Denver and Delilah Productions

American media production company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Denver & Delilah Productions, Inc. also known as Denver & Delilah Films, is an American film & television production company founded by actress and producer Charlize Theron. It is based in Los Angeles, California.

Company typePrivate
Founded2003; 23 years ago (2003)
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Denver & Delilah Productions, Inc.
Company typePrivate
IndustryProduction company
Founded2003; 23 years ago (2003)
FoundersCharlize Theron
Headquarters,
U.S.
Websitehttps://www.denveranddelilah-productions.com/
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History

Charlize Theron founded the company in 2003, and named it after her two dogs Denver and Delilah.[1][2] The company's film productions include the 2003 film Monster, 2006's East of Havana, 2007's Sleepwalking, 2011's Young Adult and 2017's Atomic Blonde.[3]

Collaborations and deals

In July 2013, the company signed on with Bunim/Murray Productions to develop and produce unscripted programming for television.[4] In January 2015, Denver & Delilah signed a first-look deal with Universal Cable Productions to develop and produce scripted series for NBCUniversal, and for that the company hired Laverne McKinnon as head of scripted television. While Beth Kono and A.J. Dix also partnered with Theron on these projects.[5] One project in development, with comic book writer Greg Rucka, is an adaptation of the stop-motion animated comedy web series The Most Popular Girls in School.[6] More recently, her production company received a first-look deal with HBO and HBO Max.[7]

Filmography

Films

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleDirectorGross (worldwide)Notes
2003 Monster Patty Jenkins $60.4 million Co-production with K/W Productions
2006 East of Havana Jauretsi Saizarbitoria
Emilia Menocal
N/a
2007 Sleepwalking William Maher N/a Co-production with Dream7 Entertainment
2011 Young Adult Jason Reitman $22.6 million Co-production with Mandate Pictures, Mr. Mudd and Right of Way Films
2015 Dark Places Gilles Paquet-Brenner $3.5 million Co-production with Exclusive Media Group and Mandalay Pictures
2016 Brain on Fire Gerard Barrett N/a Co-production with Foundation Features and Broad Green Pictures
2017 Atomic Blonde David Leitch $100 million Co-production with Sierra/Affinity, Chickle the Cop Productions, TGIM Films and 87Eleven Productions
2018 Tully Jason Reitman $15.6 million Co-production with Bron Studios and Right of Way Films
2018 Gringo Nash Edgerton $11 million Co-production with Blue-Tongue Films
2018 A Private War Matthew Heineman $3.8 million Co-production with Acacia Filmed Entertainment, Savvy Media Holdings and Thunder Road Pictures
2019 Long Shot Jonathan Levine $52.8 million Co-production with Good Universe and Point Grey Pictures
2019 Murder Mystery Kyle Newacheck N/a Co-production with Happy Madison Productions, Endgame Entertainment, Vinson Films, Tower Hill Entertainment, and Mythology Entertainment
2019 Bombshell Jay Roach $56.1 million Co-production with Bron Studios, Annapurna Pictures, Gramsci, Lighthouse Management & Media and Creative Wealth Media
2020 The Old Guard Gina Prince-Bythewood N/a Co-production with Skydance Media and Marc Evas Productions
2025 The Old Guard 2 Victoria Mahoney
2026 Apex Baltasar Kormákur N/a Co-production with Chernin Entertainment, Ian Bryce Productions, and RVK Studios
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Television

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleCreatorNetworkNotes
2017 Girlboss Kay Cannon Netflix Cancelled after one season
2017–2019 Mindhunter Joe Penhall Netflix Nominated for an Emmy Award
2023 Last Call: When a Serial Killer Stalked Queer New York Anthony Caronna & Howard Gertler HBO
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References

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