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Movie 43: distribution; with Rogue Pictures and Virgin Produced: February 8, 2013: Identity Thief: co-production with Universal Pictures and Bluegrass Films: February 14, 2013: Safe Haven: distribution; with Temple Hill Entertainment: March 1, 2013: 21 & Over: distribution; with Mandeville Films and Virgin Produced: April 19, 2013: Oblivion
S. Safe Haven (film) Safe House (2012 film) Salt (2010 film) Sanctum (film) Savages (2012 film) Scott Pilgrim vs. the World; Season of the Witch (2011 film)
Animated films which were produced by Relativity Media — based in Beverly Hills. Pages in category "Relativity Media animated films" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
Earth to Echo is a 2014 American science fiction film directed by Dave Green, and produced by Ryan Kavanaugh and Andrew Panay. Based on a screenplay by Henry Gayden, the film stars Teo Halm, Brian "Astro" Bradley, Reese C. Hartwig and Ella Wahlestedt as four neighborhood friends who find a robotic, telekinetic alien in the desert, and are soon hunted by dangerous forces who seek to take the ...
Wormholes are the principal means of space travel in the Stargate movie and the spin-off television series, Stargate SG-1, Stargate Atlantis and Stargate Universe, to the point where it was called the franchise that is "far and away most identified with wormholes". [8]
Following their television broadcast, the films were made available free of charge for classroom use. J. B. Gilbert estimated that, by the mid-1960s, the films had been watched by five million schoolchildren and half a million college students; about 1600 copies of the film were ultimately distributed. [3]
Presented here are images from the Fleischer film and German film. If actual footage was not recycled into The Einstein Theory of Relativity, these images and text from the Scientific American article suggest that original visual elements from the German film were. [3] This film, like much of the Fleischer's work, has fallen into the public domain.
The film's running time was between two and three hours, depending on the length of the commentaries made by the scientific presenter. While the original version of the film is lost, part of the film (around 20 minutes) was used to create Max Fleischer's film The Einstein Theory of Relativity from 1923. [1]