Fogwood Films and as an independent producer Ziskin formed Fogwood Films with partner
Sally Field in 1984, and produced ''
Murphy's Romance (1985). As an independent producer, Ziskin produced the thriller No Way Out (1987) for Orion Pictures. Ziskin and partner Ian Sander produced two films featuring Dennis Quaid, the 1988 remake of D.O.A.,'' and
Taylor Hackford's ''
Everybody's All-American'' (also 1988).
Touchstone Pictures Ziskin's largest success came with the release of the comedy
Pretty Woman (1990), starring
Julia Roberts and
Richard Gere, on which Ziskin served as executive producer for
Touchstone Pictures. Ziskin's next project,
What About Bob? (1991), proved stressful. She and star
Bill Murray had spirited disagreements during production, which involved Murray pushing her into a lake and breaking her sunglasses. Neither that film nor
The Doctor (also 1991) were anywhere near as strong at the box-office as
Pretty Woman. A switch to Columbia resulted in
Stephen Frears'
Hero (1992), a loose remake of
Meet John Doe (1941), for which Ziskin both produced and supplied the story. Ziskin directed her first short film
Oh, What a Day! 1914, which was released in 1994, and produced the
Nicole Kidman tour-de-force
To Die For (1995), under the banner of Laura Ziskin Productions.
Fox 2000 Ziskin was appointed president of
Fox 2000 in 1994, a newly created division of
20th Century Fox. Among the films released were
Edward Zwick's
Gulf War drama
Courage Under Fire (1996), the romantic comedy
One Fine Day (1996), Pat O'Connor's
Inventing the Abbotts (1997), and the big-budget disaster film
Volcano (1997). Ziskin and
Tom Rothman helped develop the script for
The English Patient (1996) before studio head
Bill Mechanic returned the rights to director
Anthony Minghella, who then got it produced and distributed through
Miramax Films. Ziskin executive produced
As Good as It Gets (1997). The film received seven Academy Award nominations, including Best Picture. Its stars,
Jack Nicholson and
Helen Hunt, received the leading role Oscars in the acting categories.
Columbia Pictures After nearly five years in the same job, Ziskin resigned from Fox 2000 in November 1999 and within a month had a production deal at
Columbia Pictures. After serving as the first solo female producer of an Academy Awards telecast in 2002, Ziskin returned to the big screen with the feature version of
Spider-Man (2002). The film was released in early May to widespread acclaim from critics and became the highest-grossing film of its year. The success of the film led to two sequels,
Spider-Man 2 (2004) and
Spider-Man 3 (2007). In 2002, Ziskin was awarded the
Crystal Award by
Women in Film for her efforts at expanding the role of women in the entertainment industry. ==Activism==