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taken from Pound Puppies And The Legend Of Big Pawrelease date: March 18th 1988villain: Marvin McNasty.
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- Colin Levert
Apr 17, 2021 · From a random YouTube video with the opening of Rambo III (1988).Looks like this print has the TriStar logo and fanfare intact. © Lionsgate, ViacomCBS, Studi...
- 41 sec
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- totoro and shadow’s channel
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Nov 4, 2021 · From: Rambo 3 (1988)
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- 2022 Tuan Nguyen
co-production with Carolco Pictures: Short Circuit: 1986–88 Iron Eagle: Look Who's Talking: 1989–93 3 Universal Soldier: 1992–99 2 Co-production with Carolco Pictures and IndieProd Company Productions Sniper: 1993–2002 3 Ninjas: 1994–98 3 Matilda: 1996–2022 2 Starship Troopers: 1997–2004 Godzilla: 1998–99
January 15, 1988: For Keeps: co-production with ML Delphi Premier Productions March 4, 1988: Switching Channels: March 18, 1988: Pound Puppies and the Legend of Big Paw: theatrical distribution only; produced by Carolco Pictures: April 1, 1988: The Seventh Sign: co-production with Interscope Communications and ML Delphi Premier Productions ...
Release DateTitleApril 6, 1984May 11, 1984July 13, 1984July 27, 1984distributed by TriStar Pictures June 17, 1988: Red Heat: November 4, 1988: They Live: international distribution only; with Alive Films and Larry Franco Productions; distributed by Universal Pictures in the U.S. November 11, 1988: Iron Eagle II: distributed by TriStar Pictures December 2, 1988: Watchers
In late 1987, most of Tri-Star's releases were copyrighted under the "Columbia Pictures Entertainment, Inc." name until mid-1988, when it was reverted back to "Tri-Star Pictures, Inc.", as a new entity with that name was incorporated on April 13. In January 1988, CPE's stocks fell a little and Coke decreased its shares in CPE to 49%.