Pictures provided by: antp
Author | Message |
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◊ 2013-01-03 18:33 |
IMDB lists it as a TV-movie, but it is actually a TV-series that won't go further than the pilot episode. background BMW E46 + a school bus that is not really identifiable I guess: -- Last edit: 2013-01-03 18:33:50 |
◊ 2013-01-03 18:53 |
How about TV movie if it's over a hour or Short Movie if it's under an hour? That's what decided here: /movie_138972-K-9-and-Company.html (because we still don't have a category that completely fits it) |
◊ 2013-01-03 19:21 |
School bus has a Carpenter body |
◊ 2013-01-04 00:22 |
^I agree with G-MANN. A TV series is a series--more than one episode. A TV pilot that never got picked up is essentially a 60-minute or 30-minute TV movie. |
◊ 2013-01-04 02:40 |
I agree with taco. |
◊ 2013-01-04 12:32 |
I still prefer to list canceled series as series rather than TV movies, but if all agree otherwise I won't fight What about series canceled after the second episode rather than after the first one? /movie_1591490-Lone-Star.html |
◊ 2013-01-04 12:47 |
To me, a series cancelled after the second episode is still a TV series---a really, really short series, but a series nonetheless. |
◊ 2013-01-04 16:20 |
That's what IMDB seems to do... But series up to 6 episodes are usually called "mini-series". So why does a series stopped after 1 episode become a movie, but if stopped after 2 episodes it stays series rather than becoming mini-series? (though that other series actually have more than two episodes produced, I think - they simply weren't broadcasted). -- Last edit: 2013-01-04 16:20:40 |