Cruise/Wagner Productions

Cruise/Wagner Productions, also abbreviated as C/W Productions, was an American independent film production company. It was founded by actor Tom Cruise and his agent Paula Wagner in July 1992.[1][2][3] Wagner had been representing Cruise for eleven years before the formation of C/W Productions.[2][3] The company has grossed more than $2.9 billion in box office proceeds since its inception.[4][5][6][7][8][9]

Cruise/Wagner Productions
IndustryFilm
FoundedJuly 1992; 31 years ago (1992-07)
FounderTom Cruise
Paula Wagner
DefunctAugust 2008; 15 years ago (2008-08)
FatePartnership dissolved
SuccessorTC Productions
HeadquartersUnited States
OwnerTom Cruise
Paula Wagner

Cruise/Wagner Productions was formed to give Cruise more creative freedom over his film projects and to give him the opportunity to produce and direct motion pictures.[3] In October 1992, Cruise/Wagner Productions signed an exclusive three-year multi-picture financing and distribution deal with Paramount Pictures.[10][11] The deal was renewed and expanded several times over the next fourteen years. In August 2006 Sumner Redstone, chairman of Viacom (parent company of Paramount Pictures) terminated that relationship citing Cruise's comments in the media about psychiatry, anti-depressants and Brooke Shields' handling of postpartum depression, and his taking up Scientology.[5][6][7][8][9][12] However, the termination may have been more about money than anything else.[9][13][14] Within a week, Daniel Snyder, owner of the Washington Redskins and two hedge funds, secured financial backing to buy the company.[7][12][15][16]

In November 2006, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (MGM) came to Cruise/Wagner with a deal that gave them a percentage of the ownership in United Artists (UA) in an effort to revive the floundering production company.[4][9] This deal fell apart when Wagner left the studio in August 2008.[17][18][19][20]

Productions

Feature films

YearTitleDirectorDistributorBudgetBox officeNotes
1996Mission: ImpossibleBrian De PalmaParamount Pictures$80 million$457.7 millionInstallment of the Mission: Impossible franchise.
1998Without LimitsRobert TowneWarner Bros.$25 million$777,423
2000Mission: Impossible 2John WooParamount Pictures$125 million$546.4 millionInstallment of the Mission: Impossible franchise.
2001The OthersAlejandro AmenábarDimension Films/Miramax Films$17 million$209.9 million
Vanilla SkyCameron CroweParamount Pictures$68 million$203.4 millionRemake of Open Your Eyes.
2002NarcJoe Carnahan$6.5 million$12.6 million
Minority ReportSteven Spielberg20th Century Fox$102 million$358.4 million
2003Shattered GlassBilly RayLionsgate Films$6 million$2.9 million
The Last SamuraiEdward ZwickWarner Bros.$140 million$456.8 million
2004Suspect ZeroE. Elias MerhigeParamount Pictures$27 million$11.4 million
2005War of the WorldsSteven Spielberg$132 million$603.9 millionRemake of The War of the Worlds.
ElizabethtownCameron Crowe$45 million$52 million
2006Ask the DustRobert Towne$2.5 million
Mission: Impossible IIIJ. J. Abrams$150 million$398.5 millionInstallment of the Mission: Impossible franchise.
2007Lions for LambsRobert RedfordMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer (United States)
20th Century Fox (International)
$35 million$63.2 million
2008The EyeDavid Moreau and Xavier PaludParamount Pictures
Lionsgate Films
$12 million$56.7 millionRemake of The Eye.
Death RacePaul W. S. AndersonUniversal Pictures$45–65 million$76 millionInstallment of the Death Race franchise.
ValkyrieBryan SingerMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer (United States)
20th Century Fox (International)
$75–90 million$201.5 million

References