Comprehensive catalog of Warner Home Video releases

This page is for sorting Warner Home Video's worldwide releases by catalog number.

Releases with catalog letters followed by four-digit codes can be viewed at Comprehensive catalog of Warner Home Video letter-four digit releases.

Original releases (1000 to 6999)
For the first few years of Warner Home Video's existence, the company's catalog numbers were four digits long; they would shortly adjust to five-digit releases. 1000s were set to be released by Warner Bros., 2000s were released by Orion Pictures, 3000s were CED releases (all distributed by RCA SelectaVision), 4000s were from independent companies including the newly-formed New World Pictures, and 6000s for U.S. Spanish-language releases, the latter all issued since the late '80s.

Standard Warner Bros. releases (11000+, 1981-2003)
This category also includes the company's cornerstone titles that were given catalog numbers normally correlating to other categories.

Buena Vista DVD releases (34500-35000, 1998-2000; Europe, Middle East, Africa and former Soviet Union only)
Buena Vista Home Entertainment (now Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment) was one of the earliest studios to release DVDs, and, on July 6, 1998, arranged to have Warner Home Video distribute its DVD releases in Europe, the Middle East, Africa and the fifteen former Soviet republics during the period where the format was in its infancy. The agreement covered titles from Walt Disney Pictures, Touchstone Pictures, Hollywood Pictures and, in some markets, Miramax Films. In the later months of 2000, Buena Vista ended its European, Middle Eastern, African and post-Soviet state distribution deal with Warner Home Video and began releasing DVDs either on its own or through locally-centric companies in these parts of the world.

Turner Entertainment releases (65000 to 70000)
All these releases were previously held by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer before Turner acquired its pre-1986 library in a failed attempt to purchase the company itself. Warner assumed full control of these titles in 1999 as part of a deal to terminate its home video distribution contract with MGM/UA Home Video early.