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Highest-grossing films of 1991 Rank Title Distributor Worldwide gross 1 Terminator 2: Judgment Day: TriStar Pictures: $204,843,345 2 Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves: Warner Bros. $165,493,908 3 Beauty and the Beast: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures: $145,863,363 4 The Silence of the Lambs: Orion: $130,742,922 5 City Slickers: Columbia Pictures ...
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country broke Beverly Hills Cop ' s record ($15.2 million) for the highest weekend debut in December and Star Trek V: The Final Frontier ' s record ($17.3 million) for the highest weekend debut for a film based on a television show.
April 26, 1991: Talent for the Game: May 31, 1991: Soapdish: June 28, 1991: The Naked Gun 2½: The Smell of Fear: co-production with Zucker/Abrahams/Zucker Productions July 10, 1991: Regarding Henry: co-production with Scott Rudin Productions: August 2, 1991: Body Parts: August 23, 1991: Dead Again: co-production with Mirage Enterprises ...
Wedlock is a 1991 American science fiction-action television film from HBO Pictures, directed by Lewis Teague and starring Rutger Hauer, Mimi Rogers, Joan Chen, and James Remar. It received an Emmy Nomination for Sound Editing.
June 7, 1991: Jungle Fever: co-production with 40 Acres and a Mule Filmworks: July 3, 1991: Problem Child 2: co-production with Imagine Films Entertainment: July 26, 1991: Mobsters: August 9, 1991: Pure Luck: co-production with The Sean Daniel Company: August 30, 1991: Child's Play 3: co-production with Living Doll Productions: October 4, 1991 ...
In 2000, Paramount Home Entertainment released the film on DVD. This release contained only two trailers as bonus features. [23] In 2006, the film was reissued in a double feature with Addams Family Values. [24] In September 2014, Warner Home Video released the film on Blu-ray in the United States. [25]
[22] [28] [29] Filming on the set was completed in December 1990 [21] and production finally ceased in March 1991. [ 9 ] [ 31 ] To Fechner and Carax's regret, in January 1991 the farmer who owned the site had the entire bridge set destroyed; [ 9 ] [ 24 ] it had attracted visitors as well as money to the area, and the mayor of Lansargues had ...
TV Guide gave Going Under 2 stars out of 5 stars. [12] In Hal Erickson's book Military Comedy Films: A Critical Survey and Filmography of Hollywood Releases Since 1918, he writes: "Unlike A Man Called Sarge, Going Under actually indicates that some thought and money went into its preparation.