). Tarantino formed A Band Apart in 1991, naming it after his favorite Godard film,
Bande à part. The company's logo was a stylized image of the robbers from
Reservoir Dogs, Tarantino's debut film. Subsequently, several legal entities within the company were named after the film's characters.
Mr. Pink LLC was for music video production budgets, and
Mr. Brown LLC was for commercials. In addition to Tarantino, members of the company included
Robert Rodriguez,
John Woo,
Tim Burton,
Steve Buscemi,
Darren Aronofsky,
John Landis, Athanasius Acropolis,
Joseph McGinty Nichol,
Nigel Dick, Varl Hobe,
Steve Carr, Cameron Casey,
Marcel Langenegger,
Wayne Isham, Cale Donk, Terry Windell, Lisa Prisco, Paul Street, Phil Harder-Rick Fuller,
Coodie & Chike, Osbert Parker,
Luc Besson, Porker LeVance,
Adam Christian Clark,
André 3000,
Christopher Morrison and Michael Palmieri, Ducky Powell, Andy Mornahan, Chash Brower, Steve Lowe, Loren Hill, Darren Grant, Charles Whittenmier, Geoff McGann, Olivier Venturini, The 405 Guys, and Craig Tanamoto. The company catapulted to fame with the 1994 release of Tarantino's
Pulp Fiction, which was considered by some critics to be the most influential American film of the decade. In the summer of 1995, the company added a division for commercials and later, for music video production, adding a third co-owner Michael Bodnarchek. Michael Bodnarchek tapped Simon Foster to co-found A Band Apart Music Video who brought notable A-list Directors as well as Kristin Cruz (aka Kris Foster) and Heidi Santelli as directors' rep and executive producer, respectively.
Company closure Tarantino and Bender had an amicable split, leaving Tarantino as the sole owner of the studio and the studio being up for
liquidation, while
David Heyman (
Harry Potter,
Gravity) produced Tarantino's ninth film,
Once Upon a Time in Hollywood. The company is listed for Tarantino's
Inglourious Basterds (2009) and
Django Unchained (2012), and credited for
Grindhouse (2007). ==Filmography==