UA | May 28, 1982 | Rocky III | distribution only; produced by United Artists |
MGM | June 4, 1982 | Poltergeist | co-production with SLM Production Group |
B | July 2, 1982 | The Secret of NIMH | Distribution only Produced by Aurora and Don Bluth Productions |
MGM | July 30, 1982 | Forced Vengeance | |
MGM | August 13, 1982 | Pink Floyd – The Wall | Distribution only |
MGM | August 20, 1982 | The Beastmaster | distribution only |
MGM | September 10, 1982 | Endangered Species | |
MGM | September 17, 1982 | Inchon | Distribution only |
MGM | September 24, 1982 | Yes, Giorgio | |
MGM | October 1, 1982 | My Favorite Year | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
UA | November 19, 1982 | Still of the Night | |
UA | December 17, 1982 | Trail of the Pink Panther | |
1983
|
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
MGM | January 21, 1983 | The Year of Living Dangerously | |
UA | March 24, 1983 | Gabriela | |
UA | March 25, 1983 | The Black Stallion Returns | Distribution only, produced by United Artists |
MGM | April 15, 1983 | Rock & Rule | US distribution only; produced in Canada by Nelvana |
MGM | April 29, 1983 | The Hunger | |
MGM | April 1983 | Nana, the True Key of Pleasure[N 8] | USA distribution only; co-production with The Cannon Group |
UA | April 24, 1983 | Exposed | |
UA | June 3, 1983 | WarGames | co-production with Sherwood Productions |
UA | June 10, 1983 | Octopussy | Produced by Danjaq S.A. |
UA | August 12, 1983 | Curse of the Pink Panther | |
MGM | August 26, 1983 | Hercules[N 8] | USA distribution only; co-production with The Cannon Group |
MGM | August 26, 1983 | Strange Brew | |
MGM | September 16, 1983 | Revenge of the Ninja[N 8] | international distribution only; co-production with The Cannon Group |
MGM | September 30, 1983 | Brainstorm | |
UA | October 7, 1983 | Romantic Comedy | co-production with Taft Entertainment |
MGM | October 28, 1983 | The Wicked Lady[N 8] | distribution only; produced by The Cannon Group |
MGM | November 18, 1983 | A Christmas Story | |
UA | December 9, 1983 | Yentl | |
1984
|
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
MGM | February 3, 1984 | Reckless | co-production with Scott Rudin Productions |
MGM | March 2, 1984 | Over the Brooklyn Bridge[N 8] | distribution only; produced by The Cannon Group |
MGM | March 2, 1984 | Sahara[N 8] | USA distribution only; co-production with The Cannon Group |
MGM | March 16, 1984 | The Ice Pirates | |
MGM | March 30, 1984 | Misunderstood | Distribution only Produced by Producers Sales Organization |
MGM | May 4, 1984 | Breakin'[N 8] | USA distribution only; co-production with The Cannon Group |
MGM | May 18, 1984 | Making the Grade[N 8] | distribution only; produced by The Cannon Group |
UA | June 22, 1984 | The Pope of Greenwich Village | |
MGM | July 20, 1984 | Electric Dreams | produced by Virgin Films |
UA | August 10, 1984 | Red Dawn | distribution only; produced by United Artists |
MGM | August 24, 1984 | Oxford Blues | U.S. distribution only |
UA | September 21, 1984 | Until September | |
MGM | September 1984 | Nothing Lasts Forever | |
UA | October 5, 1984 | Teachers | |
UA | October 12, 1984 | Garbo Talks | |
MGM | November 16, 1984 | Just the Way You Are | |
MGM | December 7, 1984 | 2010 | |
MGM | December 26, 1984 | Mrs. Soffel | co-production with Scott Rudin Productions |
1985
|
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
MGM | January 18, 1985 | That's Dancing! | |
MGM | February 1, 1985 | Heavenly Bodies | |
UA | February 22, 1985 | Martin's Day | |
UA | March 1, 1985 | The Aviator | |
MGM | April 12, 1985 | Cat's Eye | Distribution only Produced by Dino De Laurentiis Company |
MGM | May 3, 1985 | Gymkata | |
UA | May 3, 1985 | Movers & Shakers | |
UA | May 24, 1985 | A View to a Kill | Produced by Danjaq S.A. |
MGM | July 3, 1985 | Red Sonja | Distribution only Produced by Dino De Laurentiis Company |
MGM | August 16, 1985 | Year of the Dragon[N 6][N 9] | Distribution only Produced by Dino De Laurentiis Company |
MGM | September 27, 1985 | Code Name: Emerald | |
MGM | September 27, 1985 | Marie | Distribution only Produced by Dino De Laurentiis Company |
UA | November 1, 1985 | To Live and Die in L.A. | |
MGM | November 22, 1985 | Fever Pitch | |
UA | November 27, 1985 | Rocky IV | distribution only; produced by United Artists |
1986
|
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
UA | January 31, 1986 | Youngblood | |
MGM | February 21, 1986 | 9½ Weeks | U.S. distribution only |
MGM | February 28, 1986 | Dream Lover | |
MGM | March 28, 1986 | Ginger and Fred | |
MGM | April 18, 1986 | Wise Guys | Last MGM film before the Turner split worldwide |
MGM | May 9, 1986 | Killer Party | Last MGM film before the Turner Entertainment Co. split (U.S. distribution only) |
MGM | May 23, 1986 | Poltergeist II: The Other Side | First MGM film after the Turner split Most films from this time onward (with few exceptions) are still owned by MGM |
MGM | June 27, 1986 | Running Scared | |
MGM | August 29, 1986 | Shanghai Surprise | distribution only; produced and owned by HandMade Films with Lionsgate handling distribution |
MGM | September 19, 1986 | Where the River Runs Black | |
MGM | November 26, 1986 | Solarbabies | |
1987
1988
|
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
MGM | February 26, 1988 | Taffin | |
MGM | March 11, 1988 | Masquerade | |
MGM | May 6, 1988 | Whoops Apocalypse | distributor only, produced by ITC Entertainment |
MGM | May 20, 1988 | Willow | U.S. distribution only; co-production by Lucasfilm and Imagine Entertainment[N 10] |
MGM | June 10, 1988 | Poltergeist III | |
UA | July 13, 1988 | It Takes Two | |
MGM | July 15, 1988 | A Fish Called Wanda | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy |
MGM | September 9, 1988 | Some Girls | |
MGM | September 23, 1988 | Spellbinder | |
MGM | September 28, 1988 | Memories of Me | |
UA | November 9, 1988 | Child's Play | |
MGM | November 18, 1988 | Last Rites | |
MGM | December 2, 1988 | Blueberry Hill | |
UA | December 16, 1988 | Rain Man | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture; co-production with Baltimore Pictures |
1989
|
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
MGM | January 13, 1989 | The January Man | |
MGM | February 3, 1989 | Wicked Stepmother | |
MGM | February 16, 1989 | The Mighty Quinn | |
MGM | March 3, 1989 | Mind Games | |
MGM | March 17, 1989 | Leviathan | |
UA | May 19, 1989 | Road House | co-production with Silver Pictures |
UA | July 14, 1989 | Licence to Kill | Produced by Danjaq S.A. |
MGM | September 20, 1989 | A Dry White Season | |
MGM | October 27, 1989 | Kill Me Again | |
MGM | November 3, 1989 | After Midnight | |
MGM | November 10, 1989 | Survival Quest | U.S. distribution only |
UA | November 17, 1989 | All Dogs Go to Heaven | distribution only; produced by Goldcrest Films and Sullivan Bluth Studios |
MGM | December 1, 1989 | City Rhythms | |
1990s
- (company known as MGM-Pathé Communications Co., Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Inc., MGM/UA Distribution Co. and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures)
1990
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 26, 1990 | Mortal Passions | |
February 9, 1990 | Stanley & Iris | |
March 16, 1990 | Blue Steel | |
April 27, 1990 | Instant Karma | |
May 4, 1990 | Daddy's Dyin': Who's Got the Will? | |
August 24, 1990 | Delta Force 2: The Colombian Connection | USA distribution only; co-production with Cannon Films |
September 14, 1990 | Death Warrant | |
October 5, 1990 | Desperate Hours | |
October 19, 1990 | Quigley Down Under | co-production with Pathe Entertainment |
November 16, 1990 | Rocky V | distribution only; produced by United Artists |
December 19, 1990 | The Russia House | co-production with Pathe Entertainment |
1991
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 11, 1991 | Not Without My Daughter | co-production with Pathe Entertainment |
May 24, 1991 | Thelma & Louise | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama. |
June 28, 1991 | Fires Within | |
July 26, 1991 | Life Stinks | |
August 9, 1991 | Delirious | |
August 23, 1991 | Harley Davidson and the Marlboro Man | |
September 6, 1991 | Crooked Hearts | |
September 6, 1991 | Company Business | |
September 13, 1991 | Liebestraum | |
September 20, 1991 | The Indian Runner | |
September 27, 1991 | Timebomb | |
October 4, 1991 | The Man in the Moon | |
October 11, 1991 | Shattered | |
December 22, 1991 | Rush | co-production with The Zanuck Company |
1992
1993
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 15, 1993 | Body of Evidence | co-production with Dino De Laurentiis Company |
February 12, 1993 | Untamed Heart | |
March 5, 1993 | Rich in Love | co-production with The Zanuck Company |
April 16, 1993 | Benny & Joon | |
August 6, 1993 | The Meteor Man | |
August 27, 1993 | Son of the Pink Panther | co-production with United Artists |
September 10, 1993 | Undercover Blues | |
October 22, 1993 | Flight of the Innocent | |
October 29, 1993 | Fatal Instinct | |
November 19, 1993 | Dangerous Game | |
December 8, 1993 | Six Degrees of Separation | |
1994
1995
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
April 12, 1995 | The Pebble and the Penguin | U.S. distribution only; Warner Bros. Family Entertainment helds international rights; produced by Don Bluth Entertainment |
June 2, 1995 | Fluke | |
July 7, 1995 | Species | |
September 13, 1995 | Hackers | distribution only; produced by United Artists |
September 22, 1995 | Showgirls | distribution only; produced by United Artists and Carolco Pictures |
October 20, 1995 | Get Shorty | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy. co-production with Jersey Films |
October 27, 1995 | Leaving Las Vegas | distribution only; produced by United Artists |
November 13, 1995 | GoldenEye | distribution only; produced by Danjaq, Inc., Eon Productions and United Artists |
December 22, 1995 | Cutthroat Island | distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures[N 12] |
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000s
2000
2001
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 13, 2001 | Antitrust | |
February 9, 2001 | Hannibal | USA distributor, co-production with Universal Pictures, Scott Free Productions and Dino De Laurentiis Company - DDLC |
March 23, 2001 | Heartbreakers | |
April 11, 2001 | Josie and the Pussycats | international distributor, co-production with Universal Pictures |
June 1, 2001 | What's the Worst That Could Happen? | co-production with Hyde Park Entertainment and Turman/Morrisey Productions |
July 13, 2001 | Legally Blonde | |
August 3, 2001 | Original Sin | co-production with Hyde Park Entertainment and Di Novi Pictures |
October 12, 2001 | Bandits | co-production with Hyde Park Entertainment, Cheyenne Enterprises and Baltimore/Cold Spring Creek Pictures |
2002
Release date |
Title |
Notea |
February 8, 2002 | Rollerball | co-production with Mosaic Media Group |
February 15, 2002 | Hart's War | co-production with Cheyenne Enterprises, David Ladd Films and David Forster Productions |
June 14, 2002 | Windtalkers | co-production with Lion Rock |
July 12, 2002 | The Crocodile Hunter: Collision Course | co-production with Animal Planet and Cheyenne Enterprises |
September 13, 2002 | Barbershop | co-production with Cube Vision and State Street Pictures |
October 11, 2002 | Bowling for Columbine | distribution only; produced by United Artists |
October 14, 2002 | Red Dragon | select international distribution only, co-production with Universal Pictures, Dino De Laurentiis Company and Scott Free Productions |
November 22, 2002 | Die Another Day | co-production with Danjaq LLC and Eon Productions |
2003
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 17, 2003 | A Guy Thing | co-production with David Ladd Films |
March 14, 2003 | Agent Cody Banks | co-production with Maverick Films, Dylan Sellers Productions and Splendid Pictures |
April 16, 2003 | Bulletproof Monk | co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment, Lion Rock and Mosaic Media Group |
April 25, 2003 | It Runs in the Family | USA distributor, co-production with Buena Vista International and Furthur Films |
July 2, 2003 | Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde | |
August 15, 2003 | Uptown Girls | co-production with GreeneStreet Films |
October 3, 2003 | Out of Time | co-production with Original Film and Monarch Pictures |
October 10, 2003 | Good Boy! | co-production with Jim Henson Pictures |
2004
2005
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 4, 2005 | Swimming Upstream | Australia distribution only |
February 18, 2005 | Bigger Than the Sky | Australia distribution only |
March 4, 2005 | Be Cool | co-production with Jersey Films and Double Feature Films |
March 30, 2005 | Beauty Shop | |
April 15, 2005 | The Amityville Horror | USA distributor, co-production with Dimension Films, Platinum Dunes and Radar Pictures |
May 6, 2005 | Jiminy Glick in Lalawood | distribution only; produced by Gold Circle Films |
August 26, 2005 | The Brothers Grimm | co-production with Miramax, Dimension Films, Atlas Entertainment, The Weinstein Company, Mosaic Media Group and Summit Entertainment |
September 30, 2005 | Into the Blue | USA distributor; co-production with Columbia Pictures and Mandalay Pictures |
November 23, 2005 | Yours, Mine and Ours | International distributor; co-production with Paramount Pictures, Columbia Pictures, Nickelodeon Movies and Robert Simonds Productions; remake of the 1968 United Artists film of the same name |
2006
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 27, 2006 | Nanny McPhee | select international distribution only, co-production with Universal Studios, Working Title Films and StudioCanal |
February 10, 2006 | The Pink Panther | co-production with Columbia Pictures and Robert Simonds Productions |
March 31, 2006 | Basic Instinct 2 | co-production with Intermedia Films and C2 Pictures |
April 7, 2006 | Lucky Number Slevin[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company |
July 21, 2006 | Clerks II[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only, produced by The Weinstein Company |
August 18, 2006 | Material Girls | co-production with Arclight Films and Maverick Films]] |
September 22, 2006 | Flyboys | co-production with Skydance Productions, Electric Entertainment and Centropolis Entertainment |
September 29, 2006 | School for Scoundrels[N 14] | with Dimension Films; produced by The Weinstein Company |
October 6, 2006 | Stormbreaker[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and Isle of Man Film |
November 10, 2006 | Copying Beethoven | co-production with Sidney Kimmel Entertainment |
November 10, 2006 | Harsh Times | Australia distribution only |
November 17, 2006 | Casino Royale | co-production with Columbia Pictures and Eon Productions |
November 23, 2006 | Bobby[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only, produced by The Weinstein Company |
December 3, 2006 | Miss Potter[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only, produced by The Weinstein Company |
December 20, 2006 | Rocky Balboa | co-production with Columbia Pictures, Revolution Studios and Chartoff/Winkler Productions |
December 29, 2006 | Factory Girl[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only, produced by The Weinstein Company |
2007
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
January 12, 2007 | Arthur and the Invisibles[N 14] | USA theatrical distributor only, produced by The Weinstein Company and EuropaCorp |
January 26, 2007 | Blood and Chocolate | co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment |
February 9, 2007 | Breaking and Entering[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only, produced by The Weinstein Company |
February 9, 2007 | Hannibal Rising[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only, produced by The Weinstein Company and Dino De Laurentiis Company |
March 2, 2007 | Two Weeks | |
March 16, 2007 | Premonition | co-production with TriStar Pictures, Hyde Park Entertainment and Offspring Entertainment |
April 27, 2007 | The Poughkeepsie Tapes | |
May 4, 2007 | The Flying Scotsman | |
May 11, 2007 | Home of the Brave | |
May 11, 2007 | The Ex[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company |
June 1, 2007 | Mr. Brooks | co-production with Element Films and Relativity Media |
June 22, 2007 | 1408[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by Dimension Films, Di Bonaventura Pictures and The Weinstein Company |
July 4, 2007 | Rescue Dawn | |
July 27, 2007 | Who's Your Caddy?[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by Our Stories Films and Dimension Films |
August 17, 2007 | Death at a Funeral | |
August 24, 2007 | The Nanny Diaries[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company |
August 31, 2007 | Halloween[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by Dimension Films |
September 14, 2007 | The Hunting Party[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only, produced by The Weinstein Company |
September 28, 2007 | Feast of Love | |
October 12, 2007 | Lars and the Real Girl | co-production with Sidney Kimmel Entertainment |
October 26, 2007 | Music Within | |
November 9, 2007 | Lions for Lambs | co-production with United Artists |
November 21, 2007 | The Mist[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only; produced by Dimension Films |
November 30, 2007 | Awake[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company |
December 25, 2007 | The Great Debaters[N 14] | USA theatrical distribution only, produced by The Weinstein Company |
2008
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 22, 2008 | Charlie Bartlett | |
March 28, 2008 | Superhero Movie[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by Dimension Films |
April 18, 2008 | Pathology | co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment |
April 25, 2008 | Deal | co-production with Tag Entertainment |
August 15, 2008 | Vicky Cristina Barcelona[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company |
August 22, 2008 | The Longshots[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by Dimension Films |
August 29, 2008 | College | |
September 19, 2008 | Igor | co-production with The Weinstein Company and Exodus Film Group |
October 3, 2008 | How to Lose Friends & Alienate People | co-production with HanWay Films, Film4 Productions and UK Film Council |
October 31, 2008 | The Other End of the Line | |
November 7, 2008 | Soul Men[N 14] | USA distribution only; produced by Dimension Films |
November 14, 2008 | Quantum of Solace | co-production with Columbia Pictures and Eon Productions |
December 25, 2008 | Valkyrie | co-production with United Artists, Bad Hat Harry Productions and Babelsberg Studio |
2009
2010s
2010
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
March 26, 2010 | Hot Tub Time Machine | co-production with United Artists and New Crime Productions; last film completely distributed by MGM before resorting to co-distributing |
2011
2012
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
March 16, 2012 | 21 Jump Street | co-production with Columbia Pictures, Relativity Media, Original Film and Cannell Studios |
August 8, 2012 | Hope Springs | co-production with Columbia Pictures, Alliance Films, Mandate Pictures, Escape Artists and Film 360 |
October 5, 2012 | Everything or Nothing: The Untold Story of 007 | Made for TV documentary, distribution; co-production with Columbia Pictures, Passion Pictures and Red Box Films |
November 9, 2012 | Skyfall | distribution; co-production with Columbia Pictures, Dune Entertainment and Eon Productions |
November 21, 2012 | Red Dawn | uncredited, co-production with United Artists, FilmDistrict, FilmNation Entertainment and Contrafilm |
December 14, 2012 | The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey | co-production with Warner Bros., New Line Cinema and WingNut Films |
2013
2014
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 12, 2014 | RoboCop | co-production with Columbia Pictures, StudioCanal and Strike Entertainment |
June 13, 2014 | 22 Jump Street | co-production with Columbia Pictures, Relativity Media, Original Film, Media Rights Capital and Cannell Studios |
July 25, 2014 | Hercules | co-production with Paramount Pictures, Flynn Picture Company and Radical Pictures |
August 22, 2014 | If I Stay | co-production with New Line Cinema and Di Novi Pictures |
December 17, 2014 | The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies | co-production with Warner Bros., New Line Cinema, RatPac Entertainment and WingNut Films |
2015
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 20, 2015 | Hot Tub Time Machine 2 | co-production with Paramount Pictures |
May 8, 2015 | Hot Pursuit | co-production with Warner Bros., New Line Cinema, RatPac Entertainment and Pacific Standard |
May 22, 2015 | Poltergeist | co-production with 20th Century Fox, Ghost House Pictures, TSG Entertainment and Vertigo Entertainment |
June 26, 2015 | Max | co-production with Warner Bros., RatPac Entertainment and Sunswept Entertainment |
November 6, 2015 | Spectre | distribution; co-production with Columbia Pictures, TSG Entertainment and Eon Productions |
November 25, 2015 | Creed | co-production with Warner Bros. and New Line Cinema |
2016
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
February 12, 2016 | How to Be Single | co-production with Warner Bros., New Line Cinema, RatPac Entertainment and Flower Films |
April 15, 2016 | Barbershop: The Next Cut | distribution; co-production with Warner Bros., New Line Cinema and Cubevision |
June 3, 2016 | Me Before You | co-production with Warner Bros., New Line Cinema and Sunswept Entertainment |
August 19, 2016 | Ben-Hur | co-production with Paramount Pictures, Lightworkers Media, Bazelevs Company and Alphaville Films |
September 23, 2016 | The Magnificent Seven | distribution; co-production with Columbia Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, Escape Artists, LStar Capital and Pin High Productions |
Upcoming films
Release date |
Title |
Notes |
March 17, 2017 | The Belko Experiment | co-production with Orion Pictures, Blumhouse Tilt, High Top Releasing and The Safran Company[4][5] |
April 7, 2017 | Going in Style | co-production with New Line Cinema, Village Roadshow Pictures, RatPac Entertainment and De Line Pictures; distributed by Warner Bros. |
August 18, 2017 | Everything, Everything | co-production with Warner Bros.[6] and Alloy Entertainment[7] |
January 12, 2018 | Gnomeo & Juliet: Sherlock Gnomes | co-production with Paramount Animation and Rocket Pictures; distributed by Paramount Pictures[8] |
March 16, 2018 | Tomb Raider | co-production with Warner Bros. and GK Films |
TBA | Bond 25 | distribution; co-production with Danjaq LLC and Eon Productions |
Death Wish | co-production with Paramount Pictures |
G.I. Joe 3 | co-production with Paramount Pictures, Hasbro Studios and Di Bonaventura Pictures |
Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters 2 | co-production with Paramount Pictures, MTV Films and Gary Sanchez Productions |
Shanghai Dawn | |
See also
Notes
References
- ↑ Eames, John Douglas. The MGM Story. Octopus Books, London. 1975
- ↑ Mirisch, Walter (2008). I Thought We Were Making Movies, Not History (pp. 80-81). University of Wisconsin Press, Madison, Wisconsin. ISBN 0-299-22640-9.
- ↑ "The Postman always rings twice / an Andrew Braunsberg production ; produced in association with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer ; produced by Charles Mulvehill and Bob Rafelson ; directed by Bob Rafelson" (PA0000100011 / 1981-05-04). United States Copyright Office.
- ↑ Fleming, Mike (2016-09-11). "Finally! A Toronto Deal! BH Tilt Lands Orion's The Belko Experiment". Deadline.com. Retrieved 2016-09-17.
- ↑ "Film releases". Variety Insight. Retrieved December 2, 2016.
- ↑ Galuppo, Mia (2016-11-09). "'A Star Is Born,' Starring Lady Gaga, Dated by Warner Bros.". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2016-11-11.
- ↑ Ford, Rebecca (2016-06-01). "YA Adaptation 'Everything, Everything' Finds Director (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2016-11-11.
- ↑ Robinson, Will (7 November 2015). "Johnny Depp takes lead in Sherlock Gnomes". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 7 November 2015.