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This is a list of television series and films based on properties of Image Comics.This list includes live action and animated television series and films. For some of the television series and films below, Image Comics did not begin publishing the associated comic book until after the television series or film had been released.
Release date Title Notes May 31, 2013: After Earth: co-production with Overbrook Entertainment and Blinding Edge Pictures: June 12, 2013: This Is the End: co-production with Point Grey Pictures and Mandate Pictures: June 28, 2013: White House Down: co-production with Mythology Entertainment and Centropolis Entertainment: July 12, 2013: Grown Ups 2
Opening Title Production company Cast and crew Ref. J A N U A R Y 4: A Dark Truth: Magnolia Pictures: Damian Lee (director/screenwriter); Andy García, Kim Coates, Deborah Kara Unger, Alec Rayme, David Anders, Henry Kingi, Eva Longoria, Forest Whitaker, Devon Bostick, Steven Bauer, Al Sapienza, Kevin Durand, Jim Calarco, Millie Davis
OK!TV [281] September 11 Thieves Inc. Food Network [282] Too Young To Marry? Oxygen [66] September 15 The Great Santini Brothers: History Channel [283] September 16 The Lisa Oz Show: Veria Living TV Sleepy Hollow: Fox [284] September 17 Dads [284] Brooklyn Nine-Nine: The New Atlanta: Bravo [285] I Dream of NeNe: The Wedding [286] September 21 ...
6. Crazy, Stupid, Love (2011). Cast: Steve Carell, Ryan Gosling, Julianne Moore, Emma Stone Rating: PG-13 Directors: Glenn Ficarra and John Requa Run time: 118 minutes Carell is Cal Weaver, a ...
This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:2013 films. It includes 2013 films that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Television films released in the year 2013
The film was originally scheduled to be released on May 15, 2015, [52] [53] but on August 12, 2014, the release date was pushed to July 24, 2015. [54] In the United States and Canada, it was released in the Dolby Vision format in Dolby Cinema, the first film from Sony to be released in that format. [55] Pixels has a runtime of 106 minutes. [56]
The 2013 crop comprises an unplanned, if not accidental, collective declaration of the essence of the cinema, an art of images and sounds that, at their best, don't exist to tell a story or to tantalize the audience (though they may well do so) but, rather, to reflect a crisis in the life of the filmmaker and the state of the artist's mind or ...