List of Lionsgate theatrical animated feature films
This list of theatrical animated feature films consists of animated films produced or released by Lionsgate.
Lionsgate releases films from Lionsgate-owned and non-Lionsgate owned animation studios. Most films listed below are from Splash Entertainment which distributed animated films for Lionsgate, producing its first feature-length animated film Norm of the North in 2016. Lionsgate has also released animated films by other production companies, such as Aardman Animations.
Films
American releases
| Aardman Animations (2015–18) | |
| Splash Entertainment (2016–present) | |
| Other Lionsgate studio | |
| Third-party studio | |
| Distribution only | D |
| Distributed by Lionsgate but only in the U.K. | UK |
Highest grossing films
| Rank | Film | Gross | Studio | Year | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Shaun the Sheep Movie | $106,209,378 | Aardman | 2015 | [1] |
| 2 | My Little Pony: The Movie | $60,330,833 | DHX Media | 2017 | [2] |
| 3 | Early Man | $54,622,814 | Aardman | 2018 | [3] |
| 4 | Alpha and Omega | $50,507,267 | Crest Animation Productions | 2010 | [4] |
| 5 | Tarzan | $44,095,996 | Summit Entertainment | 2013 | [5] |
| 6 | Fly Me to the Moon | $41,721,414 | nWave Pictures | 2008 | [6] |
| 7 | The Wild Life | $40,075,446 | 2016 | [7] | |
| 8 | Astro Boy | $39,886,986 | Imagi Animation Studios | 2009 | [8] |
| 9 | Happily N'Ever After | $38,085,778 | Vanguard Animation | 2007 | [9] |
| 10 | Norm of the North | $30,734,502 | Splash Entertainment | 2016 | [10] |
See also
- List of The Weinstein Company animated films (they are from one of Lionsgate's predecessor)
References
Notes
- ^ Listed are the original theatrical release dates in the United States (or other non-U.S. territories) when the film was contributed by Lionsgate. Different distributors are attributed and credited for distributing each film throughout the history of Lionsgate.
- ^ a b Limited release in the United States.
- ^ In 2018, Universal Pictures (who owns Veggietales under DreamWorks Animation and DreamWorks Classics, the latter who owns Big Idea Entertainment) bought the film from Lionsgate (the owner of Artisan Entertainment, the distributor of the film).
- ^ a b c d e f g h Released by Lionsgate in North America
- ^ a b c d e f Released by Summit Entertainment