Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group#3000 Pictures

{{short description|Sony Pictures Entertainment division}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2019}}

{{Infobox company

| name = Sony Pictures Entertainment Motion Picture Group

| logo = File:Sony Pictures logo.svg

| logo_size = 100px

| former_names = Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group (1998–2013)

| type = Division

| foundation = {{start date and age|1998}} Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, U.S.

| location = 10202 West Washington Boulevard, Culver City, California, U.S.

| location_city =

| location_country =

| locations =

| area_served = Worldwide

| key_people = {{ubl|Tom Rothman (chairman and CEO)|Josh Greenstein (co-president)|Sanford Panitch (co-president)}}

| industry = Entertainment

| products = Motion pictures

| services = {{ubl|Film production|Distribution}}

| revenue =

| owner =

| num_employees =

| parent = Sony Pictures Entertainment

| divisions = {{unbulleted list

| Columbia Pictures

| TriStar Pictures

| Screen Gems

| 3000 Pictures

| Sony Pictures Animation

| Sony Pictures Classics

| Sony Pictures Imageworks

}}

| homepage = {{URL|https://www.sonypictures.com/movies|sonypictures.com/movies}}

}}

Sony Pictures Entertainment Motion Picture Group (formerly known as the Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group until 2013, and abbreviated as SPMPG) is a division of Sony Pictures Entertainment to manage its motion picture operations. It was launched in 1998 by integrating the businesses of Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc. and TriStar Pictures, Inc.[https://variety.com/1998/biz/news/sony-hitches-tristar-to-col-1117469309/ "Sony Hitches TriStar to Col"], Variety, March 31, 1998.

History

The Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group was founded in 1998 as the Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group, as a current division of Sony Pictures Entertainment, owned by Sony. It has many of Sony Pictures' current motion picture divisions as part of it. Its divisions at that time were Columbia Pictures, TriStar Pictures, Triumph Films, Sony Pictures Classics, and Sony Pictures Releasing.

On December 8, 1998, SPE resurrected its former animation and television division Screen Gems as a film division of Sony Pictures Entertainment's Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group that has served several different purposes for its parent companies over the decades since its incorporation."Los Angeles Times" [https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1998-dec-08-fi-51776-story.html Sony Forms New Movie Division] articles.latimes.com December 8, 1998, Retrieved on April 4, 2016

In 2002, Columbia TriStar Television was renamed as Sony Pictures Television. The last three remaining companies, with the "Columbia TriStar" brand in its name, were Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment, the Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group, and Columbia TriStar Marketing Group. Columbia TriStar Home Entertainment and Columbia TriStar Film Distributors became Sony Pictures Home Entertainment and Sony Pictures Releasing International in 2004 and 2005 and Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group became the second-to-last subsidiary of Sony Pictures Entertainment to use the "Columbia TriStar" brand name in its name.

In 2013, TriStar Productions was launched, as a joint venture of Sony Pictures Entertainment and former 20th Century Fox chairman Thomas Rothman.{{cite news|last1=Abrams|first1=Rachel|title=Tom Rothman in Joint Venture With Sony to Run TriStar Productions|url=https://variety.com/2013/more/news/breaking-tom-rothman-joins-sony-1200571530/|access-date=October 30, 2014|work=Variety|date=August 1, 2013}}{{cite news|last1=CIEPLY|first1=MICHAEL|title=Sony Hires Rothman to Head Revived TriStar Unit|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/02/business/media/sony-hires-rothman-to-head-revived-tristar-unit.html?partner=yahoofinance&_r=0|access-date=August 2, 2013|work=The New York Times|date=August 1, 2013}}

In October 2013, Sony Pictures rebranded its motion picture group under the monicker "Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group". Sony Pictures Animation and Sony Pictures Imageworks were moved from Sony Pictures Digital to its motion picture group.

On June 2, 2016, Doug Belgrad had announced he was to step down as president of the SPMPG and would transition his role to producer at the studio.[https://www.latimes.com/entertainment/envelope/cotown/la-et-ct-doug-belgrad-resigns-20160602-snap-story.html Doug Belgrad exits as president of Sony Pictures' motion picture group] latimes.com, Retrieved on June 3, 2016 Belgrad was promoted as president of the SPMPG back in 2014.

Film divisions

class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; width:100%;"
colspan="5" style="text-align:center;" | Studio divisions
style="text-align:center; width:30%;" | Production

! style="text-align:center; width:30%;" | Distribution

! style="text-align:center; width:30%;" | Other

|{{Unbulleted list|Columbia Pictures|TriStar Pictures (TriStar Productions)|Screen Gems (Scream Gems)|Sony Pictures Animation|Sony Pictures Classics|Sony Pictures Imageworks|3000 Pictures|Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions (Destination Films, Stage 6 Films, and Affirm Films)|Sony Pictures International Productions}}{{Unbulleted list|Sony Pictures Releasing|Sony Pictures Releasing International}}


{{Unbulleted list|Sony Pictures Home Entertainment}}

{{Unbulleted list|Crunchyroll|Ghost Corps|Triumph Films |Columbia TriStar Marketing Group}}

3000 Pictures

{{Infobox company

| type =

| name = 3000 Pictures

| logo = File:3000 Pictures (with Sony byline).svg

| logo_size = 200px

| predecessor = Fox 2000 Pictures

| foundation = {{start date and age|2019}}

| defunct =

| industry = Motion pictures

| fate =

| founder =

| key_people = Elizabeth Gabler (president)

| location_country =

| products =

| parent = Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group

| subsid =

}}

On July 15, 2019, former Fox 2000 Pictures president Elizabeth Gabler and the entire Fox 2000 staff joined Sony Pictures Entertainment and formed 3000 Pictures with the motion picture group. HarperCollins would be funding half of the division's overhead and development. 3000 Pictures would also pursue projects for TV and streaming.{{cite news |last1=Masters |first1=Kim |title=Elizabeth Gabler Breaks Silence on Sony Move, Disney Exit, HarperCollins and Streaming Plans (Exclusive) |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/elizabeth-gabler-talks-disney-exit-harpercollins-streaming-1240141 |access-date=23 June 2020 |work=The Hollywood Reporter |language=en}}

Sony Pictures Releasing

{{Infobox company

| name = Sony Pictures Releasing Corporation

| logo = File:Sony Pictures Releasing logo.svg

| logo_size = 100px

| logo_caption = Logo used since 2005

| type = Division

| industry = Motion pictures

| predecessor = Triumph Releasing Corporation

| founded = {{Start date and age|1994|11|23}}

| location_city = 10202 West Washington Boulevard, Culver City, California

| location_country = United States

| key_people =

| services = {{ubl|Film distribution|Marketing}}

| revenue =

| operating_income =

| owner =

| parent = Sony Pictures Entertainment

| divisions = Sony Pictures Releasing International

| website = {{URL|https://www.sonypictures.com|sonypictures.com}}

}}

Sony Pictures Releasing Corporation is an American film distributor owned by Sony. Established in 1994[https://businessprofiles.com/details/sony-pictures-releasing/NY-1358802 SONY PICTURES RELEASING CORPORATION] businessprofiles.com, Retrieved on January 20, 2014 as a successor to Triumph Releasing Corporation, the company handles theatrical distribution, marketing and promotion for films produced and released by Sony Pictures Entertainment, including Columbia Pictures, TriStar Pictures (as well as TriStar Productions), Screen Gems, Sony Pictures Classics, Sony Pictures Animation, Crunchyroll, Stage 6 Films, Affirm Films, Destination Films, and Triumph Films.{{cn|date=May 2023}} It is a member of the Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group. It also has an international division called Sony Pictures Releasing International, which from 1991 to 2005 was known as Columbia TriStar Film Distributors International.{{cn|date=May 2023}}

= International arrangements =

{{Infobox company

| name = Sony Pictures Releasing International Corporation

| logo = File:Sony Pictures Releasing International Print.svg

| logo_caption = Logo used since 2005

| former_names = Columbia Tri-Star Film Distributors International (1988–1991)
Columbia TriStar Film Distributors International (1991–2005)

| type = Division

| industry = Motion pictures

| founded = {{Start date and age|1988|12|21}}

| location_city = 10202 West Washington Boulevard, Culver City, California

| location_country = United States

| key_people =

| services = {{ubl|International film distribution|Marketing}}

| revenue =

| operating_income =

| owner =

| parent = Sony Pictures Entertainment (1988–1994)
Sony Pictures Releasing (1994–present)

| divisions =

| website = {{URL|https://www.sonypictures.com|sonypictures.com}}

}}

From 1971 until the end of 1987, Columbia's international theatrical distribution operations were a joint venture with Warner Bros. named Columbia-Warner, and in some countries, this joint venture also distributed films from other companies like with EMI Films and Cannon Films in the UK under the names of Columbia-EMI-Warner in 1978 and later Columbia-Cannon-Warner in 1986. The UK venture was dissolved in 1988.

In Australia, which from 1975 to 1996, 20th Century-Fox and Columbia Pictures formed an alliance that they would distribute films for the Australian market, initially going under the name Fox Columbia Film Distributors, before Hoyts came to the venture, and it was renamed first to Hoyts Fox Columbia TriStar Films, then Fox Columbia TriStar Films.{{Cite news |date=March 1975 |title=The Australian Film Industry - A Duopoly in Distribution in Exhibition |pages=37 |work=Cinema Papers}}

On February 6, 2014, Columbia TriStar Warner Filmes de Portugal Ltda., a joint venture with Warner Bros. which distributed films from both companies in Portugal, announced that they will close their offices on March 31.{{cite web| url=https://www.dn.pt/artes/cinema/interior/columbia-tristar-warner-encerra-escritorios-em-portugal-3673331.html| title=Columbia Tristar Warner encerra escritórios em Portugal| first=Eurico| last=de Barros| work=Diário de Notícias| date=February 6, 2014| access-date=September 29, 2017| trans-title=Columbia Tristar Warner closes offices in Portugal| language=pt| archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170930083919/https://www.dn.pt/artes/cinema/interior/columbia-tristar-warner-encerra-escritorios-em-portugal-3673331.html| archive-date=September 30, 2017| url-status=live}} Sony Pictures' films are distributed in Portugal by Big Picture Films since then, while NOS Audiovisuais took over the distribution duties for Warner Bros. films in the country.

From June 2014 until February 2020, Sony Pictures' Philippine releasing arm under the name of Columbia Pictures Philippines distributed films by United International Pictures' partner studios, Paramount Pictures and Universal Pictures (including films by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer), after UIP ended its nine-year distribution agreement with the studio's local distributor Solar Entertainment and their Solar Films subsidiary. The Philippine distribution to films made by Universal lasted up until January 2020, when distribution reverted to Warner Bros. (UIP's former local distributor from the 1990s to 2000) in October 2021 while most Focus Features titles are instead released through a start-up online distribution company, UPSTREAM. Paramount later renewed their distribution agreements with Sony in October 2021.

The theatrical distribution of Sony Pictures' films in Italy was handled by Warner Bros. from 2011 to 2023. One notable example of this is Call Me By Your Name, where Warner Bros. handled Italian theatrical distribution (although the Sony label is still being used) while home video distribution went through Sony itself. In 2023, Eagle Pictures, which was already distributing Sony's films on home video in the country, took over their theatrical distribution as well.

Sony Pictures and Walt Disney Studios formed a film distribution joint venture in Southeast Asia in 1997.{{cite news |last1=Frater |first1=Patrick |title=Sony Launches Its Own Theatrical Distributors in Southeast Asia |url=https://variety.com/2017/film/asia/sony-launches-own-theatrical-distributors-in-se-asia-exclusive-1202526543/ |access-date=June 13, 2018 |work=Variety |date=August 14, 2017}} By December 2006, 14 joint distribution ventures between Sony Pictures Releasing International and Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures were formed and exist in countries including Brazil, Mexico, Singapore, Thailand and the Philippines. In January 2007, their 15th such partnership began operations in Russia and CIS.{{cite news |last1=Holdsworth |first1=Nick |title=Disney, Sony team up for Russian content |url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/disney-sony-team-up-russian-147608 |access-date=July 27, 2018 |work=The Hollywood Reporter |agency=AP |date=December 27, 2006 |language=en}} In February 2017, Sony starting leaving the Southeast Asia venture with the Philippines. In August 2017, Sony terminated the joint venture agreement for their own operations. On January 31, 2019, in anticipation of Disney's then-pending acquisition of most 21st Century Fox assets (including 20th Century Fox), it was agreed that Disney would sell its stake in the Mexican joint venture named Walt Disney Studios Sony Pictures Releasing de México to Sony Pictures Releasing.{{Cite web |url=https://www.cofece.mx/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/COFECE-009-2019-English.pdf |title=Clarification on Disney/Fox transaction |date=February 6, 2019 |website=Cofece |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190209123805/https://www.cofece.mx/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/COFECE-009-2019-English.pdf |archive-date=February 9, 2019 |access-date=February 8, 2019}} As part of the global economic fluctuations caused by the Disney's acquisition, Sony Pictures Production and Release LLC and Disney Studios LLC parted amicably signing a formal demerger on 21 January 2020. The contract would allow Sony Pictures Releasing to operate autonomously.{{Cite web|url=https://news.ru/en/cinema/walt-disney-to-create-a-new-distribution-company-in-russia/ |title=Walt Disney to create a new distribution company in Russia |website=news.ru |access-date=January 24, 2020}}{{Cite news|title=Disney и Sony разделят экраны|language=ru|trans-title=Disney and Sony to split screens|work=Kommersant|url=https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/4227876|access-date=2021-04-13}}

In Argentina and Poland, United International Pictures handles theatrical distribution of films released by Sony Pictures.

In the Netherlands, Universal Pictures International currently handles theatrical distribution of films released by Sony Pictures since 2013.

In the Netherlands and Sweden, Columbia TriStar Films (now known as Sony Pictures Releasing) formerly handled theatrical distribution of films released by 20th Century Fox from 1992 to 1997 in the former country and from 1994 to 1996 in the latter.

In South Africa, Ster-Kinekor handles theatrical and home video distribution of films released by Sony Pictures and Columbia Pictures.

Film library

{{main|Lists of Columbia Pictures films|List of TriStar Pictures films|List of Screen Gems films|List of Sony Pictures Animation productions|List of Sony theatrical animated feature films|List of Sony Pictures Releasing International films}}

= Film series =

class="wikitable sortable"
Title

! Release date

! No. Films

! Studio(s)

! Notes

The Three Stooges

| 1934–65

| rowspan="2" | 10

| rowspan="10" | Columbia

| rowspan="2" |

Mr. Deeds

| 1936–2002

Blondie

| 1938–50

| 28

| co-production with King Features Entertainment

Five Little Peppers

| 1939–40

| 4

| rowspan="2" |

Boston Blackie

| 1941–49

| 14

Cantinflas films

| 1942–82

| 34

| from Los tres mosqueteros to El barrendero

Crime Doctor

| 1943–49

| 10

| rowspan="4" |

The Whistler

| 1944–48

| 8

Rusty

| 1945–49

| 8

Jungle Jim

| 1948–56

| 16

Superman

| 1948–87

| 7

| rowspan="2" | Columbia/TriStar

| International theatrical distribution only; released in the US by Warner Bros. (1978–87), and produced by Dovemead Ltd. (1978–83), International Film Production (1978–80), Pueblo Film AG Productions (1984), The Cannon Group, Inc. and Golan-Globus Productions (both 1987)

Frankenstein

| 1958–94

| 4

| co-production with Hammer Film Productions (1958), Colgems Productions Ltd. (1985), Taft Entertainment Pictures (1987), The IndieProd Company and American Zoetrope (both 1994)

13 Ghosts

| 1960–2001

| 2

| rowspan="5" | Columbia

Matt Helm

| rowspan="2" | 1966–68

| 4

| co-production with Meadway-Claude Productions Company

The Trouble with Angels

| rowspan="2" | 2

Guess Who

| 1967–2005

James Bond

| 1967–2015

| 5

| co-production with Famous Artists Productions (1967), Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Eon Productions (both 2006–15) from Casino Royale to Spectre

Dracula

| 1972–95

| 6

| Columbia/TriStar

| co-production with Hammer Horror (1972-74), American Zoetrope and Osiris Films (both 1992)

Death Wish

| 1974–82

| rowspan="2" | 2

| rowspan="3" | Columbia

| international distributor; co-production with Paramount Pictures and Filmways Pictures

Fun with Dick and Jane

| 1977–2005

Spider-Man

| 1977–present

| 14

| co-production with Danchuck Productions (1977–81 series only), Marvel Entertainment (2002–present), Marvel Studios (2017–present) and Sony Pictures Animation (2018–present) (including the MCU Spider-Man films)

Ice Castles

| 1978–2010

| rowspan="2" | 2

| Columbia/Stage 6

When a Stranger Calls

| 1979–2006

| Columbia/Screen Gems

The Blue Lagoon

| 1980–2012

| 3

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Television

Gloria

| 1980–99

| rowspan="2" | 2

| Columbia

Heavy Metal

| 1981–2000

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with CinéGroupe (2000)

Annie

| 1982–2021

| 7

| Columbia/TriStar/Sony Pictures Television

| co-production with Rastar, Overbrook Entertainment, Village Roadshow Pictures, Storyline Entertainment, Chris Montan Productions and Walt Disney Television (1999 TV movie only)

Ghostbusters

| rowspan="2" | 1984–present

| 5

| rowspan="2" | Columbia

| co-production with Village Roadshow Pictures (2016) and Ghost Corps (2016–)

The Karate Kid

| 6

| co-production with Overbrook Entertainment (2010), China Film Group (2010), JW Productions (1984, 2010), Westbrook Studios (2025) and Sunswept Entertainment (2025)

The Muppets

| 1984, 1999–2002

| 3

| TriStar/Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment/Sony Pictures Television

| co-production with The Jim Henson Company (19842002) and Jim Henson Pictures (1999)

Fright Night

| 1985–89

| 2

| Columbia/TriStar

Rambo

| 1985–2019

| 3

| TriStar/Sony Pictures Releasing International

| co-production with Carolco Pictures, Lionsgate, StudioCanal, and The Weinstein Company

Iron Eagle

| rowspan="2" | 1986–88

| rowspan="4" | 2

| rowspan="2" | TriStar

| co-production with Carolco Pictures and Alliance Films (both 1988)

Short Circuit

| co-production with Producers Sales Organization (1986) and The Turman Foster Company (1986–88)

Pippi Longstocking

| 1988–97

| Columbia/Columbia TriStar Film Distributors Intl.

| co-production with Longstocking Productions, Svensk Filmindustri, Nelvana Limited, IdunaFilm, and TFC Trickompany

Wild Orchid

| 1989–91

| Triumph

Look Who's Talking

| 1989–93

| 3

| TriStar

Total Recall

| 1990–2012

| rowspan="4" | 2

| TriStar/Columbia

| co-production with Carolco Pictures, Original Film, and Relativity Media

Flatliners

| 1990–2017

| rowspan="3" | Columbia

| co-production with Stonebridge Entertainment (1990), Cross Creek Pictures, Further Films, Laurence Mark Productions and The Safran Company (both 2017)

City Slickers

| rowspan="2" | 1991–94

| co-production with Castle Rock Entertainment, Nelson Entertainment (1991) and Face Productions

My Girl

| co-production with Imagine Entertainment

Terminator

| 1991–2009

| 3

| TriStar/Columbia

| co-production with Carolco Pictures, Intermedia, C2 Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, and The Halcyon Company

Fortress

| 1992–2000

| 2

| Columbia/TriStar

| co-production with Dimension Films, Village Roadshow Pictures, Davis Entertainment, Gower Productions, The Carousel Picture Company, and John Flock Productions

El Mariachi

| 1992–2003

| 3

| Columbia

| co-production with Dimension Films and Troublemaker Studios

Single White Female

| 1992–2005

| rowspan="2" | 2

| Columbia/Destination

Basic Instinct

| 1992–2006

| TriStar/Sony Pictures Releasing

| co-production with Carolco Pictures, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, and C2 Pictures

Universal Soldier

| 1992–2012

| 4

| TriStar/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Sniper

| 1993–present

| 8

| TriStar/Destination

RoboCop

| 1993–2014

| 2

| Columbia

| co-production with Orion Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn Mayer

3 Ninjas

| 1994–98

| 3

| TriStar

| co-production with Sheen Productions

Little Women

| 1994–2019

| 2

| Columbia

| co-production with DiNovi Pictures (1994), Regency Enterprises and Pascal Pictures (both 2019)

The Swan Princess

| 1994–2023

| 12

| Columbia TriStar Film Distributors Intl./Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Bad Boys

| rowspan="2" | 1995–present

| rowspan="2" | 4

| Columbia

| co-production with Jerry Bruckheimer Films

Jumanji

| TriStar/Columbia

The Net

| 1995–2006

| rowspan="4" | 2

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Screamers

| 1995–2009

| Triumph/Screen Gems

The Craft

| 1996–present

| Columbia

| co-production with Red Wagon Entertainment and Blumhouse Productions (2020)

Matilda

| 1996–2022

| TriStar

Men in Black

| 1997–2019

| 4

| Columbia

| co-production with Amblin Entertainment, Parker MacDonald, Imagenation Abu Dhabi, Overbrook Entertainment, and Relativity Media

Anaconda

| rowspan="3" | 1997–present

| 5

| Columbia/Screen Gems/Stage 6/Destination

I Know What You Did Last Summer

| 4

| Columbia/Destination/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Mandalay Entertainment

Starship Troopers

| 5

| TriStar/Destination/Stage 6

| co-production with Touchstone Pictures

Zorro

| rowspan="3" | 1998–2005

| rowspan="2" | 2

| TriStar/Columbia

| co-production with Spyglass Entertainment, Amblin Entertainment, and Parker MacDonald

8mm

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Vampires

| 3

| Columbia/Destination

Wild Things

| 1998–2010

| 4

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Mandalay Entertainment

Godzilla

| 1998–2004

| 4

| TriStar

| co-production with Centropolis Entertainment, Fried Films, Independent Pictures (both 1998), and Toho (1998–2004)

Urban Legend

| 1998–present

| rowspan="2" | 3

| TriStar/Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Original Film and Phoenix Pictures (both 1998–2000) and NPP Productions (2005)

Cruel Intentions

| rowspan="2" | 1999–2004

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Original Film and Newmarket Capital Group

Baby Geniuses

| 2

| TriStar/Triumph/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Crystal Sky Pictures

Stuart Little

| 1999–2005

| 3

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Franklin/Waterman Productions and Red Wagon Entertainment

Bats

| 1999–2007

| rowspan="3" | 2

| Columbia/Destination

| rowspan="3" |

Anatomy

| 2000–03

| Columbia

Hollow Man

| 2000–06

| Columbia/Destination

Charlie's Angels

| 2000–19

| rowspan="2" | 3

| Columbia

| co-production with Leonard Goldberg Productions, Flower Films, Tall Trees Productions (all 2000–03), Wonderland Sound and Vision (2003), 2.0 Entertainment, Brownstone Productions and Cantillon Company (all 2019)

Final Fantasy

| 2001–present

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Square Enix

The Glass House

| 2001–06

| 2

| Columbia/Destination

| Co-production with Original Film (2001)

Resident Evil

| 2002–present

| 7

| Screen Gems

| co-production with Constantin Film, Capcom, Davis Films, Impact Pictures and New Legacy Films (2002)

XXX

| 2002–05

| rowspan="3" | 2

| Columbia

| co-production with Original Film, and Revolution Studios

Half Past Dead

| 2002–07

| Screen Gems/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

Daddy Day Care

| 2003–07

| Columbia/TriStar

| co-production with Revolution Studios

Underworld

| 2003–16

| 5

| Screen Gems

| co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment and Sketch Films (2009–16)

S.W.A.T.

| 2003–17

| 3

| Columbia/Destination

| co-production with Original Film

The Grudge

| 2004–present

| rowspan="2" | 4

| Columbia/Screen Gems/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment/Stage 6

| co-production with Ghost House Pictures

The Punisher

| 2004–14

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Releasing International/Sony Pictures Entertainment Japan

| co-production with Marvel Entertainment, Marvel Studios, and Lionsgate

Boogeyman

| 2005–08

| 3

| Screen Gems/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment/Stage 6

| co-production with Ghost House Pictures

Into the Blue

| 2005–09

| 2

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and Mandalay Pictures

Hostel

| 2005–11

| 3

| Screen Gems/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment/Stage 6

| co-production with Lionsgate Films

Jesse Stone

| 2005–15

| 9

| Sony Pictures Television

| co-production with Brandman Productions and TWS Productions II

The Pink Panther

| 2006–09

| 2

| Columbia

| co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

Open Season

| 2006–present

| 4

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Sony Pictures Animation

Robert Langdon

| 2006–16

| 3

| Columbia

| co-production with Imagine Entertainment and Relativity Media

The Messengers

| 2007–09

| rowspan="9" | 2

| Columbia/Screen Gems//Sony Pictures Home Entertainment/Stage 6

Stomp the Yard

| rowspan="2" | 2007–10

| Screen Gems/Stage 6

| co-production with Rainforest Films

30 Days of Night

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment/Stage 6

| co-production with Ghost House Pictures (200710), Dark Horse Entertainment (2007) and RCR Media Group (2010)

Ghost Rider

| 2007–11

| Columbia

| co-production with Marvel Entertainment, Crystal Sky Pictures, Hyde Park Entertainment, Saturn Films, Imagenation Abu Dhabi, and Relativity Media

Surf's Up

| 2007–17

| Columbia/Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with Sony Pictures Animation and WWE Studios

Quarantine

| 2008–11

| Screen Gems

| co-production with Vertigo Entertainment

Paul Blart: Mall Cop

| 2009–15

| rowspan="3" | Columbia

| co-production with Happy Madison Productions

Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs

| 2009–13

| co-production with Sony Pictures Animation

Grown Ups

| 2010–13

| co-production with Happy Madison Productions

Insidious

| rowspan="2" | 2011–present

| 4

| Stage 6/Screen Gems

| co-production with Blumhouse Productions, Atomic Monster, and Universal Pictures

Dragon Tattoo Stories

| 2

| rowspan=4 | Columbia

| co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer

The Smurfs

| 2011–17

| 3

| co-production with Sony Pictures Animation and The K Entertainment Company

Jump Street

| 2012–14

| 2

| co-production with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Relativity Media, and Original Film

Hotel Transylvania

| 2012–22

| 4

| co-production with Sony Pictures Animation

Evil Dead

| 2013

| 1

| TriStar

| co-production with FilmDistrict and Ghost House Pictures (both 2013)

The Equalizer

| 2014–23

| 3

| rowspan=3 | Columbia

| co-production with Escape Artists

Goosebumps

| 2015–18

| rowspan="4" | 2

| co-production with Sony Pictures Animation, Scholastic Productions, Village Roadshow Pictures, and Original Film

Angry Birds

| 2016–19

| co-production with Rovio Animation and Sony Pictures Animation (2019)

Don't Breathe

| 2016–present

| Screen Gems/Stage 6

| co-production with Ghost House Pictures

The Marine

| 2017–18

| Sony Pictures Home Entertainment

| co-production with WWE Studios

Marvel Cinematic Universe

| rowspan="2" | 2017–present

| rowspan="2" | 3

| Columbia

| co-production with Marvel Studios and Pascal Pictures

Sword Art Online

| Sony Pictures

| licensed only, produced by A-1 Pictures and Aniplex

Peter Rabbit

| 2018–21

| rowspan="2" | 2

| Columbia

| co-production with Sony Pictures Animation (2018), Animal Logic, Olive Bridge Entertainment, 2.0 Entertainment, Screen Australia, and Screen NSW

Searching

| 2018–23

| Screen Gems

| co-production with Bazelevs Company

Sony's Spider-Man Universe

| 2018–24

| 6

| rowspan="2" | Columbia

| co-production with Marvel, Arad Productions, Matt Tolmach Productions and Pascal Pictures

Spider-Verse

| rowspan="2" | 2018–present

| 2

| co-production with Sony Pictures Animation, Marvel, and Pascal Pictures

My Hero Academia

| 4

| Sony Pictures

| licensed only, produced by Bones and Toho

Escape Room

| rowspan="2" | 2019–present

| 2

| Columbia

| co-production with Original Film

Rascal Does Not Dream

| rowspan="2" |3

| rowspan="2" |Sony Pictures

| licensed only, produced by Cloverworks and Aniplex

Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba

| 2021–present

PlayStation films

| 2022–present

| 3

| Columbia/Screen Gems

| co-production with PlayStation Productions

Thanksgiving

| 2023–present

| 1

| TriStar

| co-production with Spyglass Media Group, LLC, Dragonfly Entertainment and Electromagnetic Entertainment

28 Days Later

| 2025–present

| 1

| Columbia

| co-production with DNA Films, British Film Institute and Decibel Films (2025–present)

= Highest-grossing films =

{| class="wikitable sortable" style="margin:auto; margin:auto;"

|+Highest-grossing films in North America

Rank

! Title

! Year

! Domestic gross

! Studio label(s)

1

|Spider-Man: No Way Home

| 2021

| $814,108,407

| Columbia/Marvel

2

|Spider-Man

| 2002

| $407,022,860

| rowspan="2" |Columbia

3

|Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle

| 2017

| $404,540,171

4

|Spider-Man: Far From Home

| 2019

| $390,532,085

|Columbia/Marvel

5

| Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

| 2023

| $381,593,754

| rowspan="3" |Columbia

6

|Spider-Man 2

| 2004

| $373,585,825

7

|Spider-Man 3

| 2007

| $336,530,303

8

|Spider-Man: Homecoming

| 2017

| $334,201,140

|Columbia/Marvel

9

|Jumanji: The Next Level

| 2019

| $320,314,960

|Columbia

10

|Skyfall

| 2012

| $304,360,277

|Columbia/MGM

11

|The Amazing Spider-Man

| 2012

| $262,030,663

| rowspan="7" |Columbia

12

|Men in Black

| 1997

| $250,690,539

13

|Ghostbusters

| 1984

| $229,242,989

14

|Hancock

| 2008

| $227,946,274

15

|The Da Vinci Code

| 2006

| $217,536,138

16

|Venom: Let There Be Carnage

| 2021

| $213,550,366

17

|Venom

| 2018

| $213,515,506

18

|Terminator 2: Judgment Day

| 1991

| $204,843,345

|TriStar/Carolco

19

|Bad Boys for Life

| 2020

| $204,292,401

| rowspan="2" |Columbia

20

|The Amazing Spider-Man 2

| 2014

| $202,853,933

21

|Spectre

|2015

| $200,074,609

| Columbia/MGM

22

|Bad Boys: Ride or Die

| 2024

| $193,410,058

| rowspan="4" |Columbia

23

|22 Jump Street

| 2014

| $191,719,337

24

|Men in Black II

| 2002

| $190,418,803

25

|Spider-Man: Into The Spider-Verse

| 2018

| $190,241,310

|

class="wikitable sortable" style="margin:auto; margin:auto;"

|+Highest-grossing films worldwide

RankTitleYearWorldwide grossStudio(s)
1

|Spider-Man: No Way Home

| 2021

| $1,916,306,995

|Columbia/Marvel

2

|Skyfall

| 2012

| $1,142,471,295

|Columbia/MGM

3

|Spider-Man: Far From Home

| 2019

| $1,131,927,996

|Columbia/Marvel

4

|Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle

| 2017

| $962,126,927

| rowspan="2" |Columbia

5

|Spider-Man 3

| 2007

| $894,983,373

6

|Spectre

| 2015

| $880,674,609

|Columbia/MGM

7

|Spider-Man: Homecoming

| 2017

| $880,166,924

|Columbia/Marvel

8

|Venom

| 2018

| $855,013,954

| rowspan="11" |Columbia

9

|Spider-Man

| 2002

| $825,025,036

10

|Jumanji: The Next Level

| 2019

| $800,059,707

11

|2012

| 2009

| $791,217,826

12

|Spider-Man 2

| 2004

| $788,976,453

13

|The Da Vinci Code

| 2006

| $758,239,851

14

|The Amazing Spider-Man

| 2012

| $757,930,663

15

|The Amazing Spider-Man 2

| 2014

| $708,982,323

16

| Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse

| 2023

| $690,897,910

17

|Hancock

| 2008

| $624,386,746

18

|Men in Black 3

| 2012

| $624,026,776

19

|Casino Royale

| 2006

| $606,099,584

| rowspan="2" |Columbia/MGM

20

|Quantum of Solace

| 2008

| $589,580,482

21

|Men in Black

| 1997

| $589,390,539

| rowspan="3" |Columbia

22

|The Smurfs

| 2011

| $563,749,323

23

|Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation

| 2018

| $528,583,774

24

|Terminator 2: Judgment Day

| 1991

| $519,843,345

|TriStar/Carolco

25

|Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba the Movie: Mugen Train

| 2021

| $507,127,293

|Aniplex/Funimation

|}

References

{{Reflist}}