On 1 January 1987, Canal+ Productions was founded as a cinema film co-production subsidiary of the cable channel
Canal+. The subscription channel was co-founded by
André Rousselet This was to reduce Canal+'s dependence on the American major studios by building its own library that the pay-TV channel could use on their own channels and internationally. By December 1990, Canal+ Productions rebranded to Le Studio Canal+, and released its first film,
The Double Life of Veronique, by
Krzysztof Kieslowski. StudioCanal also financed French-language films, such as
Brotherhood of the Wolf (which became the sixth-highest-grossing French-language film of all time in the United States) and
Intimate Strangers. Films such as
Terminator 2: Judgment Day which grossed US$519 million,
Basic Instinct which grossed US$352 million and
The Tourist which grossed US$278 million worldwide, have been big box-office hits for StudioCanal. In January 1996, Le Studio Canal+ made a $56 million bid for the library of the American independent film studio
Carolco Pictures.
20th Century Fox (now 20th Century Studios), which had originally agreed to buy the library for $50 million, had dropped their bid to $47.5 million and ultimately dropped out of contention, making this acquisition Canal+'s first foray into library acquisitions. Le Studio Canal+'s original plan was to build a pan-European distribution network. They made their first known acquisition into a foreign market in 1997 when they bought a 20% minority stake in German film distribution company
Tobis Film, marking their first entry into the German movie distribution market; they would later increase their stake to 60% in February 2000, renaming the company Tobis StudioCanal. On 1 December 1998, all of Canal+ film, television, music, video production activities, etc., were grouped into a new entity, Canal+ Image, which was rebranded StudioCanal in 2000. However, in June 2003, StudioCanal announced it had relinquished their 50% stake to RAI, giving the latter full control of 01 Distribution. In July 2001, StudioCanal entered the Spanish film industry by acquiring a 45% stake in Sogepaq from Spanish pay television company
Sogecable (Vivendi Universal owned 21% of Sogecable at the time) for $36.2 million, also giving the former a 73% controlling stake in its Spanish subsidiary StudioCanal España and a minority stake in the joint venture
Warner Sogefilms. The following month, StudioCanal acquired a 52% stake in French television production powerhouse Expand. In May 2002, StudioCanal expanded their Italian operations by setting up an in-house production outfit based in Rome named StudioCanal Urania, aiming to produce up to three films annually. In late-September 2002, StudioCanal announced that they and
BAC Majestic had parted ways. Terms of the deal included the sale of their joint venture
Mars Distribution to StudioCanal, while BAC Distribution would revert to BAC Majestic. In July 2003, StudioCanal partnered with French animation studio
Alphanim (now Gaumont Animation) and had jointly established the home entertainment subsidiary entitled Alphanim Video to distribute Alphanim's catalogue on home media. Staff departures and its parent Vivendi Universal's debt forced StudioCanal to gradually sell off their interests in these companies: • Tobis StudioCanal was subject to a management buyout by CEO Kilian Rebentrost and shareholder
Pathé in December 2002 and renamed back to Tobis Film, although the two companies maintained their business relations. • Mars Films split from StudioCanal in 2007 to become independent; StudioCanal would later buy a 30% stake in the company in September 2015 and begin controlling its library in August 2021. Three years later, StudioCanal re-entered the international market by acquiring British film distributor
Optimum Releasing in May 2006 as their first expansion into the United Kingdom, releasing their British film and television catalogue, including the
EMI Films library, through the newly acquired company. In August 2007, StudioCanal partnered with
NBC Universal's international home entertainment division Universal Pictures International Entertainment to launch a joint venture home entertainment distribution subsidiary called Universal Studio Canal Video. In January 2008, StudioCanal acquired German-based film independent distributor
Kinowelt, which had distributed StudioCanal's films there until then, marking a re-entry for StudioCanal into the German market. In January 2012, StudioCanal expanded its European operations by acquiring a majority stake in Munich-based producer and distributor
Tandem Productions, marking the company's first major move into television production. StudioCanal would later buy out the company's remaining shares in May 2020. In July 2012, StudioCanal made a deal with Australian & New Zealand cinema chain
Hoyts to acquire the latter's independent film distribution division Hoyts Distribution, marking StudioCanal's first acquisition outside of Europe and its first entry into the Australian film & television distribution market; the company was rebranded to StudioCanal Pty Limited one year later in April 2013. In December 2013, StudioCanal announced its acquisition of a majority stake in the British independent TV production company
Red Production Company, expanded StudioCanal's British activities into the British television industry. In May 2014, StudioCanal expanded their operations into the Scandinavian market, joining forces with Danish screenwriter & author
Søren Sveistrup, screenwriter
Adam Price and film & television producer Meta Louise Foldager to launch a new Danish television production company based in
Copenhagen named
SAM Productions, with the latter becoming CEO of the new production company. In September 2014, StudioCanal announced a first-look deal with the newly established American entertainment company
The Picture Company, founded by former
Silver Pictures employees
Andrew Rona and Alex Heinemann. The deal was extended in May 2023, with StudioCanal acquiring a minority stake in the company alongside a new five-year deal. In May 2015, StudioCanal collaborated with Japanese publishing company
Kadokawa Corporation to restore
Akira Kurosawa’s highly acclaimed film
Ran for its 30th anniversary with French film processing company
Éclair restoring the film in 4K under the supervision of the two companies ahead of the film's re-release in Japanese theatres before releasing it to French cinemas. In April 2016, StudioCanal further extended their British film & television activities by acquiring a 20% stake in two London-based British film & television production companies: actor
Benedict Cumberbatch's film and television production company SunnyMarch TV and
Johnny Capps & Julian Murphy's television production company Urban Myth Films; they also acquired a 33% stake in Spanish television production company Bambú Producciones, marking StudioCanal's re-entry into the Spanish film & television production business. In June 2016, following the success of the 2014 film
Paddington, StudioCanal acquired the
Paddington Bear brand along with Paddington & Company and The Copyrights Group, the franchise's merchandise licensing agent. StudioCanal then announced that it would be producing three more
Paddington films, including
a show on
Nick Jr. in 2020. In 2017, StudioCanal, who owns Carolco Pictures' library, reached an agreement with the revived American film studio Carolco, whereby the French film production & distribution studio would have sole control of the Carolco name and logo and the revived Carolco Pictures company would be renamed Recall Studios; this agreement settled a legal dispute over the Carolco mark brought by StudioCanal. The arrangement took effect on November 29 of that year. In July 2021, StudioCanal announced their acquisition of German production company Lailaps Films. In June 2022, StudioCanal expanded into the Benelux film & television market by acquiring a majority stake in the Dutch independent film production and distribution firm
Dutch FilmWorks. In October 2022, StudioCanal entered a partnership with Rome-based Italian film production company Elsinore Film to jointly co-develop and co-produce a slate of scripted and unscripted content for the international market, marking a re-entry for StudioCanal into the Italian film & television business. In March 2024, StudioCanal launched their first in-house production label, an unnamed film & television production genre label dedicated to horror, thriller and sci-fi action movies and had hired former StudioCanal UK executive Jed Benedict as the CEO of the label. In February 2025, the label, now christened Sixth Dimension, made its first acquisition by acquiring distribution rights outside North America to an upcoming reboot of the
Silent Night, Deadly Night series from
Cineverse. In April 2024, StudioCanal established an in-house production label dedicated to publishing book-to-screen adaptations called StudioCanal Stories, which would produce film and television adaptations of famous books and novels; StudioCanal had previously produced adaptations of novels such as
War of the Worlds. StudioCanal's head of TV series department Sarah Reese Geffroy was appointed senior vice president of the new label. In July 2024, StudioCanal expanded their American operations by launching their second American office based in New York City and promoted former global distribution sales chief Anne Chérel to oversee the office as StudioCanal's chief commercial officer. In September 2024, StudioCanal rebranded their merchandising and licensing company The Copyrights Group to StudioCanal Kids & Family to expand their kids and family brand portfolio; they will also lead worldwide brand development, licensing and retail services, with Francoise Guyonnet continuing to be the CEO of the renamed division. In October 2024, StudioCanal signed an international distribution deal with American independent film production company
River Road Entertainment for nine feature films and two documentaries for theatrical, television, SVOD and other media. In June 2025, StudioCanal announced their decision to shut down British television production outfit Red Production Company due to Patrick Schweitzer stepping down as chief executive officer, with Red's current and future slate being taken over by StudioCanal's British television production division StudioCanal TV UK. In October 2025, StudioCanal reorganized its worldwide television production division under executive managing director
Mary-Kathryn Kennedy, bringing all of StudioCanal's television production subsidiaries under one senior management team. As part of the reorganisation, Alix Lebrat was named senior vice president of series for France & Southern Europe and would oversee French & Spanish-language states, with StudioCanal planning to borden its scripted production in its home country under labels such as 2eme Bureau. Near the end of November 2025 and following the success of the westend musical
Paddington the Musical, StudioCanal expanded its stage operations by launching its own stage division entitled StudioCanal On Stage that would produce its stage, theatre and live experiences based on StudioCanal's own intellectual properties from its film & television catalogue such as
Paddington including producing its own adaptations of broadways starting with the broadway revival of
Mel Brooks's 1967 Embassy Pictures film
The Producers and the broadway adaptation of 1949 Ealing Studios film
Kind Hearts and Coronets with StudioCanal's vice president of global productions Ron Halpern leading StudioCanal On Stage as president of development. In February 2026, StudioCanal acquired a 51% majority stake in the Italian distribution company Lucky Red, which has previously distributed multiple films from the former in Italy; co-founder
Andrea Occhipinti retains the remaining 49% and will continue to serve as its CEO. ==Production companies==