Touchstone Pictures, established in 1984, is one of several alternate
film labels of
The Walt Disney Company. Its releases typically feature more mature themes than those that are released under the
Walt Disney Pictures banner.
Touchstone Pictures is merely a label and does not exist as a separate company: the two companies behind it are the Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group and Walt Disney Pictures and Television.
[The Walt Disney Company SEC filing Form 10-K For the Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2006, page 15]
Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group entered into a long term, 30-picture distribution deal with
DreamWorks by which DreamWorks' productions will be released through the Touchstone Pictures banner over the next five years beginning in 2010.
[Variety: Disney signs deal with DreamWorks Company will handle distribution for films, Variety, February 09, 2009]
Background
In late
1979, Walt Disney Productions released
The Black Hole, a
science-fiction film that was the studio's first production to receive a
PG rating (the company, however, had already distributed its first PG-rated film,
Take Down—without the Disney name visible—almost a year before the release of
The Black Hole.) Over the next few years, Disney experimented with more PG-rated fare, such as the 1981 film
Condorman,
1982's
Tron and 1983's
Never Cry Wolf and
Trenchcoat. The latter film attracted major criticism for including adult themes that were considered inappropriate for a Disney film.
The controversy over
Trenchcoat is generally considered the catalyst that later sparked the creation of the Touchstone Pictures brand.
Started by then-Disney CEO
Ron W. Miller in 1984, Touchstone's first film was
Splash, a huge hit for Walt Disney Productions, grossing $68 million at the domestic boxoffice.
[1984 Yearly Chart for Domestic Grosses at boxofficemojo.com, Retrieved on May 25, 2007.] Splash included brief rear nudity on the part of star
Daryl Hannah and occasional inappropriate language, earning a PG-rating. Because of its success, yet another Disney film label was started in 1990,
Hollywood Pictures, with the release of
Arachnophobia.
Following the success of the Disney-branded PG-13 rated
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl in 2003, and other films that in the 1980s and 90's would have been assigned to the Touchstone (or Hollywood Pictures) label, Disney has decided to weigh distribution of films more toward Disney-branded films and away from Touchstone films, though not entirely disbanding them.
[The Walt Disney Company SEC filing Form 10-K For the Fiscal Year Ended September 30, 2006, page 15]
Notable films
Some well-known Touchstone Pictures releases include
Pretty Woman,
Dead Poets Society,
Sister Act,
The Insider,
Ernest Goes to Camp,
Who Framed Roger Rabbit,
Rushmore,
The Royal Tenenbaums, and
Good Morning Vietnam.
Through Touchstone, Disney's first
R-rated film,
Down and Out in Beverly Hills, came in January 1986 and was a large box-office success.
Ruthless People followed in April 1986 and was also very successful. Both of these pictures starred
Bette Midler, who had signed a six picture deal with Disney and became a major film star again with these hits as well as
Beaches and
Outrageous Fortune.
One of the key producers behind Touchstone films of recent times has been producer
Jerry Bruckheimer, who has had a production deal with Disney since the early '90s.
[Lev, Michael (January 18, 1991, Friday), 2 Top Movie Producers Sign Disney Accord, The New York Times Financial Desk. Late Edition - Final, Section D, Page 3, Column 1, 286 words] His Touchstone titles include
The Ref,
Con Air,
Armageddon,
Enemy of the State,
Gone in Sixty Seconds,
Coyote Ugly,
Pearl Harbor,
Bad Company,
Veronica Guerin,
King Arthur and
Déjà Vu. In addition, Bruckheimer has also produced several other movies released under the Walt Disney Pictures and Hollywood Pictures labels.
Many films from the
Walt Disney Motion Pictures Group have before release shifted between the Walt Disney Pictures, Touchstone Pictures and Hollywood Pictures imprints before finally settling for one. Examples include
Who Framed Roger Rabbit,
Dick Tracy,
The Nightmare Before Christmas,
The Santa Clause,
Remember the Titans,
Sweet Home Alabama,
Bringing Down the House,
National Treasure,
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy,
Dark Water,
Hidalgo and
Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl. Of these films,
The Rocketeer,
The Santa Clause,
Remember the Titans,
National Treasure, and
The Curse of the Black Pearl were released under the Disney label; ironically,
The Santa Clause was released under both the Disney and Hollywood Pictures labels. The rest were released under Touchstone. Since 2006,
The Nightmare Before Christmas has been released under the Disney label.
Touchstone Television
Disney's former non-Disney branded television division,
Touchstone Television Productions, LLC known as Touchstone Pictures and Television (itself an alternate version of [[Walt Disney Pictures and Television]) and later
Touchstone Television], is known for being the production company of the series
The Golden Girls,
Blossom,
Boy Meets World (all three began before Disney's ABC acquisition),
My Wife and Kids,
Desperate Housewives,
Lost,
Grey's Anatomy,
Private Practice and
Scrubs.
On February 8, 2007 at the Disney Investor Conference,
Disney-ABC Television Group President
Anne Sweeney, announced that they would rebrand Touchstone Television to ABC Television Studio in order tie its successful productions more closely with the ABC brand. The announcement was made as part of a company-wide strategy to focus on three core brands, Disney,
ABC and
ESPN.
[The Walt Disney Company News Release, "Disney-ABC Television Group Renames Television Studio". Retrieved on May 25, 2007] In May 2007, the television production company yet again changed its name, this time to
ABC Studios.
Touchstone Games
By the end of 2007, Disney's video game subsidiary
Buena Vista Games began to produce material under its own Touchstone imprint. As is the case with its motion picture and television counterparts, Touchstone merely acts as a label/imprint of Disney Interactive and not its own entity. The first such release was the
Turok video game in 2008.
List of Touchstone Pictures productions