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The Audio Description Project

Notes on Year, Studio, and Genres in ADP Listings

This page explains how and why we associate studio names with the movie and series titles in our listings on this website, the meaning and accuracy of years we associate with titles, and how we select the genre to list for each title.

As the volume of titles we handle (currently over 10K) increased, we ran into problems properly identifying individual videos just by their title and type (movie or series), so we began adding years. Doing so allowed users to readily distinguish between the 1950 version of Cinderella and the 2015 one, for example. Robin Hood became a problem with its five different versions, so adding years helped there, too, but we also added studio names just to be clear. Then in 2023 we found that some titles were identical by specifying only title, type, and year, because different studios used the same name in the same year! (See, for example, the title Alone on Prime Video.) And to top it all off, we found that streaming services were making lots of errors in the film year they were sending us. Our definition of year is the year the film was first released commercially in the USA. That excludes film festivals or foreign releases. We have undergone a massive project of researching correct years of releases for films and are overriding what services send us where necessary for the purpose of consistency.

So how do we determine what studio to list? Our definition of studio is the studio that most people would associate with a video because it typically is the first thing anyone sees as the film opens. For example, "stars glide in from the sky and form a circle around a mountain: Paramount". Technically, that studio is the distributor, and that is the term we generally use internally. In reality, when a studio is through with the production of a film, they may hire a third party company to handle the actual distribution. One of those companies was Buena Vista, a Disney subsidiary which handled all of Disney's film distributions from 1953 to 2007. Their role was distribution and marketing of a finished product, but you would most likely rather identify the film with Disney, which is what we do. In 2020 another distribution company was formed to handle Universal and Warner Bros releases: Studio Distribution Services (SDS). Their name does not appear in the movies themselves, however.

It is our practice to try to avoid listing distribution-only companies (like SDS), and we try to ferret out the name that appears at the start of a film. When it comes to streaming services, however, they may purchase the rights to a film (rather than produce it) and call it their own. Those films are called Originals, like a Netflix Original. Things get confusing when two streaming services offer the same film which one company calls "Original." In some cases, they are fine crediting the "original" company, but in other cases not so much. So we sometimes maintain the name of an underlying studio for use when one company's Original is licensed by another.

We understand that most people don't care what studio released a film: you just care about the film! However, some studios are what's called "niche" studios and have their followers. So fans of horror films may love Shudder (although they rarely include audio description); and people who like G-rated sentimental films may like Hallmark; while cinema buffs may want to find out what A24 is showing; and parents of young kids will trust Disney for appropriate viewing. So for some folks, for some films, distribution studio matters.

Getting down to how we actually list studio names, we take some shortcuts. For the well known studios like the former 20th Century Fox and Universal Studios Home Entertainment, we cut down the titles as much as we can. We think you understand Fox, Universal, Disney, DreamWorks, etc., without spelling out their full legal names. For lesser known studios, we carry a longer name, like Highland Film Group or MarVista Entertainment. And just to cover this, while many sites say Warner Bros., we just say Warner Bros without the period.

Now how about genres? Initially we tried to consolidate to 9 genres per service; but when this became impractical, we introduced a button to display all a service's titles by genre, and let the number increase as necessary, though still doing some consolidation. A simple example of consolidation is using the genre Kids & Family, converting any of the following to it: Kids, Family, Children, Children's Television. We do this consolidation to make it easier for you to find all films of a certain genre easily, without knowing all the variations possible.

The current website limits services to only one genre per film or series. We realize this is limiting, and we are working on expanding this later in 2024.

Here is a chart showing you all the genres we "allow" and what consolidates into those names. Comments welcome!

GENRE NAME WE USE

Additional Genres found in vendor spreadsheets

Action & Adventure

Action
Adventure
Action/Adventure
Action and Adventure
Action-Adventure
Action – Adventure

Adult Animation

[will calculate if necessary for R & TV-MA Animation]

Animation

Animated
Cartoons
[currently we don't display this as a genre, but rather as a characteristic;
we'll convert to a genre in the future]

Anime

 

Classics

Film Noir

Comedy

Comedy-Drama
Sitcom

Crime

Mystery
Police/Cop

Disabilities

 

Documentary

Documentaries
Docuseries
documenary

Drama

Soap Operas

Food & Home

Cooking & Food

Game Show

Game Shows
Game Show/Competition
Game Show / Competition

Genre Not Specified

n/a
na

Holiday

[this is rarely sent to us as a genre, but we are looking in to
how to better us this genre]

Horror

Horror and Suspense

Independent

Art House
Arthouse

International

Korean [It is unclear at this point whether we keep International]

Kids & Family

Kids
Family
Children
Children's Cinema
Childrens Television
Children & Family
Family Cinema
Kids_and_family

LGBTQ

LGBTQ+ [we may switch the primary name to this one]
LGBT
Gay & Lesbian

Lifestyle & Culture

Lifestyle
Travel

Military and War

 

Music

Music Video
Music Videos and Concerts
Music Concert Footage
Music Documentaries
Concert
Concert Film
Concert Films

Musical

Musicals

News

News Shows
News and Information
News Magazine
Entertainment News

Reality TV

Reality-TV
Reality
Reality Competition
Competition

Romance

Romantic Comedy

Sci-Fi & Fantasy

Science fiction
Science Fiction
Science-Fiction
Fantasy
Sci-Fi
Sci-Fi/Fantasy
Sci_fi
Fantasy & Sci-Fi
Paranormal
Supernatural
Time Travel

Science & Nature

Animals & Nature
Nature
Nature and Wildlife

Short Films

Short_films

Special Interest

 

Sports

Sport
SPORTS
Sports Family
Olympics
Soccer
WWE

Stand-up

Standup
Stand-Up

Super Hero

 

Thriller

Thrillers
Suspense

TV Variety

Talk Shows
Talk Show
Talk_show
Entertainment
Variety
Award Shows & Events
Awards Shows & Events

Western

Westerns

Young Adult

Coming of Age
Teen
Young adult audience

 

If you have any feedback about how we use year, studio, and genre, feel free to contact webmaster Fred via the link at the bottom of this page.

- First published Jan 30, 2024; Last Updated Feb 23, 2024