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This is a list of films produced by Embassy Pictures, an American independent film production and distribution studio.
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
February 17, 1960 |
Jack the Ripper |
distributed by Paramount Pictures
|
July 13, 1960 |
Hercules Unchained |
distributed by Warner Bros.
|
May 9, 1961 |
Two Women |
North American distribution only
|
May 28, 1961 |
David and Goliath |
|
August 10, 1961 |
The Thief of Baghdad |
Co-production with Titanus and Lux Compagnie Cinématographique de France, distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|
November 17, 1961 |
Morgan, the Pirate |
Distributed by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
|
December 13, 1961 |
The Wonders of Aladdin
|
July 16, 1962 |
Strangers in the City |
|
October 10, 1962 |
Long Day's Journey Into Night |
|
January 23, 1963 |
The Last Days of Sodom and Gomorrah |
distributed by 20th Century Fox
|
1964 |
Goliath and the Rebel Slave |
|
March 10, 1964 |
The Empty Canvas |
co-production with Paramount Pictures
|
April 9, 1964 |
The Carpetbaggers |
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
|
August 12, 1964 |
A House Is Not a Home |
|
November 2, 1964 |
Where Love Has Gone |
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
|
November 14, 1964 |
Santa Claus Conquers the Martians |
|
December 18, 1964 |
Contempt |
|
June 23, 1965 |
Harlow |
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
|
June 30, 1965 |
Requiem for a Gunfighter |
|
July 31, 1965 |
The Bounty Killer |
|
October 20, 1965 |
Village of the Giants |
|
October 1965 |
Git! |
|
November 5, 1965 |
Country Music on Broadway |
|
November 14, 1965 |
The Little Nuns |
US distribution only; Hesperia Cinematografica (Italy)
|
The Second Best Secret Agent in the Whole Wide World |
US distribution only; Alistair Films (UK)
|
December 20, 1965 |
The 10th Victim |
US distribution only; Italo-French co-production
|
March 4, 1966 |
The Oscar |
|
April 10, 1966 |
Jesse James Meets Frankenstein's Daughter |
|
John F. Kennedy: Years of Lightning, Day of Drums |
|
Billy the Kid Versus Dracula |
|
June 1966 |
The Cat |
|
An Eye for an Eye |
|
June 22, 1966 |
The Daydreamer |
co-production with Rankin/Bass Productions
|
August 3, 1966 |
A Man Called Adam |
|
August 10, 1966 |
The Idol |
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
|
September 1966 |
Jack Frost |
US distribution only; produced by Gorky Film Studio
|
November 2, 1966 |
Picture Mommy Dead |
|
March 8, 1967 |
Mad Monster Party? |
co-production with Rankin/Bass Productions
|
May 1, 1967 |
They Came from Beyond Space |
US distribution only; produced by Amicus Productions
|
The Terrornauts |
US distribution only; produced by Amicus Productions
|
May 24, 1967 |
The Caper of the Golden Bulls |
Distributed by Paramount Pictures
|
June 27, 1967 |
Woman Times Seven |
|
September 6, 1967 |
Where the Bullets Fly |
US distribution only; Alistair Films (UK) and Puck Films (UK)
|
September 27, 1967 |
Robbery |
US distribution only; Oakhurst Productions (UK)
|
December 2, 1967 |
The Wacky World of Mother Goose |
co-production with Rankin/Bass Productions
|
December 21, 1967 |
The Graduate |
Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1996
|
March 18, 1968 |
The Producers |
Inducted into the National Film Registry in 1996
|
October 30, 1968 |
The Lion in Winter |
|
March 19, 1969 |
Baby Love |
|
July 30, 1969 |
Stiletto |
|
November 11, 1969 |
Don't Drink the Water |
|
December 3, 1969 |
A Nice Girl Like Me |
|
December 15, 1969 |
Generation |
|
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
March 25, 1970 |
The Adventurers |
co-production with Paramount Pictures
|
August 12, 1970 |
Soldier Blue |
|
August 17, 1970 |
Macho Callahan |
|
August 26, 1970 |
The People Next Door |
|
October 14, 1970 |
C.C. and Company |
|
January 21, 1971 |
Promise at Dawn |
|
February 8, 1971 |
Hot Pants Holiday |
|
February 17, 1971 |
The Man Who Had Power Over Women |
|
February 28, 1971 |
The Sporting Club |
|
June 30, 1971 |
Carnal Knowledge |
|
September 15, 1971 |
The Steagle |
|
December 1, 1971 |
The Ski Bum |
|
1972 |
Wacky Taxi |
|
1972 |
The Witches Mountain |
US distribution only
|
February 15, 1972 |
The Nightcomers |
|
April 1, 1972 |
J.C. |
|
June 15, 1972 |
A Place Called Today |
|
August 1972 |
Bloomfield |
|
August 23, 1972 |
Rivals |
|
September 13, 1972 |
The Ruling Class[1] |
|
October 1972 |
Thumb Tripping |
|
November 1972 |
The Stoolie |
|
February 1973 |
Jory |
|
April 11, 1973 |
Book of Numbers |
|
June 15, 1973 |
Interval |
|
June 20, 1973 |
A Touch of Class[4] |
|
August 10, 1973 |
Night Watch |
|
October 23, 1973 |
The Summertime Killer |
|
November 14, 1973 |
Hurry Up, or I'll Be 30 |
|
December 19, 1973 |
The Day of the Dolphin |
|
July 11, 1974 |
The Tamarind Seed [5] |
produced by ITC Entertainment and Lorimar Productions
|
July 24, 1974 |
Lucky Luciano |
|
September 20, 1974 |
Homebodies |
|
December 5, 1974 |
The Photographer |
|
March 1, 1975 |
Shatter |
|
April 30, 1975 |
Tubby the Tuba |
|
August 8, 1975 |
Farewell, My Lovely [5] |
produced by ITC Entertainment
|
August 20, 1975 |
Russian Roulette |
|
October 22, 1975 |
Diamonds |
|
October 27, 1975 |
The Mummy's Revenge |
|
November 1, 1975 |
Permission to Kill |
|
November 7, 1975 |
Mister Quilp |
|
November 1975 |
Petersen |
|
December 14, 1975 |
Deadly Hero |
|
December 1975 |
Psychic Killer |
|
January 1976 |
The Four Deuces |
|
March 5, 1976 |
Man Friday |
|
April 11, 1976 |
The Sailor Who Fell from Grace with the Sea |
|
May 19, 1976 |
The Premonition |
|
May 28, 1976 |
Shoot |
|
October 1976 |
Bittersweet Love |
|
November 1976 |
Pipe Dreams |
|
December 22, 1976 |
Voyage of the Damned [5] |
produced by ITC Entertainment
|
January 1977 |
False Face |
|
February 9, 1977 |
The Cassandra Crossing [5] |
produced by ITC Entertainment
|
March 23, 1977 |
The Domino Principle [5] |
produced by ITC Entertainment
|
May 7, 1977 |
Cross of Iron |
produced by EMI Films and ITC Entertainment
|
August 4, 1977 |
The Great Gundown |
|
August 1977 |
Sidewinder 1 |
|
October 1977 |
The Chicken Chronicles |
|
April 9, 1978 |
Rabbit Test |
|
April 28, 1978 |
The Manitou |
|
May 10, 1978 |
A Different Story |
|
June 14, 1978 |
Go Tell the Spartans |
|
August 1978 |
Stingray |
|
October 1978 |
Born Again |
|
November 1, 1978 |
Watership Down [6] |
US theatrical distribution only
|
February 1, 1979 |
Murder By Decree |
|
March 21, 1979 |
The Bell Jar |
|
March 28, 1979 |
Phantasm |
|
April 13, 1979 |
Old Boyfriends |
|
May 11, 1979 |
Winter Kills |
|
June 15, 1979 |
Goldengirl |
|
August 31, 1979 |
City on Fire |
|
September 19, 1979 |
The Onion Field |
|
September 28, 1979 |
A Man, a Woman, and a Bank |
|
Release date
|
Title
|
Notes
|
January 25, 1980 |
Fish Hawk |
distribution only; produced by Canadian Film Development Corporation
|
February 1, 1980 |
The Fog |
|
March 7, 1980 |
The Black Marble |
|
March 7, 1980 |
Death Ship |
distribution only; produced by Astral Films
|
April 1, 1980 |
The Baltimore Bullet |
distribution only; produced by Filmfair Communications
|
April 11, 1980 |
Night Games |
distribution only; produced by Golden Harvest
|
June 1, 1980 |
Hog Wild |
distribution only
|
August 15, 1980 |
Prom Night |
distribution only; produced by Astral Films
|
September 10, 1980 |
The Exterminator [7] |
distribution only; produced by Shapiro-Glickenhaus Entertainment
|
September 26, 1980 |
Hopscotch [1] |
distribution only
|
January 14, 1981 |
Scanners |
distribution only; produced by Filmplan International
|
January 16, 1981 |
Fear No Evil |
co-production with LaLoggia Productions
|
March 6, 1981 |
Dirty Tricks |
distribution only; produced by Filmplan International
|
March 13, 1981 |
The Howling |
co-production with International Film Investors and Wescom Productions
|
May 15, 1981 |
Take This Job and Shove It |
co-production with Cinema Group Ventures
|
May 29, 1981 |
Dead & Buried |
distribution only
|
June 5, 1981 |
The Night the Lights Went Out in Georgia |
|
Final Exam |
distribution only
|
July 10, 1981 |
Escape from New York |
co-production with International Film Investors, Goldcrest Films International and City Films
|
August 14, 1981 |
An Eye for an Eye |
co-production with Adams Apple Production Company, South Street Films and Westcom Barber International
|
September 25, 1981 |
Carbon Copy [8] |
distribution only; produced by Hemdale and RKO Pictures
|
October 1981 |
Tulips |
distribution only; produced by Astral Films
|
November 6, 1981 |
Time Bandits [9] |
US distribution only; produced by Handmade Films
|
November 18, 1981 |
Crunch |
distribution only
|
November 19, 1981 |
Roadgames |
|
January 22, 1982 |
Vice Squad |
|
January 29, 1982 |
The Seduction |
|
February 19, 1982 |
Swamp Thing |
|
March 12, 1982 |
Parasite |
|
April 2, 1982 |
The Long Good Friday [9] |
US distribution only; produced by Handmade Films
|
May 7, 1982 |
Paradise |
co-production with RSL Films
|
June 11, 1982 |
Humongous |
distribution only; produced by Astral Films
|
June 15, 1982 |
The Soldier |
|
July 23, 1982 |
The Challenge [10] |
distribution only, produced by CBS Theatrical Films
|
July 23, 1982 |
Zapped! |
|
July 30, 1982 |
Hysterical |
distribution only
|
October 15, 1982 |
Enigma[1] [11] |
|
December 10, 1982 |
Savannah Smiles |
|
April 8, 1983 |
Losin' It |
|
April 20, 1983 |
Champions |
|
June 17, 1983 |
Fanny and Alexander |
US distribution only
|
July 8, 1983 |
Deadly Force |
|
August 5, 1983 |
Get Crazy |
distribution only
|
August 19, 1983 |
The Ballad of Gregorio Cortez |
|
September 23, 1983 |
Eddie and the Cruisers |
co-production with Aurora Productions
|
March 2, 1984 |
This Is Spinal Tap |
Inducted into the National Film Registry in 2002
|
September 28, 1984 |
The Bear |
|
January 9, 1985 |
The Plague Dogs[1][11] |
re-cut version of the 1982 animated film; produced by Nepenthe Productions
|
March 1, 1985 |
The Sure Thing |
co-production with Monument Pictures
|
July 3, 1985 |
The Emerald Forest |
|
December 13, 1985 |
A Chorus Line |
co-production with PolyGram Pictures; distributed by Columbia Pictures
|
January 31, 1986 |
The Goodbye People |
distribution only; produced by Castle Hill Productions
|
April 25, 1986 |
Crimewave |
co-production with Renaissance Pictures; distributed by Columbia Pictures
|
May 2, 1986 |
Saving Grace |
distributed by Columbia Pictures
|