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Paramount
(aka: Paramount Television Studios)

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Paramount (Creator)

Agent: I have bad news about your script. I thought it was great; unfortunately, Paramount loved it.
Screenwriter: That sounds like great news. Why is that unfortunate?
Agent: Paramount is my dog.
— Old joke about Hollywood

Paramount Pictures Corporation is an American film production and distribution company. Founded in 1912 and currently owned by media conglomerate Paramount Global, it is the second-oldest existing American film studio (after Universal, which now owns the following content originally released by Paramount: most of Paramount's pre-1950 sound features, five Alfred Hitchcock films, the 1957 Elvis Presley film Loving You, most short subjects released between October 1950 and March 1962, and the 2006-12 DreamWorks Animation catalog; additionally, Universal co-owns United International Pictures with Paramount); Paramount is also the last major film studio still based in the Hollywood district of Los Angeles (Universal is in Universal City, which is an unincorporated island surrounded by the LA neighborhoods of Hollywood Hills, Studio City and Toluca Lake).

Paramount has been consistently ranked as one of the top-grossing movie studios, but more recently it's had to stage a comeback as one of the backbones of Hollywood, a status it's held since the Golden Age as one of the original "Big Five." Paramount's currently trying to retain its position in the modern "Big Five"* against the rise of young Turk Lionsgate. Its Vanity Plate is a mountain, reportedly originally based on Utah's Ben Lomond Mountain, surrounded by an arc of 22 equilateral stars.

Paramount's film library consists of most of its surviving silent films still under copyright, a portion of sound films from 1929 to 1949, and almost all films produced from 1949 onward. It also owns most of its cartoon catalog created by Famous Studios prior to October 1950, which it actually reacquired when Viacom bought Republic Pictures, although a majority of these cartoons have become public domain. Paramount sold a large majority of its 1929-1949 sound films to talent agency MCA in 1958 for $50 million, wanting to leave out space in their archives for newer, more valuable films (this library is now owned by Universal). Additionally, it sold the Popeye series of shorts to Associated Artists Productions in 1956 (these are currently owned by Warner Bros. Animation in conjunction with Turner Entertainment; WB also owns the original film elements to the 1940s Superman cartoons through DC Comics, although the shorts themselves are in the public domain), and did the same with most of its original Famous Studios characters, such as Casper the Friendly Ghost, Herman and Katnip, and Baby Huey to Harvey Comics three years later, along with every other cartoon produced from October 1950 to March 1962 (Universal also owns these cartoons, via DreamWorks Classics). All cartoons after that month never left Paramount.

In 1966, Paramount, on the brink of collapse due to major Box Office Bombs and aged leadership, was acquired by Gulf+Western Industries, a large diversified conglomerate with interests in many different areas; in turn, they acquired Desilu Studios the following year to bolster Paramount's television holdings. Gulf+Western proceeded to turn Paramount around, revitalizing the studio with a string of great films. In The '70s, the Desilu deal included getting a surprise bonus from that acquisition with the seemly failed Space Opera property, Star Trek, exploding into a Cult Classic which was well positioned to take advantage of the 1977 blockbuster sensation, Star Wars, making Science Fiction a bigtime film genre to become the studio's signature popular franchise. During The '80s, Gulf+Western would divest itself of many of its non-entertainment subsidiaries, focusing on the studio and related media properties, before renaming itself Paramount Communications, Inc. in 1989. In the years after G+W's rebranding, the company bought the TVX Broadcast Group chain of TV stations and renamed the operation Paramount Stations Group, as well as the KECO Entertainment chain of theme parks from Great American Broadcasting (formerly Taft Broadcasting) and renaming them Paramount Parks. Years earlier, G+W had for a very short time owned a TV station in Palm Springs, California, KESQ-TV (affiliated with ABC, which had aired a number of successful series from Paramount Television since 1969 and bought Famous Music Group from the studio in 1974; years before, United Paramount Theaters, the former movie theater arm of Paramount, had bought ABC to help it compete better with CBS and NBC), after buying the station's previous owner Esquire, Inc. (which at one point owned Esquire magazine); G+W immediately sold the station to Gulf Broadcasting which later merged with Taft Broadcasting (then the owner of several assets that would come under common ownership with Paramount by the turn of the 21st century - namely several of the TV stations TVX once owned, a number of radio stations that would be under CBS ownership later on, the aforementioned theme park chain, and most of Taft's TV and film library, outside of most works from Hanna-Barbera and Ruby-Spears). Paramount used its ownership of a chain of TV stations (which coincidentally added the previously-unrelated-to-TVX WTVX in West Palm Beach to its stable in 1997) to help launch the United Paramount Network with Chris-Craft Industries in 1995, following in the footsteps of Twentieth Century Fox, who acquired the Metromedia chain of TV stations in the 1980s and used that chain to launch Fox.

Viacom would buy Paramount in 1994 (resulting in two of Viacom's cable networks launching film production arms, producing films that would be distributed by the studio, some being based on TV shows those networks were airing), 1999 saw the absorption of sister firm Republic Pictures, and in 2000 would add its own former parent, CBS, to its family. On December 31, 2005, Viacom and CBS split into two separate companies, which affected Paramount's assets: Paramount Pictures Corporation went with the newly-formed Viacom Inc., while Paramount Television stayed with the original company, now renamed CBS Corporation, and renamed CBS Paramount Television (this had the effect of undoing the 1967 merger of Desilu and Paramount, but now with the TV production company serving as the production arm of the CBS television network rather than operating as an independent entity like Desilu did prior to 1967), which became CBS Television Studios in 2009, and then CBS Studios in 2020. In 2013, Paramount Pictures re-launched the Paramount Television brand as a production house with a focus on shows based on Paramount films; this unit added "Studios" to the end of its name in 2020 after Viacom and CBS re-merged and then dissolved into CBS Studios in 2024 amid financial troubles at the parent company.

Formerly the distributor of all of DreamWorks Pictures' releases; it parted ways with the main DreamWorks studio in 2008 and DreamWorks Animation in 2012. The majority of live-action films released between 2011 and 2016 are currently distributed by Disney via Touchstone Pictures, and the animated releases are currently handled by Universal, who purchased DWA in 2016. Paramount retains the live-action films released from the studio's inception up until 2010, as well as sequel rights to this catalog. The company was also the distributor of four of the first five films of the Marvel Cinematic Universe as part of a contract with Marvel Studiosnote ; Disney now owns the rights to those films as well.

In 2014, Paramount became the first studio to shoot and distribute its releases exclusively on digital format, dropping 35mm film stock altogether. A year later however, they reversed this decision and allowed their filmmakers to shoot on film again.

Beginning in 2011, the studio went through its most difficult period since the aftermath of the Paramount case, with the majority of its releases either garnering mediocre-to-negative reception or flopping massively at the box office. The period has seen the aforementioned departures of DreamWorks Animation and Marvel Studios, many of their IP-driven fare, most notably the Transformers film series, under-performing with each film, and turmoil at Viacom nearly leading to a sale of Paramount in 2016. By 2017, the studio had fallen behind Lionsgate, a mini-major, in terms of box office market share. In the wake of the Coronavirus Pandemic, Paramount sold numerous 2020 titles (including The Trial of the Chicago 7 and Coming 2 America) to streaming services to keep afloat. By then, it was ranked dead last among major studios in box office share for eight years straight.

In 2019, the first act done by their new parent company, ViacomCBS (which changed its name to Paramount Global, simply branded "Paramount", in 2022), was the acquisition of 49% of Miramax from beIN Media Group. Paramount will gain worldwide distribution rights to the studio's 700-plus films, along with bringing some of Paramount's titles, like No Country for Old Men and There Will Be Blood, back under one roof.

In 2021, Paramount converted CBS All Access into a new streaming service, Paramount+. They also worked out a deal with MGM+, who handles first-run cable/streaming distribution of Paramount films through 2023, that would allow the studio to launch some of its new releases on Paramount+ 45 days after theatrical release. Under this 2021-2024 model, Paramount themselves would release most of their biggest, most anticipated films on the service after 45 days in theaters and as early as 90 days for all their other films.

In 2022, Paramount experienced a major commercial resurgence, as six of its films (Scream, Sonic the Hedgehog 2, Jackass Forever, The Lost City, Smile, and Top Gun: Maverick) went right to the top of the domestic and international box office charts upon release, even beating out Disney, with Top Gun: Maverick in particular becoming the studio's first in nearly a decade to gross over $1 billion worldwide.

In 2025, Paramount Pictures became a subsidiary of the combined Paramount Skydance, after Skydance Media acquired Paramount Global and its parent company National Amusements.


    open/close all folders 
    List of Paramount films 

    List of Paramount Television (original) series and TV movies. 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/cbsstudios.png
CBS Studios logo
Rights to the pre-2006 series currently held by CBS, though Paramount still owns home video rights. This incarnation of Paramount Television is currently named CBS Studios. See the CBS page for series produced after 2006. However, the list does include series produced by Paramount's subsidiaries prior to the creation of Paramount Television Studios. Since Viacom (which owns Paramount) and CBS have kissed and made up as of 2019, the division is a rather moot point today.

    List of Paramount Television Studios (2015-2024) series 
https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/paramounttelevisionstudios.png

    Animated shorts 

 
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Alternative Title(s): Paramount Pictures, Paramount Television, Paramount Television Studios

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The Last Airbender

On the first half of the Paramount logo, the stars are replaced by water (meant to resemble water-bending). The Nickelodeon logo appears made out of stone with fire topping it on an orange background. The wind strikes the logo and the fire was removed as the background turns navy blue, with fireflies in ivory.

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