Double R Productions (formerly known as Troublemaker Studios) is an American production company founded and owned by filmmaker Robert Rodriguez and producer Elizabeth Avellán.[1] The company is based in Austin, Texas and is at the former site of the Robert Mueller Municipal Airport. It shares space with Austin Studios, which is managed by the Austin Film Society, and houses production offices, sound stages and the largest green screen in Texas.
The company's visual effects division, Troublemaker Digital Studios, is also located at the site, and uses six-core AMD Opteron processors and FirePro graphics accelerators on many of its productions. A second facility, Troublemaker Sound, is located in the hill country outside Austin. It provides post-production sound and editing facilities, including a mixing and dubbing sound stage powered by a large Pro Tools installation, and a full Avid Unity-based editing system.
In the 1990s and 2000s, it had an alliance with Dimension Films to produce projects for the studio, with most of them becoming hit films and their box office successes.[2] The company made its breakthrough with its first franchise being that of Spy Kids.[3] On August 12, 2021, the company had signed a deal with HBO and HBO Max.[4]
In 2020, Troublemaker Studios was renamed to Double R Productions after Elizabeth Avellán left the company in 2019.
Los Hooligans Productions[]
The company was founded in 1991 as Los Hooligans Productions, taking its name from Rodriguez's own comic strip, Los Hooligans, which he wrote and illustrated for three years while attending the University of Texas at Austin. Rodriguez chose the name so fans of the strip would recognize it when they saw his films. The company was reincorporated as Troublemaker Studios in 2000.
Los Hooligans Productions filmography (1991-2000):
- Bedhead (1991) (short film) (distributed by Columbia Pictures)
- El Mariachi (February 26, 1993) (distributed by Columbia Pictures)
- Roadracers (July 22, 1994) (distributed by Showtime Network)
- Desperado (August 25, 1995) (distributed by Columbia Pictures)
- Four Rooms (December 25, 1995) (co-production with A Band Apart; distributed by Miramax Films)
- From Dusk Till Dawn (January 19, 1996) (co-production with A Band Apart; distributed by Dimension Films)
- The Faculty (December 25, 1998) (distributed by Dimension Films)
- From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money (March 16, 1999) (direct-to-video) (co-production with A Band Apart; distributed by Dimension Films and Buena Vista Home Entertainment)[5]
- From Dusk Till Dawn 3: The Hangman's Daughter (January 18, 2000) (direct-to-video) (co-production with A Band Apart; distributed by Dimension Films and Buena Vista Home Entertainment)[6]
Films[]

The Troublemaker Studios logo (featuring Pepino) before it was rebranded in 2020 (used in 2000-2019).
As Troublemaker Studios (2000-2019):
- Spy Kids (March 30, 2001) (distributed by Dimension Films)
- Spy Kids 2: The Island of Lost Dreams (August 7, 2002) (distributed by Dimension Films)[7]
- Spy Kids 3-D: Game Over (July 25, 2003) (distributed by Dimension Films)
- Once Upon a Time in Mexico (September 12, 2003) (distributed by Columbia Pictures and Dimension Films)
- Sin City (April 1, 2005) (distributed by Dimension Films)
- The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl in 3-D (June 10, 2005) (distributed by Dimension Films and Columbia Pictures)
- Grindhouse (April 6, 2007) (distributed by Dimension Films)
- Planet Terror (co-production with Rodriguez International Pictures)
- Death Proof (co-production with Rodriguez International Pictures)
- Shorts (August 21, 2009) (co-production with Imagination Abu Dhabi and Media Rights Capital; distributed by Warner Bros. Pictures)
- Predators (July 9, 2010) (co-production with Davis Entertainment; distributed by 20th Century Fox)[8]
- Machete (September 3, 2010) (co-production with Overnight Productions and Hyde Park Entertainment; distributed by 20th Century Fox and Sony Pictures Releasing International)
- The Black Mamba (February 19, 2011) (short film) (co-production with RadicalMedia; distributed by Nike)
- Spy Kids: All the Time in the World (August 19, 2011) (distributed by Dimension Films)
- The Director's Chair (2014–present) (co-production with Skip Film and FactoryMade Ventures)
- Sin City: A Dame to Kill For (August 22, 2014) (co-production with Aldamisa Entertainment, Miramax Films and Solipsist Films; distributed by Dimension Films)
- Sock 'Em Dead (2015) (short film) (co-production with Rodriguez International Pictures in association with Happy Socks)
- Spy Kids: Mission Critical (2018) (co-production with Dimension Television and Mainframe Studios; distributed by Lantern Television)
- Alita: Battle Angel (February 14, 2019) (co-production with Lightstorm Entertainment; distributed by 20th Century Fox)[9][10]
- Red 11 (March 15, 2019) (co-production with Double R)[11]
- UglyDolls (May 3, 2019) (co-production with Reel FX Animation Studios, Alibaba Pictures, Huaxia Film Distribution and Original Force; distributed by STX Entertainment)[12]
- 100 Years (2015; releasing in November 18, 2115) (in association with Kouz Production and Moonwalk Films)
As Double R Productions (2020-present):
- We Can Be Heroes (December 25, 2020) (distributed by Netflix)[13]
- Happier Than Ever: A Love Letter to Los Angeles (September 3, 2021) (co-production with Interscope Films, Darkroom Productions, Nexus Studios and Aron Levine Productions; distributed by Disney+)
- Hypnotic (May 12, 2023) (co-production with Studio 8, Solstice Studios, Ingenious Media and Hoosegow Productions; distributed by Ketchup Entertainment in the United States and Warner Bros. Pictures in the United Kingdom)
- Spy Kids: Armageddon (September 22, 2023) (co-production with Skydance Media and Spyglass Media Group; distributed by Netflix)[14]
Quick Draw Productions[]
- Not to be confused with The Quick Draw McGraw Show

Quick Draw Productions logo
In 2010, Rodriguez launched Quick Draw Productions, a production and financing company that would allow him greater freedom to develop and produce film and television projects. Aaron Kaufman and Iliana Nikolic are his partners in the venture. In 2012, an animation division, Quick Draw Animation, was launched. Both companies are based at Troublemaker Studios.
Quick Draw Productions filmography (2013):
- Two Scoops (2013) (short film) (in association with BlackBerry)
- Machete Kills (October 11, 2013) (co-production with A.R. Films, Aldamisa Entertainment, Demarest Films, Overnight Productions and 1821 Pictures; distributed by Open Road Films)[15]
Rodriguez International Pictures[]
Template:Redirect-distinguish

Rodriguez International Pictures logo
In the beginning of 2005, Rodriguez launched Rodriguez International Pictures, a film and television production company that mainly focuses on the horror genre. Its name is an homage to the low-budget production company American International Pictures.
Rodriguez International Pictures filmography (2005-2015):
- Curandero: Dawn of the Demon (2005) (direct-to-video) (distributed by Dimension Films, Miramax and Lionsgate Home Entertainment)
- Grindhouse (April 6, 2007) (distributed by Dimension Films)
- Planet Terror (co-production with Troublemaker Studios)
- Death Proof (co-production with Troublemaker Studios)
- El Mariachi (2014) (co-production with Teleset Colombia and Sony Pictures Television; distributed by Sony Pictures Television International)
- From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series (2014–15) (co-production with Sugarcane Entertainment and FactoryMade Ventures; distributed by Miramax and Entertainment One)
- Matador (2014) (co-production with K/O Paper Products and FactoryMade Ventures; distributed by Entertainment One)
- Lucha Underground (2014–2018) (co-production with MGM Television, FactoryMade Ventures and AG Studios)
- Sock 'Em Dead (2015) (short film) (co-production with Troublemaker Studios in association with Happy Socks)
References[]
- ↑ 'Secuestro Express': Jonathan Jakubowicz and Elizabeth Avellán on Venezuela's surprise hit
- ↑ Roman, Monica (1997-01-09). Arthouse, haunted house buoy Miramax (en-US).
- ↑ Dimension prexy ankles (en-US) (2000-10-09).
- ↑ Nakamura, Reid (2021-08-12). Robert Rodriguez Signs First-Look Deal With HBO, HBO Max (en-US).
- ↑ Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css has no content.Lawson, Terry (May 27, 1999). "Small-screen Success Stories". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved May 14, 2020.
- ↑ Cinematheque bows 'Dusk 3' for Halloween. Variety (October 19, 1999).
- ↑ Savlov, Marc (August 9, 2002). Gadgets and Gizmos. The Austin Chronicle.
- ↑ AICN Exclusive: Nimród Antal is directing PREDATORS. Aintitcool.com (July 1, 2009).
- ↑ Job Hotline – Crew & Industry Calls – Alita: Battle Angel.
- ↑ Austin filming locations for Alita: Battle Angel. kftv.com (February 6, 2019).
- ↑ Kohn, Eric (March 7, 2019). Robert Rodriguez on Advice From James Cameron and How 'Alita: Battle Angel' Brought Him Back to His Roots (en-US).
- ↑ Khatchatourian, Maane (March 28, 2017). Robert Rodriguez to Direct 'Ugly Dolls' Animated Film for STX. Variety.
- ↑ Wiseman, Andreas (August 21, 2019). Priyanka Chopra Jonas To Star In Netflix Superhero Movie From ‘Alita: Battle Angel’ Director Robert Rodriguez.
- ↑ Production Weekly – Issue 1300 – Thursday, May 26, 2022 / 17 Listings – 38 Pages (May 25, 2022).
- ↑ 'Machete Kills' Will Slice Into Theaters on September 13 (January 15, 2013).
External links[]
- Official website Troublemaker Studios
Template:Robert Rodriguez