Paramount Vantage

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Paramount Vantage
Type subsidiary
Industry Motion pictures
Founded 1998 (as Paramount Classics)
2006 (as Paramount Vantage)
Founder(s) David Dinerstein
Ruth Vitale
Key people John Lesher (President)
Nick Myer (Co-President)
Owner(s) Viacom
Parent Paramount Motion Picture Group

Paramount Vantage (originally known as Paramount Classics) is the specialty film division of Paramount Pictures (which in turn is part of Viacom), charged with producing, purchasing, distributing and marketing films, generally those with a more "art house" feel than films made and distributed by its parent company.

Paramount Classics was launched in 1998 and released such art house fare as The Virgin Suicides, You Can Count on Me, Sunshine, Mostly Martha, Winter Solstice, and three Patrice Leconte films (Girl on the Bridge, Man on the Train, Intimate Strangers). Although film journalist David Poland felt "Ruth Vitale and David Dinerstein have proven to have wonderful taste heading up Paramount Classics,",[1] the duo was fired in October 2005. [2]

In 2006, the Paramount Vantage brand branched off from Paramount Classics, which was relaunched in 2007 as a distributor of "smaller, review-driven films including foreign-language acquisitions and documentaries." [3]

In 2007, Paramount Vantage co-produced No Country for Old Men and There Will Be Blood with Miramax Films. The partnership paid off when both films were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture at the 80th Academy Awards, with the former film winning. The two won a combined six awards, including the Academy Award for Best Actor for Daniel Day-Lewis in Blood and the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for Javier Bardem in No Country.

Despite its critical success, Paramount Vantage continually failed to deliver the financial returns Paramount Pictures expected. Only No Country for Old Men made a profit, while films that should have generated significant returns failed to deliver through either poor or excessive marketing. [4]

In June 2008, Paramount Pictures consolidated Paramount Vantage’s marketing, distribution, and physical production departments into the parent studio, while retaining the Paramount Vantage brand to develop and acquire specialty product with dedicated creative staff. [5]

Contents

[edit] Paramount Classics releases

Name Release Date
Trekkies March 12, 1999
Get Real April 30, 1999
Cabaret Balkan July 23, 1999
The Adventures of Sebastian Cole August 6, 1999
Train of Life November 12, 1999
Where's Marlowe? November 12, 1999
Deterrence March 10, 2000
The Virgin Suicides May 12, 2000
Passion of Mind May 26, 2000
Sunshine June 9, 2000
The Girl on the Bridge July 28, 2000
You Can Count on Me November 17, 2000
The Gift January 19, 2001
Company Man March 9, 2001
Savage Souls May 20, 2001
Bride of the Wind June 8, 2001
An American Rhapsody August 24, 2001
Our Lady of the Assassins September 7, 2001
My First Mister October 12, 2001
Focus November 2, 2001
Sidewalks of New York November 21, 2001
Mean Machine February 22, 2002
Festival in Cannes March 3, 2002
The Triumph of Love May 10, 2002
The Emperor's New Clothes June 14, 2002
Who Is Cletis Tout? July 26, 2002
Mostly Martha August 16, 2002
Just a Kiss September 27, 2002
Bloody Sunday October 4, 2002
The Way Home November 15, 2002
Till Human Voices Wake Us February 21, 2003
House of Fools April 25, 2003
The Man on the Train May 9, 2003
Northfork July 11, 2003
And Now... Ladies and Gentlemen August 8, 2003
The Singing Detective October 24, 2003
The Machinist January 18, 2004
The Reckoning March 5, 2004
The United States of Leland April 2, 2004
Love Me If You Dare May 11, 2004
I'll Sleep When I'm Dead June 16, 2004
Intimate Strangers July 30, 2004
Mean Creek August 20, 2004
Enduring Love October 29, 2004
Fade to Black November 5, 2004
Schultze Gets the Blues February 18, 2005
Winter Solstice April 8, 2005
Mad Hot Ballroom May 13, 2005
After You... June 3, 2005
Hustle & Flow July 22, 2005
Asylum August 12, 2005
Neil Young: Heart of Gold February 10, 2006
Ask the Dust March 17, 2006
An Inconvenient Truth May 24, 2006
Typhoon June 2, 2006
Broken Bridges September 8, 2006
Arctic Tale July 25, 2007
Beneath August 7, 2007
The Kite Runner December 14, 2007
Shine a Light April 4, 2008
The Foot Fist Way May 30, 2008

[edit] Paramount Vantage releases

Film title Release Date Academy Awards
Babel October 27, 2006
Year of the Dog January 20, 2007
Black Snake Moan March 2, 2007
A Mighty Heart June 22, 2007
Into the Wild September 21, 2007
  • 2 Nominations
No Country for Old Men November 9, 2007
  • Won
  • Additional nominations
    • Best Cinematography
    • Best Editing
    • Best Sound
    • Best Sound Editing
Margot at the Wedding November 16, 2007
There Will Be Blood December 26, 2007
  • Won
  • Additional nominations
    • Best Art Direction
    • Best Director: Paul Thomas Anderson
    • Best Editing
    • Best Film
    • Best Adapted Screenplay
    • Best Sound Editing
How She Move January 25, 2008
The Eye February 1, 2008
Son of Rambow May 2, 2008
American Teen July 25, 2008
The Duchess September 19, 2008
  • Won
    • Best Costume Design
  • Additional nomination
    • Best Art Direction
Revolutionary Road December 26, 2008
  • 3 Nominations
    • Best Art Direction
    • Best Costume Design
    • Best Supporting Actor: Michael Shannon
Defiance December 31, 2008
  • 1 Nomination
    • Best Original Score
The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard August 14, 2009
The Marc Pease Experience August 21, 2009
Carriers September 4, 2009
Capitalism: A Love Story October 2, 2009
Ondine June 4, 2010
Middle Men August 8, 2010
13 TBA 2010
Waiting for Superman TBA 2010

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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