De Laurentiis Entertainment Group

De Laurentiis Entertainment Group (DEG) was an entertainment production company and distribution unit founded by Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis. The company is notable for producing Manhunter, Blue Velvet, the horror films Near Dark and Evil Dead II, King Kong Lives (the sequel to De Laurentiis' remake of King Kong), and Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure, as well as distributing The Transformers: The Movie, along with revival films, including The Howling film series (including Rob Zombie's remake)

The company's main studios were located in Wilmington, North Carolina, which is now EUE/Screen Gems Studios. The studio's first releases were in 1986. It went bankrupt two years later after Million Dollar Mystery, among other films, failed at the box office. Carolco Pictures (now by DreamWorks) acquired DEG in 1989. And in 2010, after Dino De Laurentiis' death, his own company (Dino De Laurentiis Company) has changed back to De Laurentiis Entertainment Group, by some of his own relatives, including Martha De Laurentiis & Dina De Laurentiis.

History
In 1983, Dino De Laurentiis produced Firestarter in Wilmington. The governor of North Carolina, Jim Hunt, claimed that the filming increased economic activity in the state. Hunt used incentives and loans to allow De Laurentiis to buy a local warehouse to convert into a studio. In early 1984, De Laurentiis founded the North Carolina Film Corporation, with Martha Schumacher as president.

In 1985, DEG acquired Embassy Pictures from The Coca-Cola Company, allowing for North American distribution of De Laurentiis' new product. Dino De Laurentiis continued to pre-sell his films for overseas distribution, as he had done in the past. In May 1986, De Laurentiis took DEG public, raising $240 million in the process. The following month, DEG's first slate of films were released. In 1986, De Laurentiis formed an Australian subsidiary, De Laurentiis Entertainment Limited (DEL), which built a studio on the Gold Coast.[3] Although De Laurentiis asserted that the company would make films on par with the major studios, most of DEG's slate consisted of films budgeted at $10 million or less, below the industry standard of $14-16 million, with the notable exceptions of King Kong Lives and Tai-Pan, the only studio-level films DEG financed.

By August 1987, DEG was $16.5 million in debt, citing the box-office failures and/or disappointments of its product. Dino De Laurentiis refused offers to sell the company because he wanted to retain controlling interest. Around the same time, De Laurentiis' daughter Raffaella exited her role as DEG's president of production.

De Laurentiis' North Carolina studio would be sold by Carolco Pictures and the Gold Coast studio would be acquired by Village Roadshow.

The De Laurentiis library is currently owned by StudioCanal via it's acquisition of the Paravision International library. North American home video rights to much of their films currently lie with MGM Home Media Studios because of the acquisition of PolyGram Filmed Entertainment's pre-March 31, 1996 library which included Nelson Entertainment and its back catalog which consisted of DEG and former Embassy Pictures titles, while like with Embassy, some of their films are distributed on home video by Lionsgate Films in conjunction with StudioCanal.

Films released
Canadian distribution of DEG releases were done by Paramount Pictures.

DEG had an early version of Total Recall in pre-production with Patrick Swayze as Quaid and Bruce Beresford to direct (David Cronenberg had also been approached), where it was to have been shot in Australia. After DEG's bankruptcy, the film went in turnaround to Carolco Pictures (now part of DreamWorks and owned by Amblin Partners)

Along with the Embassy Pictures library, De Laurentiis Entertainment Group's library was sold to Paravision, a subsidiary of L'Oréal, in 1989. The library currently belongs to StudioCanal, though Embassy Pictures has revived by Sony.

On November 10, 2010, Dino De Laurentiis died at age 91 in his own residence in Beverly Hills, CA. The following month, his own production company (Dino De Laurentiis Company), has changed back to De Laurentiis Entertainment Group, by some of his own relatives, including Martha De Laurentiis & Dina De Laurentiis, though Martha De Laurentiis formed the Dino De Laurentiis Company in 2015, which is currently working on projects such as NBC's Hannibal, Barbarella, and Gateway.

And on August 8, 2019, which would've been Dino De Laurentiis' 100th birthday, his relatives (including Martha & Dina) celebrated his 100th birthday. And so Martha decides to rename De Laurentiis Company to De Laurentiis Entertainment Group, in honor of Dino's 100th birthday.