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The following is a list of feature films produced and distributed by the American studio Columbia Pictures between 1960 and 1969. During the decade Columbia was transformed from a traditional studio into a corporation. [1] An increasing number of international films were released, including a number produced by its British subsidiary.
List of Columbia Pictures films (1922–1939) List of Columbia Pictures films (1940–1949) List of Columbia Pictures films (1950–1959) List of Columbia Pictures films (1960–1969) List of Columbia Pictures films (1970–1979) List of Columbia Pictures films (1980–1989) List of Columbia Pictures films (1990–1999)
The following is a list of feature films produced and distributed by the American studio Columbia Pictures from 1950 until 1959. While the company continued to make many of its films in-house, it increasingly also released films made by independent producers .
Distributed outside of the U.S. by Sony Pictures Television: Little America: 2020–2022: Apple TV+: co-production with Alan Yang Productions, Quantity Entertainment and Epic Indebted: 2020: NBC: co-production with Sony Pictures Television Studios, Screaming Elliot Productions and Doug Robinson Productions Duncanville: 2020–2022: Fox
Columbia Pictures Industries, Inc., doing business as Columbia Pictures, is an American film production and distribution company that is the flagship unit of the Sony Pictures Motion Picture Group, [2] a division of Sony Entertainment's Sony Pictures, which is one of the "Big Five" film studios and a subsidiary of the multinational conglomerate Sony Group Corporation.
SGN was the first broadcast-based service airing classic shows from the Columbia Pictures Television vault, airing shows with a resource base of 58,000 episodes of 350 television series from the 1950s to 1980s, included were shows created by Columbia Pictures Television, Tandem Productions, and ELP Communications. [1]
In 1975, Carl Reiner joined Columbia Pictures Television to serve as executive producer and host of the show Good Heavens, which was for the ABC television network. [5] Also, on July 1, 1975, former NBC vice president Larry White had set up his own production company Larry White Productions with a deal at Columbia Pictures Television. [6]
) is a package of 52 pre-1948 classic horror films from Universal Studios released for television syndication in October 1957 by Screen Gems, the television subsidiary of Columbia Pictures. The Shock Theater package included Dracula, Frankenstein, The Mummy, The Invisible Man and The Wolf Man as well as a few non-horror spy and mystery films.