Original company The first incarnation of Anchor Bay Entertainment dates its origins back to two separate home video distributors:
Video Treasures, formed in 1985, and
Starmaker Entertainment, founded in 1988. Both companies sold budget items, including reissues of previously released home video programming, at discount prices. Video Treasures started with
public domain titles, and later made licensing deals with Color Systems Technology,
Vestron Video,
Heron Communications (including
Media Home Entertainment and
Hi-Tops Video),
Britt Allcroft (specifically the
Thomas the Tank Engine series, which was inherited from Strand Home Video when Video Treasures purchased that label from
Video Collection International in December 1993), Trans World Entertainment, Regal Video, Virgin Vision,
Hal Roach Studios, Video Communications Inc.,
Jerry Lewis Productions, and
Orion Pictures, among others. Starmaker's major distributions were films from the then-recently, out-of-business
New World Pictures and programs previously licensed to New World Pictures' video division. The rights to these titles were secured in 1990.
Viacom-produced programs and
Saturday Night Live compilations were other notable Starmaker releases. Both companies competed with each other for years. In January 1989, Video Treasures was acquired by the Handleman Company. In August 1991, Video Treasures acquired MNTEX Entertainment, a discount VHS distributor based in Prior Lake, Minnesota. In June 1994, Starmaker Entertainment was acquired by Handleman as well. Eventually, both companies merged to form a new corporate umbrella:
Anchor Bay Entertainment, in May 1995. Other budget home video and music labels became part of Anchor Bay, such as MNTEX Entertainment, Teal Entertainment, and Burbank Video, which were previously part of Video Treasures. In 2003, Handleman sold Anchor Bay to
IDT Entertainment, at the time a newly-formed entertainment division of telecommunications company
IDT Corporation. On February 4, 2005, the Securities and Exchange Commission filed civil charges against two former employees of Anchor Bay Entertainment, formerly owned by Handleman. The SEC's complaint, which was filed in the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Michigan, claims that the two employees caused the company to enter into a two million-dollar fraudulent transactions. The transactions involved the purported sale of slow-moving or obsolete inventory to business partners doubled with secret buy-back provisions. The inventory included worthless video boxes and sleeves and DVDs for films. Handleman subsequently restated its financial statements to correct these accounting errors. In 2004, it signed a licensing agreement with
Stephen J. Cannell Productions to release its library on DVD. In 2005, it signed a deal with
The Carsey-Werner Company to release many television series on DVD. In 2006, it attempted an agreement with Ember Entertainment Group to release
The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and
The Girl from U.N.C.L.E. on DVD, but it was prevented by a lawsuit from
Warner Bros., who said it owned both series. In 2006, Colorado-based
Liberty Media, the owner of the digital cable/pay-TV network
Starz, purchased IDT Entertainment from
IDT Corporation and renamed as Starz Media. In May 2007, Anchor Bay was renamed as
Starz Home Entertainment. A month later, it was announced on June 19, 2007, that Starz Home Entertainment would begin releasing high-definition versions of its films exclusively in the
Blu-ray format. In 2008, Starz Home Entertainment reverted to its original Anchor Bay name. During the late 2000s,
Sony Pictures Home Entertainment had a three-year deal with Anchor Bay Entertainment for worldwide DVD releases outside of North America, Australia, and the United Kingdom. On January 4, 2011, Starz, LLC sold 25% of Starz Media to
The Weinstein Company, resulting in Anchor Bay becoming the video distributor of films made by TWC and
Dimension (Disney's former subdivision). Starz later bought back the Weinstein's stake in October 2015, with Anchor Bay continuing to release TWC and Dimension video releases. In early 2015, Anchor Bay UK (along with Manga Entertainment UK) was bought from Starz by managing director Colin Lomax and renamed to Platform Entertainment. Kaleidoscope Film Distribution would acquire Platform in December 2016, with Manga Entertainment UK becoming a separate entity and operating on its own, which itself was eventually acquired by the anime company
Funimation in 2019. On June 30, 2016,
Lionsgate agreed to acquire Anchor Bay's parent company
Starz Inc. for $4.4 billion in cash and stock. The Starz/Lionsgate merger was completed on December 8, 2016. On August 29, 2017, Anchor Bay was folded into
Lionsgate Home Entertainment. From August 30, 2017 to 2021, Anchor Bay's website remained online, but with all the links broken.
Revival On February 15, 2024, Thomas Zambeck and Brian Katz, co-founders of Umbrelic Entertainment (founded in 2018), acquired the rights to the Anchor Bay Entertainment name from Lionsgate, with the two planning to relaunch the company. The new company will specialize in "genre films, undiscovered treasures, cult classics, and remastered catalog releases", with distribution being handled by
MVD Entertainment Group. The puppet horror film
Abruptio and documentary
Dinner with Leatherface are some of the label's first releases.{{cite web |url=https://deadline.com/2024/02/anchor-bay-entertainment-relaunched-1235827165/ |title=Anchor Bay Entertainment Label Gets Revitalized; Sets 'Abruptio' & 'Dinner With Leatherface' As First Releases |first=Anthony |last=D'Alessandro ==Licensed content==