PolyGram Filmed Entertainment

PolyGram Filmed Entertainment
Formerly
  • Filmworks (1975–1976)
  • Casablanca Record & Filmworks (1976–1980)
  • PolyGram Pictures (1980–1983)
  • PolyGram Movies (1987–1990)
Company typeSubsidiary
PredecessorCasablanca Filmworks
Founded1975 (1975)
FoundersPeter Guber
Defunct1999 (1999)
FateAcquired by Seagram and folded into Universal Pictures; most of the pre-spring 1996 library sold to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Some of its North American distribution assets sold to USA Networks
SuccessorsStudio:
Universal Pictures
USA Films
Focus Features
PolyGram Entertainment
Library:
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer[a]
(pre-April 1996 films with exceptions)
Universal Pictures
(post-March 1996 films with exceptions and some pre-March 1996 films)
Parent
  • PolyGram (1980–1998)
  • Universal Pictures (1998–1999)
DivisionsPolyGram Television
PolyGram Video
PolyGram Visual Programming

PolyGram Filmed Entertainment (formerly known as Filmworks, Casablanca Records & Filmworks, PolyGram Films and PolyGram Pictures or simply PFE) was a film production company founded in 1975 as an American film studio, which became a European competitor to Hollywood within two decades, but was eventually sold to Seagram in 1998 and was folded into Universal Pictures a year later. Among its most successful and well known films were The Deep (1977), Midnight Express (1978), An American Werewolf in London (1981), Flashdance (1983), Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994), Trainspotting (1996), Dead Man Walking (1995), The Big Lebowski (1998), Fargo (1996), The Usual Suspects (1995), The Game (1997), Candyman (1992) and Notting Hill (1999).
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