Sunn Classic was located in
Park City, Utah, with offices in nearby
Salt Lake City; The founder,
Rayland Jensen, previously handled distribution of American National Enterprises' 1968 release,
Alaskan Safari, which spent five years at the North American box office. The founding executives were Jenson,
Patrick Frawley (of Schick), and
Charles E. Sellier Jr. During its tenure, Sunn Classic spent US$85,000 in pre-production research on each of its films, conducting phone surveys and interviews with potential viewers. According to Bruce A. Austin, "Sunn identified as its market
working-class families who rarely went to the movies more than twice a year". In the midst of the research, it released films with an
MPAA rating of G, and in heavily marketed limited engagements. Through a process called
four-wall distribution (or "four-walling"), the company would rent theaters to show its films, and retained all of the box office receipts. and its subsequent
spin-off television series on the
NBC network. Among its other titles were 1979's
In Search of Historic Jesus and 1983's
Cujo. The company also ran a television unit in tandem with its film department. the company and two Schick divisions were purchased by Cincinnati-based
Taft Enterprises for over US$2.5 million. However, after
Carl Lindner Jr. purchased Taft in 1987 and restructured it into Great American Broadcasting, the studio ceased operations. By the 2000s, the media and property assets of the original Sunn Classics were under new management. Currently Sunn Classic's library is owned by
Paramount Skydance Corporation subsidiary
Paramount Pictures through
Melange Pictures. However, very few films from that library have seen a DVD or Blu-ray release; those that have are mostly the later larger-budgeted Taft productions such as
Cujo,
Hangar 18, and
The Boogens although some of their TV shows like
The Life and Times of Grizzly Adams have been released on DVD, under the
CBS DVD banner due to CBS' ownership of the television side of the library. The home video rights to the Sunn Classic catalog are currently licensed to
Kino Lorber, having prior been licensed to Olive Films and
Lionsgate. == Production slate ==