View Full Version : Orion Pictures - The Studio That Won Everything, Then Went Bankrupt


TMC
04-06-2026, 07:47 PM
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How do you win the biggest night in Hollywood… and still go bankrupt?

In the early 1990s, Orion Pictures (https://bashful269.wordpress.com/2018/06/18/my-take-on-277-the-history-of-orion-pictures/) pulled off something almost impossible. Their film The Silence of the Lambs swept the Academy Awards—winning Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress, and Best Screenplay.

It was one of the greatest Oscar victories in history.

And the studio behind it… was completely broke.

So what happened?

In this video, we break down the full rise and fall of Orion Pictures (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SHlihb8LBLA)—from its founding by former United Artists executives, to its incredible run of Oscar-winning films like Amadeus, Platoon, and Dances with Wolves… to the financial decisions, industry shifts, and hidden structural problems that brought it all crashing down.

This is the story of:


A studio built to protect filmmakers
A business model that couldn’t survive success
And one of the most fascinating collapses in Hollywood history


Because sometimes… doing everything right still isn’t enough.

I want to hear from you:

What’s your favorite Orion film?

Do you think a studio like Orion could survive today?

Or was its collapse inevitable?

Drop your thoughts in the comments—I read every one.

If you enjoyed this deep dive, make sure to like, subscribe, and turn on notifications so you don’t miss the next one.

Because sometimes the studios that matter the most… are the ones that don’t last.

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I look at the history of Orion Pictures (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEKHtF0tBdc), a studio that went from releasing multiple hits and Oscar winners to facing bankruptcy.

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Orion Pictures was the new kid on the Hollywood block in 1978, an ambitious studio that gave the world such action classics like The Terminator, RoboCop (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6O9LJimSxRg), and First Blood (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jhlpkJT2XbA). Orion also had terrific success with the comedy genre, producing gems such as Throw Momma From the Train, Arthur, and the Bill and Ted films (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=stRFbFf6pXc). Not only that, Orion practically owned the Oscars, winning four Best Pictures in a span of only eight years -- Amadeus, Platoon (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5C2xU8bOl8), Dances with Wolves, and of course, Silence of the Lambs.

With this kind of resume, Orion Pictures should've had no trouble surviving for decades into the 21st Century, yet it was all over by the mid-90s. So what the heck went wrong? Ever hear of Erik the Viking? Speed Zone? State of Grace? She Devil? Well, that's just a sample of the costly flops that Orion also released throughout their tumultuous 20 year life. Add lots of "creative accounting" along with an immense amount of debt and the mystery behind Orion's crash (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TDs3G-vJEqk) becomes crystal clear. Join me as I celebrate the legacy of this truly unique movie studio, the one and only Orion Pictures.

TMC
04-11-2026, 10:23 PM
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What happens when the most critically acclaimed studio in Hollywood is simultaneously its most financially ruined? Orion Pictures collected five Academy Awards for The Silence of the Lambs — Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress, and Best Adapted Screenplay — while actively restructuring under Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. This is the full story of how that happened, and why it matters.

From its founding by frustrated United Artists executives in 1978, Orion built one of the most extraordinary creative rosters in Hollywood history — Woody Allen, Oliver Stone, Jonathan Demme, James Cameron. Four Best Picture winners. The Terminator. RoboCop. Amadeus. Platoon. Dances with Wolves. The Silence of the Lambs. A studio that consistently produced culture-defining cinema while simultaneously burying itself under nearly $700 million in debt.

We dig into the iconic production vehicles that defined Orion's visual legacy — the blacked-out 1984 Pontiac Trans Am from The Terminator, the forward-leaning 1986 Ford Taurus LX that became RoboCop's patrol car, and the deliberately outrageous 6000 SUX built on an Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme platform — and what the choices behind those vehicles reveal about the creative intelligence operating inside a studio already in financial freefall.

We also examine the decisions that compounded the collapse: the sale of The Addams Family rights to Paramount at cost price, watching a competitor take $113 million at the box office on a project Orion had developed; the slow response to the home video revolution; the franchise opportunities that slipped away at precisely the wrong moments. And we follow the story through to its extraordinary second chapter — a revived Orion label earning three consecutive Best Picture nominations under Amazon MGM, decades after the creditors took over.

Creative excellence and financial discipline are not the same skill. Orion had one of them in extraordinary abundance. This is the story of what happened because of that.

Thanks for watching! If you enjoyed this video, please give it a thumbs up and share it with your friends. Make sure to subscribe to Hollywood Vintage Vibes for more exciting content. See you in the next video.

Hawkee
04-12-2026, 03:28 AM
When you get the general picture out of all the movie studios I would have to say that Orion Pictures was one of the most underrated movie studios of Hollywood because when Orion Pictures was really at it's prime was when they released movies that won Oscars but they released movies that were stellar hits such as 1984's The Woman In Red with Gene Wilder Mermaids with Cher Christina Ricci and Winona Ryder and they were most successful in their action movies with 1990's Navy Seals and other action movies. But when you get the actual general picture the two movies that made Orion Pictures successful were Silence Of The Lambs and Dances With Wolves because if it wasn't for these two movies Orion Pictures would not have been the successful movie that they become. But I think the main reason why Orion Pictures went bankrupt was because they wanted to expand the studio beyond movies and as the years went on Orion Pictures was no more and even today Orion Pictures founded Orion Television which was a production company that produced game shows and talk shows and that's why Orion Pictures went belly up. But is there hope that Orion Pictures can make a comeback? Only time will tell?