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Goldcrest Films : ウィキペディア英語版 | Goldcrest Films
Goldcrest Films is a British film production company founded by Jake Eberts in January 1977.〔Eberts and Ilott, p. 27.〕 It enjoyed great success in the 1980s with films such as ''Local Hero'' (1983), ''The Killing Fields'' (1984) and ''Hope and Glory'' (1987) mostly produced by David Puttnam on modest budgets. The company also benefited from the new investment of Channel 4 in film production. The company won two Academy Awards for Best Picture, for ''Chariots of Fire'' in 1981 and ''Gandhi'' in 1982. After these initial successes the company backed more expensive productions with established Hollywood stars that often ran over schedule and budget culminating in ''Revolution'', ''The Mission'' (1986) and ''Absolute Beginners'' that all turned out to be box office flops. In recent years, Goldcrest Films has relaunched. ==Financing Arm== Goldcrest Films' financing arms, Goldcrest Pictures and Goldcrest Capital Partners, structure transactions in the media sector. From 2006 to 2008 — the first two years of operation — the companies provided services on 18 films, including ''Twilight'', ''Tropic Thunder'', ''Knowing'', ''Eagle Eye'', ''Revolutionary Road'' and ''Angus, Thongs and Perfect Snogging''. Goldcrest Capital also raises funds and provides services on UK independent feature films. The first two films of this new initiative were Andrea Arnold’s ''Wuthering Heights'' - produced by Douglas Rae and Robert Bernstein of Ecosse Films and Kevin Loader and co-financed with the UK Film Council, Film4 and Screen Yorkshire - and Phyllida Lloyd’s biopic of Margaret Thatcher, ''The Iron Lady''. This starred 16-time Oscar nominee Meryl Streep and was produced by Damian Jones for Pathé, Film4 and the UK Film Council with the participation of Canal+ and Cine Cinema.
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