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Despite the title of this article, only some are original films produced for the channel, while others are direct-to-video releases picked up for broadcast by Syfy. Previous editors have stated that some were broadcast, between 1999 and 2009, under the Sci Fi Pictures label – as those were the years that the channel was branded Sci Fi.
Pages in category "Syfy original films" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 259 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The Saturday Anime logo as it appeared on the Sci Fi Channel website, circa the late 1990s. For most of the 1990s, Syfy showed anime films, although they had to be edited in order to be shown on basic cable. The channel's longest running animation block, referred to as Saturday Anime, aired at the start of the channel's broadcast day each ...
Syfy (a paraphrased neology of former name Sci-Fi Channel, later shortened to Sci Fi; stylized as SYFY in all caps since 2017) [a] is an American basic cable television channel, owned by the NBCUniversal Media Group division and business segment of Comcast's NBCUniversal. [1]
This is a list of science fiction television films that did not have a theatrical release, including direct-to-video releases. This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items . ( June 2009 )
Sanctuary (Canadian TV series) Scare Tactics; School Spirits (2012 TV series) Sci Fi Investigates; Seeing Ear Theater; Sliders (TV series) Stargate Atlantis; Stargate SG-1; Stargate Universe; Stranded (TV series) Superstition (TV series) SurrealEstate; Swamp Thing (1990 TV series)
In July 2008, screenwriter Daniel Knauf said that he and his son and collaborator Charles Knauf had completed a four-hour TV-movie script for SCI FI Channel, later renamed Syfy, starring the 22nd Phantom. [2] In 2009, Sci Fi Channel formally ordered a 4-hour mini-series in two parts, also serving as a backdoor pilot.
RHI Entertainment and the Sci Fi Channel spent $20 million in the creation of the Tin Man mini-series, with Robert Halmi, Sr. acting as the lead producer. [6] Sci Fi executive Dave Howe said that the companies felt such classic stories as The Wonderful Wizard of Oz "deserve[d] to be re-imagined for a new generation."