Skip to main content

‘Moonlight’ film studio A24 to produce movies for Apple

Indie studio A24, which took home three Academy Awards for 2016’s Best Picture winner Moonlight, has entered into a multiyear deal with Apple to produce movies for the tech company’s burgeoning slate of film and television projects.

The studio will produce an unspecified number of films for Apple, according to The Hollywood Reporter, making this the first major announcement regarding the tech company’s plans for the movie side of its media development strategy. There’s no word on what the studio’s first project for Apple will be.

Recommended Videos

Best known for producing Moonlight, A24 most recently brought Jonah Hill’s critically acclaimed drama Mid90s and Bo Burnham’s similarly praised Eighth Grade to theaters. Previously, the studio distributed several award-winning films, including Room and Ex Machina.

After initiating a move into producing original television and movie projects, Apple has been primarily focused on its small-screen projects. So far, series in various stages of development and production include a TV morning show drama from Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon that will bring Steve Carell back to television for the first time in seven years. Apple is also producing Steven Spielberg’s reboot of the sci-fi anthology series Amazing Stories, as well as a series based on Isaac Asimov’s Foundation novels. Oprah Winfrey also reached a deal with Apple to produce TV content for the company, and a new series from Whiplash and La La Land director Damien Chazelle is also in the works.

That’s not all of the projects in the works. The Big Sick writers Emily V. Gordon and Kumail Nanjiani are bringing an immigration-themed anthology series to the company, and NBA star Kevin Durant is also reportedly working on a scripted series for Apple.

There’s still no word on how Apple plans to distribute any of the movie or television projects it’s developing. A24 typically handles theatrical distribution of its own films, but it also has a deal with DirecTV for the on-demand rights to its films after they leave theaters. With so many companies developing their own direct-to-consumer streaming platforms lately, it will be interesting to see where all of these projects end up.

Rick Marshall
A veteran journalist with more than two decades of experience covering local and national news, arts and entertainment, and…
7 best horror movies of the 2020s so far, ranked
A clawed hand's shadow covers Lily-Rose Depp in a still from the 2024 movie Nosferatu.

Horror movies have experienced a renaissance in the 21st century, particularly during the 2010s, and this trend has continued halfway into the 2020s. Many new and original movies have scared up plenty of fans worldwide, even while theaters struggled during the pandemic. The genre's continued achievements, both critically and commercially, have shown that the movie industry has the potential to create smart, scary, and successful films. Now that 2025 is here, it's time to review the seven best horror movies of the decade so far.
7. Evil Dead Rise (2023)

This reboot from director Lee Cronin brought new life to the iconic Evil Dead franchise, moving away from the traditional cabin-in-the-woods to an old Los Angeles apartment. There, a pregnant woman tries to protect her sister's children after the latter is turned into a Deadite, invoking the anxieties of pregnancy and motherhood.

Read more
With their new movie Y2K, Kyle Mooney and Evan Winter invite you to 1999’s deadliest party
Four people hide behind a curtain and stare in Y2K.

Get ready to party like it's the last day of 1999 in Y2K. High school juniors Eli (Jaeden Martell) and Danny (Julian Dennison) are the lovable outcasts who want to fit in with the popular kids. On New Year’s Eve, the duo crash their classmate’s house party. Eli hopes to attract the attention of his crush Laura (Rachel Zegler), while Danny wants to break out of his shell. 

Then, the clock strikes midnight, and the Y2K nightmare becomes a hellacious reality. In this alternate reality created by co-writers Kyle Mooney and Evan Winter, Y2K imagines a technological takeover, one where electronics come to life and overthrow humans to become the most powerful beings in the world. These electronics aren't peaceful, as they embark on a murder-filled quest to eradicate humanity. To save the world, the surviving teens must put aside their differences and fight together as a team, or risk becoming slaves in this new, tech-run world.

Read more
The Studio teaser trailer: Seth Rogen is a struggling Hollywood executive in Apple TV+ comedy
Seth Rogen raises his eyebrow and stares in The Studio.

In the first teaser trailer for The Studio, Seth Rogen's Matt Remick learns that running a movie studio is far from glamorous.

Matt is the new head of the embattled Continental Studios. "I got into this because I love movies," Matt tells Catherine O’Hara's character. As Matt quickly learns, the job is much harder than originally thought. From disasters on set and behind-the-scenes fights to unruly actors and pretentious artists, Matt's dream job might destroy him in the long run.

Read more