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  1. Headquarters. United States. Products. Motion pictures. Brandywine Productions is an American film production company known for its Alien film series, founded in 1969 by American filmmakers Walter Hill, David Giler, and Gordon Carroll. [1] [2] [3] [4]

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    Brandywine Productions is an American film production company. It was founded in 1960 by Walter Hill, David Giler and Gordon Carroll. It is best known for its Alien film series; Brandywine has produced or co-produced every theatrical film release in the franchise, including the 1979 film Alien, the 1986 film Aliens, the 1992 film Alien3, the 1997 f...

    •The character Sergeant Brandywine in the comic Aliens: Nightmare Asylum was named in reference to the production company.

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  3. The iconic creatures from two of the scariest film franchises in movie history wage their most brutal battle ever—in our own backyard. The small town of Gunnison, Colorado becomes a war zone between two of the deadliest extra-terrestrial life forms—the Alien and the Predator.

  4. Dec 21, 2020 · Courtesy of Brandywine Productions. David Giler, a veteran Hollywood producer known for his involvement with the long-running Alien franchise at 20th Century Fox, has passed away at the age of 77. According to a spokesman for his production company, Brandywine Productions, the writer-producer died at his home in Bangkok, Thailand on Saturday ...

  5. Brandywine Productions is a production company that has worked on several sci-fi, horror, and drama projects, such as the Alien franchise, Prometheus, and Women in Love. See the full list of titles sorted by popularity, genre, rating, and release date on IMDb.

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  6. Nov 30, 2023 · (20th Century Fox/Brandywine Productions/Alamy) Led by Fargo showrunner Noah Hawley, the new Alien TV series will reportedly take place before the events of Sigourney Weaver’s encounters with Xenomorphs in the primary Alien franchise which began with Scott’s Alien in '79 and lasted until Jean-Pierre Jeunet’s Alien: Ressurection in 1997.

  7. The success of Alien (1979) led to immediate discussions of a sequel, but the production company Brandywine Productions struggled to convince 20th Century Fox to make it. Studio president Alan Ladd Jr. was supportive of the project but left Fox to found the Ladd Company , and his replacement, Norman Levy, was concerned about the cost of ...

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