List of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer films (2000–2009)
The following is a list of films originally produced and/or distributed theatrically by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and released in the 2000s.
2000
2001
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
January 12, 2001
|
Antitrust
|
distribution in English-speaking territories, Latin America and Asia only; co-production with Hyde Park Entertainment and Industry Entertainment
|
February 9, 2001
|
Hannibal
|
North American distribution only; co-production with Universal Pictures, Scott Free Productions and Dino De Laurentiis Company
|
March 23, 2001
|
Heartbreakers
|
North American distribution only; co-production with Davis Entertainment and Winchester Films
|
April 11, 2001
|
Josie and the Pussycats
|
international distribution only; co-production with Universal Pictures, Marc Platt Productions and Riverdale Productions
|
June 1, 2001
|
What's the Worst That Could Happen?
|
co-production with Turman/Morrisey Productions and Hyde Park Entertainment
|
July 13, 2001
|
Legally Blonde
|
co-production with Marc Platt Productions and Type A Films
|
August 3, 2001
|
Original Sin
|
distribution in North and Latin America, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Asia only; co-production with Hyde Park Entertainment, Via Rosa Productions, Di Novi Pictures, Intermedia and UGC International
|
October 12, 2001
|
Bandits
|
distribution in North and Latin America, the U.K., Ireland, Australia, New Zealand and Asia only; co-production with Hyde Park Entertainment, Empire Pictures, Lotus Pictures, Baltimore/Spring Creek Pictures and Cheyenne Enterprises
|
2002
2003
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
January 17, 2003
|
A Guy Thing
|
co-production with David Ladd Films
|
March 14, 2003
|
Agent Cody Banks
|
co-production with Splendid Pictures, Maverick Films and Dylan Sellers Productions
|
April 16, 2003
|
Bulletproof Monk
|
North American and French distribution only;[1] co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment, Mosaic Media Group and Lion Rock Productions
|
April 25, 2003
|
It Runs in the Family
|
North American distribution only; co-production with Buena Vista International and Further Films
|
July 2, 2003
|
Legally Blonde 2: Red, White & Blonde
|
co-production with Marc Platt Productions and Type A Films
|
August 15, 2003
|
Uptown Girls
|
co-production with GreeneStreet Films
|
October 3, 2003
|
Out of Time
|
co-production with Original Film and Monarch Pictures
|
October 10, 2003
|
Good Boy!
|
co-production with Jim Henson Pictures
|
2004
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
February 6, 2004
|
Barbershop 2: Back in Business
|
co-production with State Street Pictures and Cube Vision
|
March 12, 2004
|
Agent Cody Banks 2: Destination London
|
co-production with Splendid Pictures, Maverick Films and Dylan Sellers Productions
|
April 2, 2004
|
Walking Tall
|
co-production with Hyde Park Entertainment, Mandeville Films, Burke/Samples/Foster Productions and WWE Films
|
May 28, 2004
|
Soul Plane
|
|
July 2, 2004
|
De-Lovely
|
|
July 9, 2004
|
Sleepover
|
co-production with Landscape Entertainment and Woodstock Productions
|
September 3, 2004
|
Wicker Park
|
North American, Australian, New Zealand and French home media distribution only;[2][3] co-production with Lakeshore Entertainment
|
2005
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
February 4, 2005
|
Swimming Upstream
|
distribution only; produced by Crusader Entertainment
|
February 18, 2005
|
Bigger Than the Sky
|
co-production with Neverland Films and Coquette Productions
|
March 4, 2005
|
Be Cool
|
co-production with Jersey Films and Double Feature Films
|
March 30, 2005
|
Beauty Shop
|
co-production with State Street Pictures, Mandeville Films and Flavor Unit Films
|
April 15, 2005
|
The Amityville Horror
|
distribution in North America, the U.K., Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, France, Germany, Austria and Japan only; co-production with Dimension Films, Platinum Dunes and Radar Pictures
|
May 6, 2005
|
Jiminy Glick in Lalawood
|
U.S. distribution only; produced by Gold Circle Films
|
August 26, 2005
|
The Brothers Grimm
|
studio credit and U.S. television distribution only; co-production with Dimension Films, Mosaic Media Group and Atlas Entertainment; distributed by Miramax Films
|
September 30, 2005
|
Into the Blue
|
co-production with Columbia Pictures and Mandalay Pictures; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing[notes 1]
|
November 23, 2005
|
Yours, Mine and Ours
|
international distribution only; co-production with Paramount Pictures, Columbia Pictures, Nickelodeon Movies and Robert Simonds Productions
|
2006
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
January 27, 2006
|
Nanny McPhee
|
studio credit only; produced by Universal Pictures, StudioCanal, Working Title Films and Three Strange Angels; distributed by Universal Pictures
|
February 10, 2006
|
The Pink Panther
|
co-production with Columbia Pictures and Robert Simonds Productions; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing[notes 1]
|
March 31, 2006
|
Basic Instinct 2
|
North American distribution only; co-production with C2 Pictures, Intermedia Films and Kanzaman Productions[notes 2]
|
April 7, 2006
|
Lucky Number Slevin
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Ascendant Pictures, Capitol Films and FilmEngine[notes 3]
|
July 21, 2006
|
Clerks II
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and View Askew Productions[notes 3]
|
August 18, 2006
|
Material Girls
|
North American distribution only; produced by Maverick Films, Rafter H Entertainment, Patriot Pictures, Milton Kim Productions, Concept Entertainment and Arclight Films
|
September 22, 2006
|
Flyboys
|
North American, German and Italian distribution only; produced by Electric Entertainment, Skydance Productions and Ingenious Film Partners[notes 4]
|
September 29, 2006
|
School for Scoundrels
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Dimension Films and Media Talent Group[notes 3]
|
October 6, 2006
|
Alex Rider: Operation Stormbreaker
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Isle of Man Film, Capitol Films, Entertainment Film Distributors and UK Film Council[notes 3]
|
November 10, 2006
|
Copying Beethoven
|
U.S. and U.K. distribution only; produced by Sidney Kimmel Entertainment
|
Harsh Times
|
U.S. theatrical and television distribution only; produced by Bauer Martinez Entertainment and Crave Films
|
November 17, 2006
|
Casino Royale
|
co-production with Columbia Pictures and Eon Productions; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing[notes 1]
|
November 23, 2006
|
Bobby
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and Bold Films[notes 3]
|
December 1, 2006
|
Van Wilder: The Rise of Taj
|
U.S. distribution only; produced by Bauer Martinez Entertainment, Tapestry Films and Myriad Pictures
|
December 3, 2006
|
Miss Potter
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Phoenix Pictures, Summit Entertainment, BBC Films and Isle of Man Film[notes 3]
|
December 15, 2006
|
Home of the Brave
|
North American distribution only; produced by Millennium Films
|
December 20, 2006
|
Rocky Balboa
|
distribution outside Scandinavia, Portugal and Israel only; co-production with Columbia Pictures, Revolution Studios and Chartoff/Winkler Productions
|
December 25, 2006
|
Black Christmas
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Dimension Films, 2929 Entertainment, Hard Eight Pictures, Hoban Segal Productions, Movie Central and Corus Entertainment[notes 3]
|
December 29, 2006
|
Factory Girl
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and Myriad Pictures[notes 3]
|
2007
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
January 12, 2007
|
Arthur and the Invisibles
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, EuropaCorp, Avalanche Productions, Metro Voices and Canal+[notes 5]
|
January 26, 2007
|
Blood and Chocolate
|
North American distribution only; produced by Lakeshore Entertainment and Berrick Filmproduktion
|
February 9, 2007
|
Breaking and Entering
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Miramax Films and Mirage Enterprises[notes 3]
|
Hannibal Rising
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Dino De Laurentiis Company, Carthago Films, Zephyr Films, Etic Films and Quinta Communications[notes 3]
|
March 2, 2007
|
Two Weeks
|
distribution only; produced by Custom Productions
|
March 16, 2007
|
Premonition
|
co-production with TriStar Pictures, Hyde Park Entertainment and Offspring Entertainment; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing[notes 6]
|
May 4, 2007
|
The Flying Scotsman
|
North American distribution only; produced by ContentFilm International, Freewheel International, Scion Films, DMC Entertainment and Zero West Films
|
May 11, 2007
|
The Ex
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and 2929 Entertainment[notes 3]
|
June 1, 2007
|
Mr. Brooks
|
U.S. distribution only; produced by Element Films, Relativity Media, Eden Rock Media and Tig Productions
|
June 22, 2007
|
1408
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by Dimension Films, Di Bonaventura Pictures and The Weinstein Company[notes 3]
|
July 4, 2007
|
Rescue Dawn
|
North American distribution only; produced by Top Gun Productions, Thema Productions and Gibraltar Films
|
July 27, 2007
|
Who's Your Caddy?
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Dimension Films and Our Stories Films[notes 3]
|
August 17, 2007
|
Death at a Funeral
|
North American distribution only; produced by Sidney Kimmel Entertainment, Parabolic Pictures and Stable Way Entertainment
|
August 24, 2007
|
The Nanny Diaries
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and FilmColony[notes 3]
|
August 31, 2007
|
Halloween
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Dimension Films, Nightfall Productions and Trancas International[notes 3]
|
September 14, 2007
|
The Hunting Party
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Intermedia Films and QED International[notes 3]
|
September 28, 2007
|
Feast of Love
|
North American distribution only; produced by Lakeshore Entertainment, GreeneStreet Films and Revelations Entertainment
|
October 12, 2007
|
Lars and the Real Girl
|
U.S. and select international distribution only; produced by Sidney Kimmel Entertainment
|
October 26, 2007
|
Music Within
|
North American distribution only; produced by Articulus Entertainment and Quorum Entertainment
|
November 9, 2007
|
Lions for Lambs
|
co-production with United Artists, Wildwood Enterprises, Brat Na Pont and Andell Entertainment
|
November 21, 2007
|
The Mist
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Dimension Films and Darkwoods Productions[notes 3]
|
November 30, 2007
|
Awake
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and GreeneStreet Films[notes 3]
|
December 25, 2007
|
The Great Debaters
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company[notes 3]
|
2008
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
February 22, 2008
|
Charlie Bartlett
|
U.S. and U.K. distribution only; produced by Sidney Kimmel Entertainment, Everyman Pictures, Texon Entertainment and Permut Presentations
|
March 28, 2008
|
Superhero Movie
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and Dimension Films[notes 3]
|
April 18, 2008
|
Pathology
|
U.S. distribution only; produced by Lakeshore Entertainment and Camelot Pictures
|
April 25, 2008
|
Deal
|
North American distribution only; produced by Seven Arts Pictures and Tag Entertainment
|
August 15, 2008
|
Vicky Cristina Barcelona
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Wild Bunch and Gravier Productions[notes 7]
|
August 22, 2008
|
The Longshots
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company and Dimension Films[notes 3]
|
August 29, 2008
|
College
|
North American distribution only; produced by Element Films and Lift Productions
|
September 19, 2008
|
Igor
|
U.S. distribution only; produced by Exodus Film Group and Sparx Animation Studios
|
October 3, 2008
|
How to Lose Friends & Alienate People
|
North American distribution only; produced by Pi Pictures, Intandem Films, Film4 Productions, Aramid Entertainment and Lipsync Productions
|
October 31, 2008
|
The Other End of the Line
|
North American distribution only; produced by Hyde Park Entertainment and Adlabs Films
|
November 7, 2008
|
Soul Men
|
U.S. theatrical distribution only; produced by The Weinstein Company, Dimension Films and Friendly Films[notes 3]
|
November 14, 2008
|
Quantum of Solace
|
co-production with Columbia Pictures and Eon Productions; distributed by Sony Pictures Releasing[notes 1]
|
December 25, 2008
|
Valkyrie
|
co-production with United Artists, Bad Hat Harry Productions, Cruise/Wagner Productions and Studio Babelsberg Motion Pictures
|
2009
Notes
References
See also
|