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词条 Imagine Entertainment
释义

  1. Background

  2. History

     Imagine Films Entertainment   Imagine Entertainment  

  3. Feature-film division

     1980s  1990s  2000s  2010s 

  4. Television division

     Television productions 

  5. References

  6. External links

{{More citations needed|date=March 2010}}{{Infobox company
| name = Imagine Entertainment
| logo = Imagine Entertainment logo.svg
| type = Private
| industry = Film
Production company
| predecessor = Imagine Films Entertainment
| foundation = {{Start date and age|1986}}
| founder = Brian Grazer
Ron Howard
| location_city = Beverly Hills, California
| location_country = United States
| area_served = Worldwide
| key_people = Brian Grazer (Chairman)
Ron Howard (Chairman)
Michael Rosenberg (Co-Chairman)
| products = Feature films, TV series
| services =
| revenue =
| operating_income =
| net_income =
| assets =
| equity =
| owner = Brian Grazer
Ron Howard
| num_employees =
| parent =
| divisions = Imagine Television
| subsid = Jax Media
| homepage = {{URL|http://imagine-entertainment.com}}
| footnotes =
}}

Imagine Entertainment (formerly Imagine Films Entertainment and also known simply as Imagine) is an American film and television production company founded in 1986 by director Ron Howard and producer Brian Grazer.

Background

Brian Grazer and Ron Howard met in 1982 on Night Shift, with Howard directing and Grazer co-producing. They followed it up by working on 1984's Splash.[1]

History

Imagine Films Entertainment

Early on, the company sealed a production and distribution deal with Universal Pictures[1] through November 1992 for financing 50% of 30 films. Imagine had an IPO in 1986 at $8 for a package of one share and one warrant. Shares rose to $19.25 before falling in the stock market crash in 1987 to $2.25. A pay television broadcast agreement was made with Showtime.[2]

By May 1992, 48% of the stock was public traded and worth $9.375. The duo agreed to a new six deal with Universal while concurrently offering $9 a share to buy the company's public outstanding share to start a new company with its assets. If not, they planned to leave the company at their contract expiration in November to start the new company anyway. Universal was providing the cash for a buyout of an equity stake in the new company.[2]

Imagine Entertainment

In 2000, the partnership teamed up with 20th Century Fox for development of TV series, an agreement set to expire at the end of 2016.[1] In 2011, the company had three weak box office performers with The Dilemma, Cowboys & Aliens and Tower Heist. Because of their weak financial pact renewal with Universal in January 2012, Imagine laid off 5 employees, including production executive Jeremy Steckler.[3] This also moves Imagine from exclusive to a first look deal. By 2013, Imagine was considering other funding methods for the company's films including crowdfunding for a Friday Night Lights movie.[4]

In November 2013, Michael Rosenberg was promoted to co-chairman followed in December 2013, with Erica Huggins being promoted to his previous position as president.[5] Industry insiders indicated in late January 2016 that a deal with Raine Group was in the works that would have Raine become a partner of the production company while contributing $100 million.[1]

In 2017, Imagine had made a six-picture deal with Warner Bros. and Australian visual effects/animation studio Animal Logic to develop, finance, and produce six animated/live-action films.[6] [7]

In 2018, Imagine acquired a controlling stake in Jax Media.[8]

Feature-film division

The feature-film division has participated in over sixty productions and is associated with Universal Pictures,[9] which has distributed many of Imagine's productions, some with other studios. Erica Huggins was hired as senior vice president of motion picture production and was elevated to executive vice president in 2006, and later to co-president of production in 2010.[5]

1980s

1987
  • Like Father Like Son (With Tri-Star Pictures)
1988
  • Willow (With Lucasfilm Ltd. & Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer)
  • Vibes (With Columbia Pictures)
  • Clean and Sober (With Warner Bros.)
1989
  • The 'Burbs[2] (With Universal Pictures)
  • The Dream Team (With Universal Pictures)
  • Parenthood[1] (With Universal Pictures)

1990s

1990
  • Cry-Baby (With Universal Pictures)
  • Opportunity Knocks (With Universal Pictures)
  • Kindergarten Cop[2] (With Universal Pictures)
  • Problem Child[2] (With Universal Pictures)
1991
  • Backdraft (With Universal Pictures)
  • Closet Land (With Universal Pictures)
  • The Doors (With TriStar Pictures)
  • My Girl (With Columbia Pictures)
  • Problem Child 2 (With Universal Pictures)
1992
  • Boomerang (With Paramount Pictures)
  • Far and Away[2] (With Universal Pictures)
  • HouseSitter (With Universal Pictures)
1993
  • CB4 (With Universal Pictures)
  • Cop and a Half (With Universal Pictures)
  • For Love or Money (With Universal Pictures)
1994
  • Greedy (With Universal Pictures)
  • The Cowboy Way (With Universal Pictures)
  • My Girl 2 (With Columbia Pictures)
  • The Paper (With Universal Pictures)
1995
  • Apollo 13 (With Universal Pictures)
1996
  • The Chamber (With Universal Pictures)
  • Fear (With Universal Pictures)
  • The Nutty Professor[3] (With Universal Pictures)
  • Ransom (With Touchstone Pictures)
  • Sgt. Bilko (With Universal Pictures)
1997
  • Inventing the Abbotts (With 20th Century Fox)
  • Liar Liar (With Universal Pictures)
1998
  • Mercury Rising (With Universal Pictures)
  • Psycho (With Universal Pictures)
1999
  • Bowfinger (With Universal Pictures)
  • EDtv (With Universal Pictures)
  • Life (With Universal Pictures)

2000s

2000
  • The Klumps (With Universal Pictures)
  • How the Grinch Stole Christmas (With Universal Pictures)
2001
  • A Beautiful Mind[1] (With Universal Pictures and DreamWorks)
2002
  • 8 Mile[3] (With Universal Pictures)
  • Blue Crush (With Universal Pictures)
  • Stealing Harvard (With Columbia Pictures and Revolution Studios)
  • Undercover Brother (With Universal Pictures)
2003
  • The Cat in the Hat (With Universal Pictures and DreamWorks)
  • Intolerable Cruelty (With Universal Pictures and Mike Zoss Productions)
  • The Missing (With Columbia Pictures and Revolution Studios)
2004
  • Friday Night Lights[1] (With Universal Pictures)
  • The Alamo (With Touchstone Pictures)
2005
  • Cinderella Man (With Universal Pictures and Miramax Films)
  • Flightplan (With Touchstone Pictures)
  • Fun with Dick and Jane (With Columbia Pictures)
  • Inside Deep Throat (With Universal Pictures)
2006
  • Curious George (With Universal Pictures)
  • The Da Vinci Code[1] (With Columbia Pictures)
  • Inside Man (With Universal Pictures and 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks)
2007
  • American Gangster (With Universal Pictures and Scott Free Productions)
2008
  • Changeling (With Universal Pictures)
  • Frost/Nixon (With Universal Pictures and StudioCanal, Working Title Films, Relativity Media)
2009
  • Angels & Demons (With Columbia Pictures)
  • Follow That Monkey! (With Universal Pictures)

2010s

2010
  • Robin Hood (With Universal Pictures)
2011
  • Take Me Home Tonight (With Relativity Media and Rogue Pictures)
  • The Dilemma[3] (with Universal Pictures and Spyglass Entertainment)
  • Cowboys & Aliens[3] (with Universal Pictures, Paramount Pictures, DreamWorks Pictures and Platinum Studios)
  • Restless (with Sony Pictures Classics and Columbia Pictures)
  • Tower Heist[3] (with Universal Pictures and Relativity Media)
  • J. Edgar (with Warner Bros. Pictures, Malpaso Productions and Wintergreen Productions)
2012
  • Part of Me (with Paramount Pictures, Insurge Pictures and MTV Films)
2013
  • Rush – independently financed[1] (with Universal Pictures, Exclusive Media, Cross Creek Pictures, Revolution Films and Working Title Films)
2014
  • Get on Up (with Universal Pictures)
  • The Good Lie (with Warner Bros, Alcon Entertainment, Black Label Media, and Reliance Entertainment)
2015
  • Back to the Jungle (with Universal 1440 Entertainment)
  • In the Heart of the Sea[1] (with Warner Bros. Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures and Roth Films)
  • Love the Coopers (with CBS Films and Lionsgate)
2016
  • Inferno[1] (with Columbia Pictures)
  • Lowriders[1] (with Universal Pictures)
  • Kindergarten Cop 2[1] (with Universal Pictures, Universal 1440 Entertainment and Where's Arnold Productions)
  • Birth of a Legend[1]
2017
  • The Dark Tower[1] (with Columbia Pictures, Media Rights Capital and Weed Road Pictures)
  • American Made[1] (with Universal Pictures and Cross Creek Pictures)
2018
  • A Star Wars Story (with Lucasfilm)[10]
  • The Spy Who Dumped Me (with Lionsgate Films)[11]
TBA
  • Splash remake (with Free Association and Walt Disney Pictures)

Television division

Its television division, Imagine Television has participated in at least twenty productions and is associated with 20th Century Fox Television.

Television productions

Year(s)TitleNetwork/ChannelNotes
1986–1987Gung Ho
ABC
with Paramount Television and Four Way Productions
1987–1988 Ohara with Warner Bros. Television and M'ass Production
1987Take Five
CBS
with TriStar Television and Empire City Presentations
1989Knight & Daye
NBC
1990–1991Parenthood
My Talk Show
Syndication
with Second City Entertainment and MCA TV
1997–1998 Hiller and Diller
ABC
with Touchstone Television
1998 From the Earth to the Moon
HBO
1998–2000 Sports Night
ABC
with Touchstone Television
1998–2002 Felicity
The WB
1999–2001 The PJs
FOX/The WB
with The Murphy Company, Will Vinton Studios, and Touchstone Television
2000 Wonderland
ABC/The 101 Network
with Touchstone Television
Rat Bastard
UPN
Pilot
2001 The Beast
ABC
with Touchstone Television
2001–10 24[1]
FOX
with Real Time Productions, Teakwood Lane Productions, and 20th Century Fox Television
2003 Miss Match
NBC
with Darren Star Productions and 20th Century Fox Television
2003–06
2013–present
Arrested Development[4]
FOX/Netflix
with The Hurwitz Company and 20th Century Fox Television
2004 The Big House
ABC
with 20th Century Fox Television
2004–05 Quintuplets
FOX
with Mark Reisman Productions and 20th Century Fox Television
2005 The Inside with Reamworks and 20th Century Fox Television
2006 Saved
TNT
with Sarabande Productions and Fox 21
2006–2015 Curious George
PBS Kids
with WGBH-TV and Universal Animation Studios
2006 Treasure Hunters
NBC
with Magical Elves, Inc. and Madison Road Entertainment
2006–08 Shark
CBS
with Deforestation Services and 20th Century Fox Television
2006–11 Friday Night Lights[4]
NBC
with Film 44 and Universal Media Studios
2008 Redemption
FOX
with Teakwood Lane Productions and 20th Century Fox Television
2009–11 Lie to Me with Pagoda Pictures, Samuel Baum Productions, MiddKid Productions, and 20th Century Fox Television
2010–15 Parenthood
NBC
with True Jack Productions, Universal Media Studios, and Universal Television
2011 Friends with Benefits with Big Kid Pictures, Pickle Films, and 20th Century Fox Television
The Playboy Club with Alta Loma Entertainment, Storyland Entertainment, and 20th Century Fox Television
2012 The 84th Academy Awards[12]
ABC
with The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
The Great Escape
TNT
with Profiles Television Productions, The Hochberg Ebersol Company, and Fox Television Studios
2013 How to Live with Your Parents (For the Rest of Your Life)
ABC
with Hot Lava Girl Productions and 20th Century Fox Television
2014 Those Who Kill
A&E/Lifetime Movie Network
with One Two One Three Pictures, Miso Film, and Fox 21
24: Live Another Day
FOX
with Teakwood Lane Productions and 20th Century Fox Television
Gang Related with Chris Morgan Productions, Skeeter Rosenbaum Productions, and 20th Century Fox Television
2015–present Empire[1] with Lee Daniels Entertainment, Danny Strong Productions, Little Chicken Inc., and 20th Century Fox Television
2015 The Bastard Executioner
FX
with Sutter Ink, FX Productions, and Fox 21 Television Studios
2017 Legacy
FOX
with Coto/Katz Productions, Teakwood Lane Productions and 20th Century Fox Television[13]
Shots Fired with Undisputed Cinema and 20th Century Fox Television
2017–present Genius
National Geographic Channel
with Paperboy Productions, OddLot Entertainment, EUE/Sokolow and Fox 21 Television Studios
TBA Untitled Music Comedy[14]
Amazon Instant Video
with Amazon Studios
Problem Child[15]
NBC
with STX Entertainment and NBCUniversal
Why Women Kill[16]
CBS All Access
with CBS Television Studios

References

1. ^10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 {{cite news|last1=Rainey|first1=James|title=Raine Group to Invest $100 Million-Plus in Imagine, Partners Eye Expansion|url=https://variety.com/2016/film/news/raine-group-imagine-entertainment-investment-1201690159/|accessdate=January 29, 2016|work=Variety|date=January 28, 2016}}
2. ^{{cite news |last1= Fabrikant|first1=Geraldine|title=COMPANY NEWS; Chiefs of Imagine Films Seek to Take It Private|url=https://www.nytimes.com/1992/05/19/business/company-news-chiefs-of-imagine-films-seek-to-take-it-private.html|accessdate=January 29, 2016|work=New York Times|date=May 19, 1992}}
3. ^{{cite news|last1=THR Staff|title=Imagine Entertainment Lays Off Staff|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/imagine-entertainment-lays-staff-281325|accessdate=January 29, 2016|work=Hollywood Reporter|date=January 12, 2012}}
4. ^{{cite news|last1=Fleming Jr|first1=Mike|title=Cannes: Brian Grazer, Ron Howard Introduce Imagine 2.0; A Pele Pic On The Croisette, A Crowd-Funded ‘Friday Night Lights’, ‘Dark Tower’, Jay-Z And One Angry White Whale|url=http://deadline.com/2013/05/cannes-brian-grazer-ron-howard-introduce-imagine-2-0-a-pele-pic-on-the-croisette-a-crowd-funded-friday-night-lights-dark-tower-jay-z-and-one-angry-white-whale-500046/|accessdate=January 29, 2016|website=Deadline Hollywood|publisher=Penske Business Media|date=May 16, 2013}}
5. ^{{cite news|last1=McNary|first1=Dave|title=Ron Howard, Brian Grazer Promote Erica Huggins to President of Imagine|url=https://variety.com/2013/film/news/ron-howard-brian-grazer-promote-erica-huggins-to-president-of-imagine-1200937744/|accessdate=January 29, 2016|work=Variety|date=December 9, 2013 }}
6. ^{{cite news|url=http://www.cartoonbrew.com/feature-film/ron-howards-imagine-entertainment-teams-animal-logic-6-animated-features-150056.html|title=Ron Howard’s Imagine Entertainment Teams Up With Animal Logic for 6 Animated Features|author=Amid Amidi|date=April 5, 2017|accessdate=April 17, 2017}}
7. ^https://deadline.com/2018/05/warner-bros-imagine-entertainment-animal-logic-animated-hybrid-family-films-five-year-deal-1202395795/
8. ^{{cite web|last1=Andreeva|first1=Nellie|title=Imagine Entertainment Takes Controlling Interest In Comedy Series Producer Jax Media|url=http://deadline.com/2018/02/imagine-entertainment-scripted-comedy-jax-media-investment-1202296753/|website=Deadline|accessdate=17 May 2018|date=20 February 2018}}
9. ^{{cite web|url=http://biz.yahoo.com/ic/106/106004.html|title=Imagine Entertainment Company Profile – Yahoo! Finance|publisher=Biz.yahoo.com|date=|accessdate=2011-05-17}}
10. ^https://imagine-entertainment.com/film/solo-a-star-wars-story/
11. ^{{cite web|author=Rebecca Ford|author2=Borys Kit|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/kate-mckinnon-talks-star-action-comedy-spy-who-dumped-me-986783|title=Kate McKinnon, Mila Kunis in Talks to Star in Action-Comedy 'The Spy Who Dumped Me'|website=hollywoodreporter.com|accessdate=17 March 2017}}
12. ^https://imagine-entertainment.com/television/84th-academy-awards/
13. ^{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2016/02/24-legacy-teddy-sears-cast-fox-pilot-1201707798/|title=‘24: Legacy’: Teddy Sears Cast As Head Of CTU In Fox Pilot|last=Andreeva|first=Nellie|website=Deadline Hollywood|date=2016-02-23|accessdate=2017-02-13}}
14. ^{{cite web|url=http://deadline.com/2017/05/danny-devito-jeff-goldblum-star-amazon-comedy-series-imagine-1202082939/|title=Danny DeVito & Jeff Goldblum To Star In Amazon Comedy Series From Imagine TV|last=Andreeva|first=Nellie|website=Deadline Hollywood|date=2017-05-03|accessdate=2017-05-03}}
15. ^{{cite news|author=Nellie Andreeva|url=https://deadline.com/2015/01/problem-child-comedy-pilot-order-nbc-1201362692/|title=‘Problem Child’ Comedy Based On Movie Gets NBC Pilot Order|website=Deadline Hollywood|date=January 29, 2015|accessdate=February 23, 2018}}
16. ^{{cite news|author=Nellie Andreeva|url=https://deadline.com/2018/09/cbs-all-access-orders-infidelity-dramedy-series-why-women-kill-from-marc-cherry-imagine-tv-studios-1202470030/|title=CBS All Access Orders Infidelity Dramedy Series ‘Why Women Kill’ From Marc Cherry, Imagine TV & CBS TV Studios|website=Deadline Hollywood|date=September 24, 2018|accessdate=March 9, 2019}}

External links

  • {{official|imagine-entertainment.com}}
  • {{imdb company|0003687}}
  • {{imdb company|0310123|Imagine Films Entertainment}}
  • {{imdb company|0006166|Imagine Television}}
{{CinemaoftheUS}}{{Film Studio}}

5 : Film production companies of the United States|Entertainment companies based in California|Companies based in Beverly Hills, California|Entertainment companies established in 1986|1986 establishments in California

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