List of Warner Bros. films (1990–1999)
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Warner Bros. and released in the 1990s.
1990
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| February 2, 1990 | Men Don't Leave | distribution only; produced by The Geffen Company |
| February 9, 1990 | Hard to Kill | co-production with Lee Rich Productions |
| March 9, 1990 | Joe Versus the Volcano | co-production with Amblin Entertainment |
| March 16, 1990 | Lambada[N 1] | North American, U.K., Irish and French theatrical distribution only; produced by Cannon Pictures and Film and Television Company |
| April 6, 1990 | Impulse | |
| June 15, 1990 | Gremlins 2: The New Batch | co-production with Amblin Entertainment |
| July 13, 1990 | Quick Change | |
| July 27, 1990 | Presumed Innocent | co-production with Mirage Enterprises |
| August 17, 1990 | My Blue Heaven | co-production with Hawn/Sylbert Movie Company |
| August 24, 1990 | Dreams | co-production with Akira Kurosawa USA |
| The Witches | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Lorimar Film Entertainment and Jim Henson Productions | |
| September 14, 1990 | White Hunter, Black Heart | co-production with Malpaso Productions and Rastar |
| September 19, 1990 | Goodfellas | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2000 |
| October 5, 1990 | Listen Up: The Lives of Quincy Jones | |
| October 12, 1990 | Memphis Belle | co-production with Enigma Productions |
| October 17, 1990 | Reversal of Fortune | North American distribution only; co-production with Edward R. Pressman Productions, Shochiku Fuji Co. Ltd. and Sovereign Pictures |
| November 2, 1990 | Graffiti Bridge | co-production with Paisley Park Films |
| November 21, 1990 | The Nutcracker Prince | U.S. distribution only; produced by Lacewood Productions and Allied Filmmakers |
| December 7, 1990 | The Rookie | co-production with Malpaso Productions |
| December 12, 1990 | The Sheltering Sky | North and Latin American and Scandinavian distribution only; produced by Recorded Picture Company |
| December 14, 1990 | Frankenstein Unbound | international distribution outside the U.K. and Ireland theatrically only; produced by The Mount Company; distributed in North America by 20th Century Fox |
| December 21, 1990 | The Bonfire of the Vanities |
1991
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| January 18, 1991 | Hamlet[N 2] | North American and Japanese distribution only; produced by Nelson Entertainment, Icon Productions and Carolco Pictures |
| February 8, 1991 | The NeverEnding Story II: The Next Chapter | |
| February 15, 1991 | Nothing but Trouble | co-production with Applied Action |
| March 8, 1991 | New Jack City | co-production with The Jackson/McHenry Company |
| March 15, 1991 | If Looks Could Kill | |
| Guilty by Suspicion | North American, U.K. and Irish distribution only; co-production with Regency Enterprises (uncredited) | |
| March 22, 1991 | Defending Your Life | distribution only; produced by Geffen Pictures |
| April 12, 1991 | Out for Justice | co-production with Arnold Kopelson Productions |
| May 3, 1991 | Born to Ride | co-production with Incovent Productions |
| May 10, 1991 | Switch | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO and Cinema Plus L.P. |
| June 7, 1991 | Don't Tell Mom the Babysitter's Dead | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO, Cinema Plus L.P., Mercury/Douglas Films and Outlaw Productions |
| June 14, 1991 | Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves[N 3] | North American and select international distribution only; co-production with Morgan Creek Productions |
| August 2, 1991 | Doc Hollywood | |
| Rover Dangerfield | co-production with Hyperion Pictures and The Kushner-Locke Company | |
| August 23, 1991 | Going Under | |
| Showdown in Little Tokyo | ||
| October 4, 1991 | Dogfight | |
| Ricochet | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO, Cinema Plus L.P. And Silver Pictures | |
| October 18, 1991 | Other People's Money | co-production with Yorktown Productions |
| October 25, 1991 | Curly Sue | co-production with Hughes Entertainment |
| November 8, 1991 | Strictly Business | North American distribution only; co-production with Island World |
| November 15, 1991 | Meeting Venus | co-production with Enigma Productions |
| December 13, 1991 | The Last Boy Scout | distribution only; produced by Geffen Pictures and Silver Pictures |
| December 20, 1991 | JFK[N 4] | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama co-production with Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises, Alcor Films, Ixtlan Corporation and A. Kitman Ho Productions |
| December 25, 1991 | Until the End of the World[N 5] | North American distribution only; produced by Road Movies Filmproduktion, Argos Films and Village Roadshow Pictures |
1992
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| January 17, 1992 | Freejack[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| January 31, 1992 | Hurricane Smith | distribution outside Australia and New Zealand only; co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures |
| February 7, 1992 | Final Analysis | co-production with Witt/Thomas Productions and Roven-Cavallo Entertainment |
| February 28, 1992 | The Mambo Kings | co-production with Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises and Alcor Films |
| Memoirs of an Invisible Man | ||
| March 27, 1992 | The Power of One[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises, Alcor Films and Village Roadshow Pictures |
| Ladybugs[N 6] | select international distribution with Morgan Creek International only; distributed in North America by Paramount Pictures | |
| April 24, 1992 | White Sands[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| May 1, 1992 | Turtle Beach[N 7] | distribution outside Australia and New Zealand only; produced by Village Roadshow Pictures and Regency International Pictures |
| May 15, 1992 | Lethal Weapon 3 | co-production with Silver Pictures |
| June 5, 1992 | Class Act | co-production with de Passe Entertainment |
| June 11, 1992 | City of Joy | distribution in the U.K., Ireland, Italy, Spain, Scandinavia and Latin America excluding Puerto Rico only; produced by Lightmotive and Allied Filmmakers |
| June 19, 1992 | Batman Returns | co-production with PolyGram Pictures |
| July 24, 1992 | Mom and Dad Save the World | North American theatrical distribution only; produced by HBO, Cinema Plus L.P. and Mercury/Douglas Films |
| August 7, 1992 | Unforgiven | Winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2004 co-production with Malpaso Productions |
| August 14, 1992 | Stay Tuned[N 6] | North and Latin American, U.K., Irish and French distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions; co-distribued by Gaumont Distribution in France |
| August 21, 1992 | Christopher Columbus: The Discovery | distribution in North America and Spain only |
| September 18, 1992 | South Central | distribution only; produced by Ixtan, Monument Pictures and Enchantment Films |
| Singles | co-production with Knickerbocker Films | |
| September 25, 1992 | Innocent Blood | |
| October 9, 1992 | Under Siege | co-production with Regency Enterprises, Le Studio Canal+ and Alcor Films |
| October 23, 1992 | Pure Country | |
| November 6, 1992 | Passenger 57 | |
| The Last of the Mohicans[N 6] | select international distribution with Morgan Creek International only; distributed in North America by 20th Century Fox; co distributed in France by AMLF | |
| November 18, 1992 | Malcolm X | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2010 North American distribution only; co-production with Largo International N.V. and 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks |
| November 25, 1992 | The Bodyguard | co-production with Tig Productions and Kasdan Pictures |
| December 11, 1992 | Forever Young | co-production with Icon Productions |
1993
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| February 5, 1993 | Sommersby[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises and Alcor Films |
| February 26, 1993 | Falling Down | co-production with Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises and Alcor Films |
| March 19, 1993 | Point of No Return | |
| April 2, 1993 | The Crush[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| April 16, 1993 | Boiling Point | North American distribution only; produced by Hexagon Films |
| April 23, 1993 | This Boy's Life[N 4] | distribution in North America, the U.K., Ireland, France, Germany, Austria and Arabia only |
| May 7, 1993 | Dave | co-production with Northern Lights Entertainment and Donner/Shuler-Donner |
| May 28, 1993 | Made in America[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises, Alcor Films, Stonebridge Entertainment and Koala Productions |
| June 25, 1993 | Dennis the Menace | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Hughes Entertainment[1] |
| July 16, 1993 | Free Willy | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises, Alcor Films and Donner/Shuler-Donner[1] |
| August 6, 1993 | The Fugitive | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture co-production with Arnold Kopelson Productions |
| That Night[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises and Alcor Films | |
| August 13, 1993 | The Secret Garden | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with American Zoetrope[1] |
| August 25, 1993 | The Man Without a Face[N 8] | North American distribution only; produced by Icon Productions |
| September 10, 1993 | True Romance[N 6] | North American, U.K. and Irish distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Davis Films |
| September 17, 1993 | Airborne | North American distribution only; produced by Icon Productions |
| October 1, 1993 | M. Butterfly | distribution only; produced by Geffen Pictures |
| October 8, 1993 | Demolition Man | co-production with Silver Pictures |
| October 15, 1993 | Fearless | co-production with Spring Creek Pictures |
| Mr. Wonderful | North American distribution only; produced by Night Life Inc. and The Samuel Goldwyn Company | |
| November 17, 1993 | The Saint of Fort Washington | North American distribution only |
| November 24, 1993 | The Nutcracker[N 7] | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Elektra Entertainment and Regency Enterprises[1] |
| A Perfect World | co-production with Malpaso Productions | |
| December 8, 1993 | Six Degrees of Separation[N 1] | international theatrical distribution outside Japan only; produced by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Maiden Movies and New Regency |
| December 17, 1993 | The Pelican Brief | |
| Wrestling Ernest Hemingway | ||
| December 25, 1993 | Batman: Mask of the Phantasm | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Warner Bros. Animation[1] |
| Grumpy Old Men | co-production with Davis Entertainment and Lancaster Gate | |
| Heaven & Earth | co-production with Regency Enterprises, Le Studio Canal+, Alcor Films, Ixtlan and New Regency |
1994
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| January 28, 1994 | Body Snatchers | |
| February 4, 1994 | Ace Ventura: Pet Detective[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| February 18, 1994 | On Deadly Ground | co-production with Seagal/Nasso Productions |
| March 11, 1994 | The Hudsucker Proxy | North American distribution only; co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Silver Pictures and Working Title Films |
| March 30, 1994 | Major League II[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| Thumbelina[N 9] | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Don Bluth Entertainment | |
| April 22, 1994 | Chasers[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| April 29, 1994 | With Honors | co-production with Spring Creek Pictures |
| May 6, 1994 | Being Human | co-production with Enigma Productions |
| Reckless Kelly | distribution outside Australia and New Zealand only | |
| May 20, 1994 | Maverick | co-production with Icon Productions and Donner/Shuler-Donner Productions |
| June 24, 1994 | Wyatt Earp | co-production with Tig Productions and Kasdan Pictures |
| July 20, 1994 | The Client | co-production with Regency Enterprises and Alcor Films |
| July 29, 1994 | Black Beauty | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only |
| August 26, 1994 | Natural Born Killers | co-production with Regency Enterprises, Alcor Films, Ixtlan, New Regency and JD Productions |
| Police Academy: Mission to Moscow | ||
| September 9, 1994 | Arizona Dream | North American distribution only |
| Rapa Nui | North American distribution only; produced by Tig Productions, Majestic Films International and RCS | |
| Trial by Jury[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions | |
| September 16, 1994 | The New Age[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises, Alcor Films and Ixtlan |
| September 30, 1994 | Second Best[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises and Alcor Films |
| October 7, 1994 | The Specialist | |
| A Troll in Central Park[N 9] | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Don Bluth Entertainment | |
| October 14, 1994 | Imaginary Crimes[N 6] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand and Italy only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| Little Giants | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Amblin Entertainment | |
| October 21, 1994 | Love Affair | |
| October 28, 1994 | Silent Fall[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| November 11, 1994 | Interview with the Vampire | distribution only; produced by Geffen Pictures |
| December 2, 1994 | Cobb | co-production with Regency Enterprises and Alcor Films |
| December 9, 1994 | Disclosure | co-production with Baltimore Pictures and Constant C |
| December 16, 1994 | The NeverEnding Story III: Escape from Fantasia | distribution in Germany, France and the U.K. under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by CineVox Filmproduktion; distributed in North America by Miramax Films |
| December 21, 1994 | Richie Rich | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Silver Pictures and Davis Entertainment |
1995
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| January 20, 1995 | Murder in the First | North American distribution only; co-production with Le Studio Canal+ and The Wolper Organization |
| February 3, 1995 | Boys on the Side[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises, Alcor Films, New Regency and Hera Productions |
| February 17, 1995 | Just Cause | co-production with Lee Rich Productions and Fountainbridge Films |
| March 10, 1995 | Outbreak | co-production with Kopelson Entertainment and Punch Productions |
| March 31, 1995 | Born to Be Wild | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Fuji Entertainment and Outlaw Productions |
| May 19, 1995 | A Little Princess | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Baltimore Pictures |
| June 2, 1995 | The Bridges of Madison County | Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama co-production with Amblin Entertainment and Malpaso Productions |
| June 10, 1995 | The Pebble and the Penguin[N 9] | international distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Don Bluth Limited; distributed in North America by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer |
| June 16, 1995 | Batman Forever | co-production with PolyGram Pictures |
| July 14, 1995 | Under Siege 2: Dark Territory | co-production with Regency Enterprises and Seagal/Nasso Productions |
| July 19, 1995 | Free Willy 2: The Adventure Home | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Le Studio Canal+, Regency Enterprises, Alcor Films and Shuler-Donner/Donner |
| August 4, 1995 | Something to Talk About | co-production with Spring Creek Pictures and Hawn/Sylbert Movie Company |
| August 25, 1995 | The Amazing Panda Adventure | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only |
| September 15, 1995 | The Stars Fell on Henrietta | co-production with Malpaso Productions |
| September 22, 1995 | Empire Records[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises and New Regency |
| September 29, 1995 | War of the Buttons | co-production with Enigma Productions, Fujisankei Communications Group, Hugo Films and Les Productions de la Guéville |
| October 6, 1995 | Assassins | co-production with Silver Pictures and Donner/Shuler-Donner |
| October 27, 1995 | Copycat[N 4] | distribution outside Japan only;[2] produced by Regency Enterprises |
| November 3, 1995 | Fair Game | co-production with Silver Pictures |
| Les Misérables | distribution in North and Latin America, the U.K., Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Italy, the Benelux, Scandinavia and Asia only; produced by TF1, Canal+ and Les Films 13 | |
| November 10, 1995 | Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| November 17, 1995 | It Takes Two[N 10] | North American distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Rysher Entertainment and Dualstar Productions |
| December 15, 1995 | Heat[N 7] | distribution outside Japan and Italy only;[3][4] co-production with Regency Enterprises and Forward Pass |
| December 22, 1995 | Grumpier Old Men | co-production with Davis Entertainment and Lancaster Gate |
1996
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| January 12, 1996 | Two If by Sea[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| January 26, 1996 | Big Bully[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Lee Rich Productions |
| March 15, 1996 | Executive Decision | co-production with Silver Pictures |
| March 22, 1996 | Diabolique[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Martin Worth Productions |
| April 5, 1996 | Small Faces | distribution in Scandinavia, the Benelux, Spain, Portugal and South Africa only; produced by BBC Films[5] |
| May 10, 1996 | Twister | North American, Philippine and Chinese theatrical distribution only; co-production with Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment |
| June 21, 1996 | Eraser | co-production with Kopelson Entertainment |
| July 24, 1996 | A Time to Kill | distribution outside Japan only;[6] co-production with Regency Enterprises |
| July 26, 1996 | Joe's Apartment | distribution only; produced by Geffen Pictures and MTV Productions |
| August 16, 1996 | Tin Cup | co-production with Regency Enterprises |
| August 23, 1996 | Carpool[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises |
| September 6, 1996 | Bogus[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises, Yorktown Productions and New Regency |
| Sweet Nothing | distribution only; produced by Concrete Films | |
| September 20, 1996 | Surviving Picasso | co-production with Merchant Ivory Productions and The Wolper Organization |
| October 4, 1996 | The Glimmer Man | co-production with Seagal/Nasso Productions |
| October 9, 1996 | The Proprietor[N 11] | distribution only; produced by Merchant Ivory Productions |
| October 11, 1996 | Michael Collins | distribution only; produced by Geffen Pictures |
| October 18, 1996 | Sleepers | North American distribution only; co-production with PolyGram Filmed Entertainment, Propaganda Films and Baltimore Pictures |
| October 25, 1996 | North Star[N 4] | distribution in North America, the U.K., Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, Germany, Austria, Switzerland and Italy only; produced by Regency Enterprises |
| Thinner | select international distribution only; produced by Spelling Films | |
| The Sunchaser[N 7] | distribution outside Japan only;[7] produced by Regency Enterprises | |
| November 1, 1996 | Bad Moon[N 6] | distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| November 15, 1996 | Space Jam | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Warner Bros. Feature Animation |
| December 13, 1996 | Mars Attacks! | |
| December 20, 1996 | My Fellow Americans | co-production with Peters Entertainment and Storyline Entertainment |
1997
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| February 14, 1997 | Absolute Power | select international distribution only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment and Malpaso Productions |
| Vegas Vacation | co-production with Jerry Weintraub Productions | |
| February 21, 1997 | Rosewood | co-production with Peters Entertainment and New Deal Productions |
| March 21, 1997 | Selena | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2021 co-production with Q-Productions |
| March 26, 1997 | Cats Don't Dance | North American distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Turner Feature Animation and David Kirschner Productions |
| April 4, 1997 | Anna Karenina[N 12] | North American, U.K. Irish and distribution only; produced by Icon Productions |
| April 18, 1997 | Murder at 1600 | distribution outside Japan only;[8] co-production with Regency Enterprises and Kopelson Entertainment |
| May 9, 1997 | Fathers' Day | co-production with Silver Pictures and Northern Lights Entertainment |
| May 23, 1997 | Addicted to Love | co-production with Outlaw Productions and Miramax Films |
| June 20, 1997 | Batman & Robin | co-production with PolyGram Pictures |
| July 2, 1997 | Wild America[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and The Steve Tisch Company |
| July 11, 1997 | Contact | co-production with South Side Amusement Company |
| July 30, 1997 | One Eight Seven[N 8] | North American, U.K. and Irish distribution only; produced by Icon Productions |
| August 8, 1997 | Conspiracy Theory | co-production with Silver Pictures and Shuler Donner/Donner Productions |
| Free Willy 3: The Rescue | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Regency Enterprises and Shuler Donner/Donner Productions | |
| August 15, 1997 | Steel | co-production with Quincy Jones-David Salzman Entertainment |
| September 5, 1997 | Fire Down Below | co-production with Seagal/Nasso Productions |
| September 19, 1997 | L.A. Confidential[N 7] | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture Nominee of the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture – Drama Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2015 distribution outside Japan only;[9] produced by Regency Enterprises |
| September 26, 1997 | Trojan War | co-production with Daybreak |
| October 17, 1997 | Breaking Up[N 4] | distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises |
| The Devil's Advocate | distribution outside Japan only;[10] co-production with Regency Enterprises and Kopelson Entertainment | |
| November 7, 1997 | Mad City | co-production with Kopelson Entertainment and Punch Productions |
| November 14, 1997 | The Man Who Knew Too Little[N 7] | distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises and Polar |
| November 21, 1997 | Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil | co-production with Malpaso Productions and Silver Pictures |
| December 25, 1997 | The Postman | co-production with Tig Productions |
1998
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| January 16, 1998 | Fallen | distribution only; produced by Turner Pictures and Atlas Entertainment |
| February 13, 1998 | Sphere | co-production with Baltimore Pictures, Constant C and Punch Productions |
| February 20, 1998 | Dangerous Beauty[N 4] | North American distribution only; produced by Regency Enterprises, Taurus Film and Bedford Falls Productions |
| March 6, 1998 | U.S. Marshals | co-production with Kopelson Entertainment and Keith Barish Productions |
| March 13, 1998 | Incognito[N 6] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Scandinavia, Portugal, Spain and Japan only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| April 3, 1998 | The Butcher Boy | Irish film; distribution only; produced by Geffen Pictures |
| April 10, 1998 | City of Angels | co-production with Regency Enterprises, Taurus Film and Atlas Entertainment |
| April 17, 1998 | Major League: Back to the Minors[N 6] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Scandinavia and Japan only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| April 24, 1998 | Tarzan and the Lost City[N 13] | North American distribution only; produced by Village Roadshow Pictures, Alta Vista and Clipsal Film Partnership |
| May 15, 1998 | Quest for Camelot | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Warner Bros. Feature Animation |
| May 28, 1998 | The Last Days of Disco | international distribution outside Australia and New Zealand only; produced by Castle Rock Entertainment; distributed in North America, Australia and New Zealand by PolyGram Filmed Entertainment (through Gramercy Pictures in the United States) |
| May 29, 1998 | Almost Heroes | distribution only; produced by Turner Pictures and Di Novi Pictures |
| June 5, 1998 | A Perfect Murder | co-production with Kopelson Entertainment |
| July 10, 1998 | Lethal Weapon 4 | co-production with Silver Pictures and Doshudo Productions |
| July 29, 1998 | The Negotiator[N 4] | distribution outside Germany, Austria and Switzerland only;[11][12] produced by Regency Enterprises, Taurus Film, Mandeville Films and New Regency |
| August 14, 1998 | The Avengers | co-production with Jerry Weintraub Productions |
| August 21, 1998 | Wrongfully Accused[N 6] | North and Latin American, U.K. and Irish distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions and Constantin Film |
| August 28, 1998 | Why Do Fools Fall in Love | co-production with Rhino Films |
| September 11, 1998 | Without Limits | co-production with Cruise/Wagner Productions |
| October 16, 1998 | Practical Magic[N 13] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Greece and Singapore only; co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Di Novi Pictures and Fortis Films |
| October 23, 1998 | Soldier | distribution outside Germany, Austria, Italy, Spain and Japan only; co-production with Morgan Creek Productions, Jerry Weintraub Productions and Impact Pictures |
| November 25, 1998 | Home Fries | co-production with Baltimore Pictures and Kasdan Pictures |
| December 11, 1998 | Jack Frost | co-production with Azoff Entertainment and The Canton Company |
| December 18, 1998 | You've Got Mail | co-production with Lauren Shuler Donner Productions |
1999
| Release date | Title | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| February 12, 1999 | Message in a Bottle | distribution outside France, Germany, Austria and Switzerland only; co-production with Bel-Air Entertainment, Tig Productions and Di Novi Pictures |
| February 17, 1999 | Payback | international distribution only; produced by Icon Productions; distributed in North America by Paramount Pictures; sales rights licensed to Summit Entertainment for Japan[13] |
| March 5, 1999 | Analyze This[N 13] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Greece and Singapore only; co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment, Baltimore/Spring Creek Pictures, Face Productions and Tribeca Productions; sales rights licensed to Summit Entertainment for Japan[13] |
| March 19, 1999 | The King and I[N 6] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Scandinavia, Portugal and Israel under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions, Rankin/Bass Productions, Nest Family Entertainment and Rich Animation Studios |
| True Crime | co-production with The Zanuck Company and Malpaso Productions | |
| March 31, 1999 | The Matrix[N 13] | Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2012 distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Greece and Singapore only; co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Groucho II Film Partnership and Silver Pictures |
| April 16, 1999 | Goodbye Lover[N 7] | distribution outside Germany, Austria and Switzerland only; produced by Regency Enterprises, Taurus Film, Gotham Entertainment Group and Lightmotive |
| April 23, 1999 | Lost & Found | distribution only; produced by Alcon Entertainment and Dinamo Entertainment |
| June 30, 1999 | South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut | international distribution only; co-production with Paramount Pictures, Comedy Central Films and Scott Rudin Productions |
| Wild Wild West | co-production with Peters Entertainment, Sonnenfeld-Josephson Worldwide Entertainment and Todman/Simon/LeMasters Productions | |
| July 16, 1999 | Eyes Wide Shut | co-production with Stanley Kubrick Productions, Pole Star and Hobby Films |
| July 28, 1999 | Deep Blue Sea[N 13] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Greece and Singapore only; co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures and Groucho III Film Partnership |
| August 6, 1999 | The Iron Giant | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Warner Bros. Feature Animation |
| August 20, 1999 | Mickey Blue Eyes | distribution in North and Latin America, Scandinavia, Turkey and Asia excluding Japan;[14][15][16][17] produced by Castle Rock Entertainment and Simian Films |
| August 27, 1999 | A Dog of Flanders | North American, U.K. and Irish distribution only; produced by Woodbridge Films |
| September 1, 1999 | Chill Factor[N 6] | North American and select international distribution only; produced by Morgan Creek Productions |
| October 1, 1999 | Three Kings[N 13] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Greece and Singapore only; co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Village-A.M. Film Partnership, Coast Ridge Films and Atlas Entertainment |
| October 22, 1999 | Three to Tango[N 13] | distribution outside Australia, New Zealand, Greece and Singapore only; co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures, Village-Hoyts Film Partnership and Outlaw Productions |
| October 29, 1999 | House on Haunted Hill | North American, Brazilian, U.K. and Irish distribution only; produced by Dark Castle Entertainment |
| November 12, 1999 | Pokémon: The First Movie | distribution outside Asia under Kids' WB/Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by OLM. |
| November 17, 1999 | Liberty Heights | co-production with Baltimore/Spring Creek Pictures |
| December 10, 1999 | The Green Mile | Nominee of the Academy Award for Best Picture distribution in North and Latin America, Scandinavia, Turkey and Asia excluding Japan only;[18][19][20][21] produced by Castle Rock Entertainment and Darkwoods Productions |
| December 22, 1999 | Any Given Sunday | co-production with Ixtlan Productions and The Donners' Company; sales rights licensed to Summit Entertainment for Japan[13] |
| Man on the Moon | select international distribution only; produced by Universal Pictures, Mutual Film Company, Marubeni, Toho-Towa, Tele-München, BBC, UGC-PH and Nordisk Film | |
| December 24, 1999 | The Big Tease | co-production with Crawford P. Productions and I Should Coco Films |
International releases
| Release Date | Title | Country | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| January 30, 1991 | Le Brasier | France | distribution only; produced by Flach Film and Solus Productions |
| November 19, 1993 | My Soul Brother | Spain | distribution only; produced by Fernando Colomo PC and Sogetel |
| November 16, 1995 | All Men Are Mortal | United Kingdom | distribution only; produced by Nova Films and Sigma Pictures |
| November 23, 1995 | Deathmaker | Germany | distribution only; produced by Pantera Film |
| December 15, 1995 | Viaggi di nozze | Italy | distribution only; produced by Cecchi Gori Group |
| December 22, 1995 | The Graduates | ||
| April 18, 1996 | Dangerous Dowry | Germany | co-production with Ena Film[22] |
| October 3, 1996 | The Adventures of Pinocchio | United States Germany |
German theatrical distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by The Kushner-Locke Company, Savoy Pictures, Pangaea Holdings, Twin Continental Films and CineVox |
| October 18, 1996 | Dying to Go Home | Netherlands Portugal |
Dutch distribution only; produced by Taiga Films and Katholieke Radio Omroep |
| November 29, 1996 | The Bandit | Turkey | First WB Turkish film; distribution only; produced by Filmacass |
| March 27, 1997 | A Rat's Tale | Germany | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment; co-production with Augsburger Puppenkiste and Monty Film |
| April 7, 1997 | Mijn Franse tante Gazeuse[N 14] | Netherlands | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Bos Bros. Film-TV Productions and AVRO |
| October 2, 1997 | The Fearless Four | Germany | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment; produced by Munich Animation |
| October 17, 1997 | Live Flesh | Spain France |
Spanish distribution only; produced by El Deseo S.A., Ciby 2000 and France 3 |
| April 24, 1998 | The Room of the Scirocco | Italy | distribution only; produced by Fandango |
| April 30, 1998 | Little Tony | Netherlands | distribution only; produced by Graniet Film[23] |
| August 27, 1998 | Siberia | distribution only; produced by Siberia Film and NPS[24] | |
| September 23, 1998 | Class Trip | France | distribution only; produced by Les Films de la Boissière[25] |
| November 25, 1998 | Les Kidnappeurs | distribution only; produced by Productions du Champ Poirier and M6 Films[25] | |
| November 26, 1998 | Kai Rabe gegen die Vatikankiller | Germany | co-production with Dreamer Joint Venture Filmproduktion |
| The Flying Liftboy[N 14] | Netherlands | distribution under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; produced by Bos Bros. Film-TV Productions, Delux Productions and AVRO[26] | |
| December 16, 1998 | Comme une bête | France | distribution only; produced by Madeleine Films[25] |
| March 25, 1999 | Jesus Is a Palestinian | Netherlands | distribution only; produced by Lagestee Film BV and VARA |
| April 1, 1999 | No Trains No Planes | distribution only; produced by Jos Stelling Filmproducties B.V. and VPRO | |
| April 21, 1999 | Orfeu | Brazil | distribution only; produced by Rio Vermelho Filmes and Globo Filmes |
| April 28, 1999 | Le Plus Beau Pays du monde | France | distribution only; produced by Septembre Productions[25] |
| May 7, 1999 | Operacja Samum | Poland | distribution only; produced by Studio D.T. Film, HBO and Telewizja Polska |
| July 15, 1999 | Long Hello and Short Goodbye | Germany | co-production with Letterbox Filmproduktion |
| September 16, 1999 | The Delivery | Netherlands | distribution only; produced by Two Independent Film and Veronica |
| September 30, 1999 | Tobias Totz and his Lion | Germany | distribution in Germany and Belgium under Warner Bros. Family Entertainment only; co-production with Rothkirch/Cartoon-Film, Munich Animation, Bioskop Film and Stupid Studio |
| November 10, 1999 | Peut-être | France | distribution only; produced by Vertigo Productions, PECF, M6 Films and TPS Cinéma |
| November 18, 1999 | 'Ne günstige Gelegenheit | Germany | co-production with Studio Hamburg Letterbox Filmproduktion |
| December 9, 1999 | Waschen, Schneiden, Legen | co-production with Neue Impuls Film | |
| December 17, 1999 | Run for Money | Turkey | distribution only; produced by Atlantik Film |
See also
- List of New Line Cinema films
- List of films based on DC Comics publications
- List of Warner Bros. theatrical animated feature films
- Category:Lists of films by studio
Notes
- ^ a b Owned by MGM
- ^ Co-owned by Icon Productions, with U.S. distribution rights licensed to Samuel Goldwyn Films
- ^ Co-owned by Morgan Creek Entertainment, with international distribution rights licensed to Revolution Studios, which has sub-licensed television and streaming rights to Sony Pictures
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Co-owned by Regency Enterprises
- ^ Owned by the Wim Wenders Foundation; commercial rights owned by HanWay Films, with U.S. distribution rights currently licensed to Janus Films and The Criterion Collection
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Owned by Morgan Creek Entertainment, with international rights licensed to Revolution Studios; home media, television and streaming rights are sub-licensed to Sony Pictures, with select distribution rights also sub-licensed to Relativity Media
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Owned by Regency Enterprises, with Disney (via 20th Century Studios) handling distribution
- ^ a b Owned by Icon Productions, with U.S. distribution rights licensed to Samuel Goldwyn Films
- ^ a b c Owned by Disney (via 20th Century Studios)
- ^ Owned by Vine Alternative Investments, with distribution rights currently handled by Paramount Pictures
- ^ Owned by Cohen Media Group
- ^ International rights owned by Icon Entertainment International and Exclusive Media
- ^ a b c d e f g Co-owned by Alcon Entertainment
- ^ a b Owned by In The Air
References
- ^ a b c d e Moerk, Christian (May 14, 1993). "Family volume at WB". Variety. Archived from the original on May 20, 2025. Retrieved May 20, 2025.
- ^ "コピーキャット【日本語吹替版】 [VHS]". amazon.co.jp.
- ^ "HEAT ヒート【日本語吹替版】 [VHS]". amazon.co.jp.
- ^ "Vhs HEAT LA SFIDA". amazon.it.
- ^ Dawtrey, Adam (November 5, 1995). "'STONEWALL' RIGHTS PICKED UP BY STRAND". Variety. Archived from the original on June 12, 2025. Retrieved June 12, 2025.
- ^ "評決のとき【字幕版】 [VHS]". amazon.co.jp.
- ^ "心の指紋【字幕版】 [VHS]". amazon.co.jp.
- ^ "ホワイトハウスの陰謀【日本語吹替版】 [VHS]". amazon.co.jp.
- ^ "L.A.コンフィデンシャル【字幕ワイド版】 [VHS]". amazon.co.jp.
- ^ "ディアボロス [DVD]". amazon.co.jp.
- ^ "Verhandlungssache (1998) - Kino: 20th Century Fox". www.ofdb.de. Retrieved May 18, 2025.
- ^ "The Negotiator". ProCinema. Retrieved May 17, 2025.
- ^ a b c Carver, Benedict (1998-05-08). "Summit to pitch WB pix". Variety. Retrieved 2024-11-06.
- ^ "Vhs Mickey Olhos Azuis - Leg. (hugh Grant)c (Usado)". produto.mercadolivre.com.br.
- ^ "Mickey Blue Eyes (1999) - VHS". Tradera.
- ^ "VCD - Belalı Aşk - Mickey Blue Eyes". kitantik.com.
- ^ "VCD Original Mickey Blue Eyes". tokopedia.com.
- ^ "Vhs À Espera De Um Milagre Stephen King (Usado)". produto.mercadolivre.com.br.
- ^ "The green mile / Gröna milen (hyrvhs, VHS, 2000, Warner)". Tradera.
- ^ "YEŞİL YOL /THE GREEN MILE - Orijinal VCD - 3 CD". kitantik.com.
- ^ "The Green Mile (1999) (VCD) (Hong Kong Version)". YesAsia.
- ^ Molner, David (28 August 1995). "WB TO GO DEUTSCH". Variety. Retrieved 7 June 2025.
- ^ Stienen, François (December 1997). "Distributie: Warmer Bros. voor Warner Bros". Filmkrant, nr. 184 (in Dutch). Archived from the original on 26 May 2006. Retrieved 30 May 2025.
- ^ De Schutter, Christian (August 15, 1997). "WB nabs 'Siberia'". Variety. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
- ^ a b c d William, Michael (May 18, 1998). "Year-old Warner starts French 'Classe'". Variety. Retrieved May 22, 2025.
- ^ "Bos Bros en Warner Bros. (Holland) sluiten distributie-over-eenkomst voor Abeltje". Holland Film Nieuws, nr. 19 (in Dutch). December 1997. p. 19. Archived from the original on 1 June 2025. Retrieved 2 June 2025.