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  1. In 1963, Jacobs formed the feature film production company APJAC Productions, which released its first film, What a Way to Go! through 20th Century-Fox the following year. Jacobs had been able to secure financing for the project on the strength of Fox contract star Monroe's agreement to star in it, but her death in 1962 forced Jacobs to replace ...

  2. APJAC International Productions was a movie production company founded in 1956 by Arthur P. Jacobs, who already headed his own publicity agency, The Arthur P. Jacobs Co., Inc.[1][2] APJAC's first production was What a Way to Go!, directed by J. Lee Thompson. The 1964 comedy was initially...

  3. Jul 6, 2005 · By Gordon C. Webb. For more than two years, Serling, who had earned a solid reputation as a television writer, struggled with the task of adapting this complex story for the big screen. By the time he submitted a final draft in early 1965, APJAC Productions had acquired the screen rights to Boulle’s story.

  4. As the president and major stockholder of his own film production company, APJAC Productions, from 1963, [1] Jacobs produced What a Way to Go! (1964, for Fox - initially a vehicle for Monroe before her 1962 death left the role to Shirley MacLaine), Doctor Doolittle (1967, for Fox), The Chairman (1969), Goodbye Mr. Chips (1969, for MGM), Play It ...

  5. Jul 10, 2017 · In October 1966, “Planet” moved to Fox, as a joint venture between the studio and Jacobs’ Apjac Productions. The following week, they announced Rod Serling as screenwriter and that the film...

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  7. Taken at the end of "Beneath the Planet of the Apes" (1969) on Disney+.

    • 10 sec
    • 53
    • Jayden Rhoel Natividad
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