From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Overview of the events of the 1990s in film
The decade of the 1990s in film involved many significant developments in the industry of cinema .[ 1] Numerous feature-length movies were specifically filmed or edited to be displayed not only on theater screens but also the smaller TV screens, like showing more close-ups and less wide shots during dialogue scenes . Moreover, the home video market grew into being a major factor in the total revenue of a theatrical film, often doubling the amount. An example of both cases is Batman: Mask of the Phantasm , which was initially planned to have a direct-to-video release.
These particular ten years are notable for milestone advancements in CGI technology, seen in such motion pictures as Terminator 2: Judgment Day , Jurassic Park , and Forrest Gump courtesy of Industrial Light & Magic . 1995's Toy Story by Pixar became the first feature film to be completely computer-animated , heralding the use of 3D graphics as a tool for filmmakers to achieve new visuals on-screen.
Stemming from the tail end of the 1980s, the mainstream successes of low-budget directors like Quentin Tarantino , Robert Rodriguez , Kevin Smith , Paul Thomas Anderson , Gus Van Sant , Richard Linklater , Steven Soderbergh , and the Coen brothers ; alongside the increased prominence of independent movie studios such as New Line Cinema , Miramax Films , and Gramercy Pictures ; gave rise to a boom period of highly profitable indie films that include Pulp Fiction , Fargo , Boogie Nights , Good Will Hunting , The Big Lebowski , and The Blair Witch Project .
The Disney Renaissance began in late 1989 with The Little Mermaid , reached peak popularity with The Lion King in 1994, and ended in 1999 with Tarzan . During its influential run, the mass appeal of animated musicals got exceptionally rejuvenated (as opposed to The Rescuers Down Under in 1990, which contains no original songs and has been generally deemed a commercial disappointment even compared to its 1977 predecessor ), resulting in supposed emulations from similar production companies . However, merely three of said attempts proved to be lucrative, namely The Nightmare Before Christmas by Skellington , Anastasia by Fox , and The Prince of Egypt by DreamWorks . Around six months prior to the decade's conclusion, Comedy Central 's South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut prospered in part through parodying the conventions of this trend.
1988's Die Hard established what would become a common plot scenario for many 1990s action films , which is the matchup of an everyman hero against a colorful villain who is threatening the lives of innocents in an isolated setting , though with certain variations. Features of this kind, and the sequels that followed some of them, are often referred to as "Die Hard on a _____": Under Siege (battleship), Cliffhanger (mountain), Speed (bus), The Rock (prison island), Con Air (prison plane), Air Force One (presidential plane), and so on.
A resurgence of disaster films dominated the box office with blockbusters such as Twister , Independence Day , Titanic , and Armageddon .
Several leading figures of 1980s to mid-1990s Hong Kong action cinema migrated to Hollywood with varying success: Jackie Chan , Jet Li , Chow Yun-fat , Michelle Yeoh , John Woo , Yuen Woo-ping , Tsui Hark , Ringo Lam , etc. Updating martial arts and gunfight choreography in American motion pictures with such releases as Broken Arrow , Face/Off , Tomorrow Never Dies , Lethal Weapon 4 , Rush Hour , and The Matrix . Three Western world directorial debuts of established Eastern filmmakers were for Jean-Claude Van Damme star vehicles , though these collaborations only performed moderately en masse at the global market.
Wes Craven 's Scream revitalized the declining interest in slasher films through satirizing the subgenre with characters that are well-versed in its clichés . Leading to studios capitalizing especially on the high school to college age demographic with the likes of I Know What You Did Last Summer , Scream 2 , Urban Legend , and I Still Know What You Did Last Summer . The three biggest hits among these movies were written or adapted by Kevin Williamson , who also co-wrote the sci-fi horror The Faculty , which targeted the same audience as well.
Highest-grossing films [ edit ]
List of worldwide highest-grossing films
Rank
Title
Studios
Worldwide gross
Year
Ref.
1
Titanic
Paramount Pictures /20th Century Fox
$1,843,201,268
1997
2
Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace
20th Century Fox
$924,317,558
1999
3
Jurassic Park
Universal Pictures
$914,691,118
1993
4
Independence Day
20th Century Fox
$817,400,891
1996
5
The Lion King
Walt Disney Studios
$763,455,561
1994
6
Forrest Gump
Paramount Pictures
$677,387,716
1994
7
The Sixth Sense
Walt Disney Studios
$672,806,292
1999
8
The Lost World: Jurassic Park
Universal Pictures
$618,638,999
1997
9
Men in Black
Sony Pictures /Columbia Pictures
$589,390,539
1997
10
Armageddon
Walt Disney Studios
$553,709,788
1998
11
Terminator 2: Judgment Day
TriStar Pictures
$519,843,345
1991
12
Ghost
Paramount Pictures
$505,702,588
1990
13
Aladdin
Walt Disney Studios
$504,050,219
1992
14
Twister
Warner Bros. /Universal Pictures
$494,471,524
1996
15
Toy Story 2
Walt Disney Studios
$485,015,179
1999
16
Saving Private Ryan
DreamWorks Pictures /Paramount Pictures
$481,840,909
1998
17
Home Alone
20th Century Fox
$476,684,675
1990
18
The Matrix
Warner Bros.
$463,517,383
1999
19
Pretty Woman
Walt Disney Studios
$463,406,268
1990
20
Mission: Impossible
Paramount Pictures
$457,696,359
1996
21
Tarzan
Walt Disney Studios
$448,191,819
1999
22
Mrs. Doubtfire
20th Century Fox
$441,286,195
1993
23
Dances with Wolves
Orion Pictures
$424,208,848
1990
24
The Mummy
Universal Pictures
$415,933,406
1999
25
The Bodyguard
Warner Bros.
$411,006,740
1992
26
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves
Warner Bros.
$390,493,908
1991
27
Godzilla
TriStar Pictures
$379,014,294
1998
28
True Lies
20th Century Fox
$378,882,411
1994
29
Toy Story
Walt Disney Studios
$373,554,033
1995
30
There's Something About Mary
20th Century Fox
$369,884,651
1998
31
The Fugitive
Warner Bros.
$368,875,760
1993
32
Die Hard with a Vengeance
20th Century Fox/Cinergi Pictures
$366,101,666
1995
33
Notting Hill
PolyGram Filmed Entertainment
$363,889,678
1999
34
A Bug's Life
Walt Disney Studios
$363,398,565
1998
35
The World Is Not Enough
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures
$361,832,400
1999
36
Home Alone 2: Lost in New York
20th Century Fox
$358,994,850
1992
37
American Beauty
DreamWorks Pictures
$356,296,601
1999
38
Apollo 13
Universal Pictures/Imagine Entertainment
$355,237,933
1995
39
Basic Instinct
TriStar Pictures
$352,927,224
1992
40
GoldenEye
MGM/United Artists
$352,194,034
1995
41
The Mask
New Line Cinema
$351,583,407
1994
42
Speed
20th Century Fox
$350,448,145
1994
43
Deep Impact
Paramount Pictures/DreamWorks Pictures
$349,464,664
1998
44
Beauty and the Beast
Walt Disney Studios
$346,317,207
1991
45
Pocahontas
Walt Disney Studios
$346,079,773
1995
46
The Flintstones
Universal Pictures
$341,631,208
1994
47
Batman Forever
Warner Bros.
$336,529,144
1995
48
The Rock
Walt Disney Studios
$335,062,621
1996
49
Tomorrow Never Dies
MGM/United Artists
$333,011,068
1997
50
Seven
New Line Cinema
$327,311,859
1995
The following films received the most acclaim at the Academy Awards during the 1990s.