Columbia Pictures
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Image:Columbia 90s.jpg Columbia Pictures, formally Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group since its 1998 merger with the former TriStar Pictures, is an American film and television production company owned by Sony Pictures Entertainment, which in turn is part of Japanese electronics giant Sony.
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History
The predecessor of Columbia Pictures, CBC Film Sales Corporation, was founded in 1919 by Harry Cohn, his brother Jack Cohn, and Joe Brandt. The company's reputation was so low that some joked that "CBC" stood for "Corned Beef and Cabbage." Many of the studio's early productions were low-budget affairs; the start-up CBC leased space in a poverty row studio on Hollywood's Gower Street.
Following a reorganization, partner Brandt was bought out, and for the next thirty years the Cohn brothers would take on the world (and sometimes each other) in running their company. Harry Cohn, based in California, oversaw production, while brother Jack ran sales, marketing and distribution from New York. Columbia was unique in that Harry, in charge of production, was also president of the company; his was the only studio that did not have to look to corporate overseers in the east for budgeting or policy decisions. In an effort to improve its image, the studio renamed itself Columbia Pictures Corporation in 1924. Though the product was mostly low-cost westerns, serials and action pictures, Columbia gradually built a reputation by attempting higher-budget fare.
Helping Columbia's climb was the arrival of an ambitious director named Frank Capra. Between 1927 and 1939, Capra became Columbia's biggest asset, gaining in confidence and constantly pushing Cohn for better material and bigger budgets. Following a string of hits in the early 1930s, the success of Capra's 1934 picture It Happened One Night (the first film to win all five major Oscars, including Best Picture, Director, Actor, Actress, and Screenplay) solidified Columbia's status as a major studio. Capra's other films at Columbia included Lady for a Day. Broadway Bill, You Can't Take It With You, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, and the original 1937 Lost Horizon.
Harry Cohn never lost a taste for low comedy, and at his insistence the studio signed The Three Stooges in 1934. Rejected by MGM (which kept straight-man Ted Healy but let the Stooges go), the Howard brothers and Larry Fine made more than 180 shorts for Columbia between 1934 and 1958. Also that year Columbia began producing a series of cartoons under the Screen Gems name. The Screen Gems name would be used often; in the late forties it was revived for a television-commercial production unit; this expanded over the next few years into a full-fledged television-series production house, offering Father Knows Best, The Donna Reed Show, Bewitched, I Dream of Jeannie and The Monkees. In the late 1990s, the Screen Gems name was revived again, this time as the "producer" of low-budget horror films, pictures which might sully the "Columbia" or "Sony" names.
By the time of World War II, Columbia had reached maturity. Propelled in part by the attendance surge during the war, the studio also benefitted from the popularity of its discovery and biggest star, Rita Hayworth.
As the larger studios declined in the 1950s, Columbia took the lead, continuing to produce forty-plus pictures a year, offering adult fare that often broke ground and kept audiences coming to theaters. While he was widely disliked, even feared, few would argue that Harry Cohn had not done a superb job in building Columbia Pictures. Following his death in 1958, Columbia went through a period of drift; though there were still important films, the momentum, as well as the mass audience, was gone.
By the late 1960s, Columbia was a schizophrenic place, offering old-fashioned fare like A Man for All Seasons and Oliver! while also backing Easy Rider and The Monkees. Nearly bankrupt by the early 1970s, the studio was saved only by the direst methods; the Gower Street studios were sold, and a new management team brought in. While fiscal health was restored through a careful choice of star-driven vehicles, the studio's image was badly marred by the David Begelman check-forging scandal. Begelman eventually resigned (later ending up at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer), and the studio's fortunes gradually recovered.
With a healthier balance-sheet, Columbia was bought by Coca-Cola in 1982. Prudish Coca-Cola management announced there would be no 'R'- or 'X'- rated films from Columbia. Studio-head Frank Price mixed big hits like Tootsie and Ghostbusters with many, many costly flops. Under Coke, Columbia acquired Norman Lear and Jerry Perenchio's Embassy Pictures, mostly for its library of highly successful television series. Expanding its television franchise, Columbia also bought Merv Griffin's game-show empire, which included rights to Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy.
To share the increasing cost of film production, Coke brought in two outside investors whose earlier efforts in Hollywood had come to nothing. In 1982 Columbia, Time-Life and CBS announced, as a joint-venture, "Nova Pictures"; this enterprise was to be re-named Tri-Star Pictures. Some years later Columbia would buy out its partners in Tri-Star. Other small-scale, "boutique" entities were created: Nelson Entertainment as a joint venture with British and Canadian partners; Triumph Films jointly owned with French studio Gaumont; and Castle Rock Entertainment. Recognizing the importance of the overseas market, in 1986 Columbia recruited British producer David Puttnam to head the studio. He alienated the film-production community upon his arrival by denouncing Hollywood's taste for froth and the light-weight. With few friends and fewer hits, his stay at Columbia was Hobbesian: nasty, brutish and short. The volatile film business made Coke shareholders nervous, and following the box-office failure of Ishtar, Coke spun off its entertainment holdings in 1987, creating a stand-alone company called Columbia Pictures Entertainment Inc.
Puttnam was succeeded by his aesthetic opposite, Dawn Steel. The first woman to run a motion picture studio, she knew the audience's tastes, and pushed Columbia back into the forefront of popular films. The Columbia Pictures empire was sold in 1989 to electronics giant Sony, one of several Japanese firms then buying American properties. Sony then made a management decision which surprised many, hiring two producers, Peter Guber and Jon Peters to serve as co-heads of production. To some observers Guber and Peters appeared to be unlikely choices; further, they had just signed a long-term contract with Warner Bros. Pictures. To extricate them from this contract, Sony finally paid hundreds of millions in cash, gave up a half-interest in its Columbia Records Club mail-order business, and bought from Warner the decrepit Culver City studio (once home of MGM) which Warner had acquired in its takover of Lorimar. Putting on a brave face, Guber and Peters set out to prove they were worth this fortune, and though there were to be some successes, there were also many costly flops. Peters resigned, to be followed soon after by Guber.
Publicly humiliated, Sony took an enormous loss on its investment in Columbia, writing off its costs, and in effect starting over. Tri-Star was consolidated into the main studio; the entire operation was re-organzized under Howard Stringer, and re-named Sony Pictures Entertainment; with this came a new effort to focus on mainstream film-making. Sony has broadened its release schedule by creating Sony Pictures Classics for art-house fare, and by backing Revolution Studios, a production company headed by Joe Roth.
Logo
The logo is of the female personification of the USA, Columbia holding a torch. [1]. In 1993, the logo was repainted digitally by New Orleans artist Michael Deas and modeled by Jenny Joseph. [2]. This is a variation of the classic-style Columbia torch lady, used from 1936 until 1976. Taxi Driver was the last film to use the classic-style torch lady.
From 1976 to 1981, Columbia (like other studios) experimented with a new logo; it began with the familiar lady with a torch, but the torch-light rays then formed an abstract blue semi-circle depicting the top half of the rays of light, with the name of the studio appearing under it. The television counterpart was just the latter part, but the semi-circle was red. This logo was replaced with a modernized "Torch Lady" in 1981.
Notable films
1930s
- Platinum Blonde (1931)
- Broadway Bill (1933)
- Lady for a Day (1933)
- Twentieth Century (1934)
- It Happened One Night (1934)
- One Night of Love (1934)
- Mr Deeds Goes to Town (1936)
- The Awful Truth (1937)
- Lost Horizon (1937)
- Only Angels Have Wings (1939)
- Mr. Smith Goes to Washington (1939)
1940s
- His Girl Friday (1940)
- Penny Serenade (1941)
- You Were Never Lovelier (1941)
- You'll Never Get Rich (1942)
- My Sister Eileen (1942)
- The More the Merrier (1943)
- Cover Girl (1944)
- Gilda (1946)
- The Jolson Story (1946)
- All the King's Men (1949)
1950s
- Born Yesterday (1950)
- In a Lonely Place (1950)
- The Marrying Kind (1952)
- From Here to Eternity (1953)
- The 5,000 Fingers of Dr. T (1953)
- The Caine Mutiny (1954)
- On the Waterfront (1954)
- Picnic (1955)
- The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957)
- Pal Joey (1957)
- Bell, Book, and Candle (1958)
- Porgy and Bess (1958, distribution only)
- Suddenly, Last Summer (1959)
- Gidget (1959)
1960s
- The Guns of Navarone (1961)
- Lawrence of Arabia (1962)
- Bye Bye Birdie (1963)
- Jason and the Argonauts (1963)
- Dr. Strangelove (1964)
- Lord Jim (1965)
- Born Free (1966)
- Georgy Girl (1966)
- Casino Royale (1967)
- In Cold Blood (1967)
- To Sir, with Love (1967)
- Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (1967)
- Oliver! (1968)
- Funny Girl (1968)
- Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969)
- Cactus Flower (1969)
- Easy Rider (1969)
1970s
- I Never Sang for My Father (1970)
- Nicholas and Alexandra (1971)
- The Last Picture Show (1971)
- The Way We Were (1973)
- Shampoo (1975)
- Murder by Death (1976)
- Taxi Driver (1976)
- Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977)
- The Buddy Holly Story (1978)
- The Cheap Detective (1978)
- Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)
- All That Jazz (1979) (co-production with 20th Century Fox)
1980s
- The Blue Lagoon (1980)
- Stir Crazy (1980)
- Stripes (1981)
- Absence of Malice (1981)
- Annie (1982, plus made-for-TV sequel in 1999)
- Tootsie (1982)
- Gandhi (1982)
- The Big Chill (1983)
- Blue Thunder (1983)
- Christine (1983)
- Ghostbusters (1984)
- The Karate Kid (1984) and its first two sequels (1986) and (1989)
- Moscow on the Hudson (1984)
- Starman (1984)
- St. Elmo's Fire (1985)
- Stand by Me (1986)
- Ishtar (1987)
- Roxanne (1987)
- The Last Emperor (1987)
- The Big Blue (Le Gran Bleu) (1988)
1990s
- The Prince of Tides (1991)
- Boyz N the Hood (1991)
- City Slickers (1991)
- Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992)
- A League of Their Own (1992)
- A Few Good Men (1992)
- Groundhog Day (1993)
- The Age of Innocence (1993)
- The Indian in the Cupboard (1995) (co-produced with Paramount Pictures)
- The Cable Guy (1996)
- The People vs. Larry Flynt (1996)
- Air Force One (1997)
- Men in Black (1997)
- Big Daddy (1999)
- Stuart Little (1999)
2000s
- Final Fantasy (2000, 3D Animation)
- Charlie's Angels (2000, based on 1970s television series)
- Hollow Man (2000)
- The Patriot (2000)
- America's Sweethearts (2001)
- Black Hawk Down (2001)
- Mr. Deeds (2002, remake of 1935 film Mr Deeds Goes to Town)
- Spider-Man (2002) and sequels
- Something's Gotta Give (2003) (co-produced with Warner Bros.).
- The Grudge (2004)
- Are We There Yet? (2005)
- Guess Who (2005, remake of 1967 film Guess Who's Coming to Dinner)
- Lords of Dogtown (2005)
- Hitch (2005)
- Bewitched (2005, based on 1960s television series)
- Monster House (movie) (2006)
External links
- Official Sony Pictures website
- Columbia Pictures at the Internet Movie Database
- Columbia Pictures Corporation at the Internet Movie Database
- The Big Cartoon DataBase entry for Columbia Pictures Cartoons
- The History of a Logo: The Lady with the Torch



