Focus Features was founded in 2002 by James Schamus and David Linde and formed from the divisional merger of USA Films, Universal Focus and
Good Machine, as well as several assets of the
Vivendi-affiliated film studio
StudioCanal. USA Films was created by
Barry Diller in 1999, when he purchased
Interscope Communications, certain assets of the film division of
Propaganda Films,
October Films and
Gramercy Pictures from
Seagram and merged the three labels together; USA Films was led by
Scott Greenstein. Universal Focus was the specialty film arm of
Universal Pictures that was created in 1999 as Universal Classics, which was led by Paul Hardart and Claudia Gray, to replace the
October Films label in order to get a group of titles to be distributed by USA Films, focused on the marketing of niche-based acquisitions by
Universal Pictures International,
Working Title, WT2 Productions,
Revolution Films and
DNA Films, and eventually rebranded into Universal Focus by 2000. In March 2004, Focus Features revived
Rogue Pictures as a genre label, which was once used by
October Films in the late 1990s. Rogue Pictures would be led by the same team who led the standard Focus management. The first film released under this label was
Seed of Chucky. 2010s In August 2011, Focus Features launched Focus World, a label focusing on the
video on demand (VOD) market with initial plans to distribute eight to 15 films per year, with one film being released per month. The first titles released under this label were Russian film
Black Lightning and Brazilian film
Adrift. On October 2, 2013, James Schamus was fired from his position as CEO of Focus, with the New York offices being shut down in the process. He was succeeded by Peter Schlessel, whose company
FilmDistrict would be merged into Focus and folded into the trade name High Top Releasing. This became effective in January 2014, and several titles developed under FilmDistrict would be released by Focus. Under Schlessel, the company began to acquire films with a wider commercial appeal, much like his previous company. In May 2015,
Gramercy Pictures was revived by Focus as a genre label, that was on action, sci-fi, and horror films. In February 2016, Focus merged with
Universal Pictures International Productions (UPIP) as part of a new strategy to "align the acquisition and production of specialty films in the global market". Following this, along with several disappointing box office returns, Schlessel was let go from the company and replaced with UPIP Managing Director
Peter Kujawski. This shift would lead to several Oscar-winning movies, such as
The Theory of Everything (2014),
The Danish Girl (2015),
Darkest Hour (2017), and
Phantom Thread (2017), as well as auteur-driven films like
Tom Ford's
Noctural Animals (2016) and
Sofia Coppola's
The Beguiled (2017). In 2018, with the release of
Morgan Neville’s
Mister Rogers bio,
Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, and Spike Lee’s
BlacKkKlansman, Focus grossed about $150 million domestically, leading the studio specialty labels. With its international business, which included foreign distribution on films like
Manchester by the Sea (2016) and
Lady Bird (2017), it grossed almost $500 million worldwide. In November 2022,
The Gotham Film & Media Institute announced that Focus Features’ Chairman, Peter Kujawski and Vice Chairman, Jason Cassidy would receive the Industry Tribute during the 32nd annual Gotham Awards Ceremony. In January 2025, it was announced that Focus Features was nearing a deal to produce an adaptation of the 1997 horror-thriller novel
Audition by
Ryū Murakami and the Japanese cult horror classic
Audition (1999)
. On October 18, 2025, Focus Features launched Feature Fest, an immersive one-day festival experience on the Universal Studios lot in
Los Angeles. The event featured several Focus films, including an advance screening of
Yorgos Lanthimos’
Bugonia (2025). In March 2026, at the
98th Academy Awards,
Jessie Buckley won Best Actress Focus Features’
Hamnet, while
Bugonia and
Song Sung Blue received four and one nominations, respectively. In April 2026, first footage from
Robert Eggers' third film at Focus, upcoming period horror film
Werwulf, was unveiled during the Universal and Focus Features presentation at
CinemaCon in
Las Vegas. That same month, early reviews for Morgan Neville's documentary about
Saturday Night Live (SNL) creator
Lorne Michaels were beginning to come out. == Distribution partners ==