Atlantic Entertainment Group
Atlantic Entertainment Group (also known as Atlantic Releasing Corporation) was an independent film production and distribution company founded by Tom Coleman and Michael Rosenblatt in 1974.
Founded | 1974 |
---|---|
Defunct | 1989 |
Fate | Acquired by Island Pictures |
Successor | Studio: Island Pictures (1989–1998) Library: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer[lower-alpha 1] |
Headquarters | United States |
Parent | Crédit Lyonnais |
Subsidiaries | Clubhouse Pictures |
History
Their initial releases were mostly geared to arthouse audiences, with an especially large number of Australian productions, as well as two Brazilian productions, Eu Te Amo (1981) and Lady on the Bus (1978), that introduced American audiences to actress Sonia Braga. They shifted their focus to small-budgeted independent films in the early 1980s, beginning with the surprise success of Valley Girl (1983), directed by Martha Coolidge. Night of the Comet, released in 1984, would be their first film to open on over 1000 screens.
By 1984, the company had signed an agreement with CBS/Fox Video, whereas a "conceptual partnership" that launched the Atlantic Video label, and among of the launch titles set up by Atlantic Video were Alphabet City, Roadhouse 66, Night of the Comet and Vamping. Atlantic International was also launched and license overseas rights to various films territory by territory.[1]
In 1985, they began a relationship with Paramount Pictures whereby the studio provided them money for larger-scale theatrical releases in exchange for home video and television rights to their films.[2] The company made its big break with the success of Teen Wolf, which then spawned a franchise that year.[3] In 1985, Atlantic Releasing Corporation started the Clubhouse Pictures label, which was designed to release films for a family audience, which set up the Clubhouse Pictures Family Network of theaters.[4]
On July 30, 1986, Jonathan Dana was hired by Atlantic Entertainment Group to supervise all Atlantic activities, via divisions Atlantic Releasing Corporation, Atlantic Television, Clubhouse Pictures and Atlantic International, and decided to "systemize" the top management to accommodate its growth to be a mini-major film studio.[5]
In November 1987, Atlantic Entertainment teamed up with Zenith Productions for a $20 million, three-picture agreement, following the success of Wish You Were Here, which the two companies ever formed a relationship that the relationship was more subtle than a 50/50 agreement, but essentially was an equal partnership, and the two companies would hold proportionate equity in all three pictures worldwide and the first wave of pictures was a production called Patty, as well as For Queen and Country and The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, a co-production between the Czech and the U.S., and Atlantic would handle worldwide rights for the former, and had North American rights to the latter two, and foreign sales would be handled by Zenith's Sales Company.[6]
In January 1989, Atlantic made a new deal with Kartes Video Communications for home video rights to the movies previously covered in the Paramount deal. The library was bought by Island Pictures, which took over soliciting the films to home video. Island themselves suffered financial losses soon after and was absorbed into PolyGram Filmed Entertainment in 1998.[7] That same year, when PolyGram themselves were acquired by Seagram (parent company of Universal Studios, Seagram sold PolyGram's pre-1996 library to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in October 1998.[8]
For a number of years, Paramount Pictures had television and video distribution rights to Atlantic's library, some from their previous deal with the company, and others inherited when Viacom, who had purchased television rights to many earlier Atlantic releases, merged with Paramount. MGM now owns most of the library as a result of purchasing the pre-1996 portion of PolyGram's library.[9][10]
Filmography
Some of the company's most notable films include:
- Caddie (1976)
- In Search of Bigfoot (1976)
- Max Havelaar (1976)
- Something to Hide (1976)
- Bonjour Amour (1977)
- The Day the Music Died (1977)
- Madame Rosa (1977)
- Lady on the Bus (1978)
- Boarding School (1978)
- The Getting of Wisdom (1978)
- The Hound of the Baskervilles (1978)
- The Irishman (1978)
- The Odd Job (1978)
- Once in Paris... (1978)
- Bahia (1979)
- Boardwalk (1979)
- Womanlight (1979)
- The Attic (1980)
- Below the Belt (1980)
- I Sent a Letter to My Love (1980)
- Rude Boy (1980)
- Eu Te Amo (1981)
- Montenegro (1981)
- Peter-No-Tail (1981)
- Aphrodite (1982)
- Breach of Contract (1982)
- By Design (1982)
- The Loveless (1982)
- Norman Loves Rose (1982)
- Smash Palace (1982)
- Waltz Across Texas (1982)
- Valley Girl (1983)
- The Smurfs and the Magic Flute (1983)
- Kamla (1984)
- Talk to Me (1984)
- Alphabet City (1984)
- Vamping (1984)
- 1984 (1984)
- City Limits (1984)
- Night of the Comet (1984)
- Roadhouse 66 (1985)
- He-Man and She-Ra: The Secret of the Sword (1985)
- Here Come the Littles (1985)
- Starchaser: The Legend of Orin (1985)
- Teen Wolf (1985)
- Water (1985, produced by Handmade Films)
- Peter-No-Tail in Americat (1985)
- Echo Park (1986)
- Extremities (1986)
- The Fringe Dwellers (1986)
- The Men's Club (1986)
- Modern Girls (1986)
- Nomads (1986)
- Nutcracker: The Motion Picture (1986)
- Stephen King's World of Horror (1986) (TV)
- Stoogemania (1986)
Release Date | Title |
---|---|
January 29, 1975 | He Is My Brother |
July 18, 1977 | The Murri Affair |
April 17, 1987 | Wild Thing |
May 8, 1987 | Steele Justice |
May 14, 1987 | The Umbrella Woman |
May 29, 1987 | Summer Heat |
July 24, 1987 | Wish You Were Here |
August 21, 1987 | The Garbage Pail Kids Movie |
November 20, 1987 | Teen Wolf Too |
December 4, 1987 | Home Is Where the Hart Is |
January 8, 1988 | Cop |
February 12, 1988 | A Tiger's Tale |
March 18, 1988 | Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw |
April 22, 1988 | Stormy Monday |
June 17, 1988 | A World Apart |
August 11, 1988 | A Summer Story |
September 23, 1988 | Patty Hearst |
November 18, 1988 | 1969 |
May 19, 1989 | For Queen and Country |
July 9, 1989 | A Soldier's Tale |
Clubhouse Pictures
The company also had a division called "Clubhouse Pictures" to release family films; theaters screening these titles participated in the "Clubhouse Family Network".[11] Films and television series released under this label include:
- The Adventures of Mark Twain (March 1, 1985)
- Hey There, It's Yogi Bear! (January 17, 1986) (reissue of the 1964 film)
- Heathcliff: The Movie (January 17, 1986)
- The Adventures of the American Rabbit (February 14, 1986)
- GoBots: Battle of the Rock Lords (March 21, 1986)
- Teen Wolf (September 13, 1986 – December 6, 1986) (later produced by Atlantic/Kushner-Locke)
Notes
- Copyright is owned by Orion Pictures.
References
- Bierbaum, Tom (1984-04-11). "Atlantic Home Video Label Formed Via 'Partnership' With CBS/Fox". Variety. p. 32.
- "...newsline..." (PDF). Billboard. 1985-05-04. p. 30. Retrieved 2021-12-30.
- Variety. 1985-08-28.
{{cite news}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - Cohn, Lawrence (1985-11-13). "Atlantic corralling kidpic exhib web". Variety. p. 3.
- Bierbaum, Tom (1986-07-30). "Atlantic Taps Dana To Head Up New Pic, TV Division". Variety. p. 5.
- "Atlantic Entertainment Cements 3-Pic, $20-Mil Zenith Coventure". Variety. 1987-11-04. p. 27.
- Polygram shutters Island Pictures — Variety
- MGM Agrees to Acquire PolyGram Movie Library - Los Angeles Times
- Eller, Claudia (23 October 1998). "MGM Agrees to Acquire PolyGram Movie Library". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
- Kroon, Richard W. (2014). A/V A to Z: An Encyclopedic Dictionary of Media, Entertainment and Other Audiovisual Terms. McFarland. ISBN 9780786457403.
- Lyman, Rick (1986-01-17). "At Last, Movies for the Whole Family". The Philadelphia Inquirer. p. E.16. Retrieved 2023-01-26 – via ProQuest.
- Bohar, Jay; Sentinel Movie Critic (1986-01-17). "A RALLY FOR G RATINGS CLUBHOUSE GETSBANDWAGON ROLLING FOR FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT". Orlando Sentinel. Retrieved 2023-01-26.