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With an initial overall budget of £6 million a year, Channel Four Films was to invest in twenty films annually for Film on Four. [1] The first film backed was Neil Jordan's debut film Angel (1982). [2] The first film shown as part of Film on Four was Stephen Frears's Walter which was screened on 2 November 1982, the launch date of Channel 4.
Link Entertainment [4] Sailor Moon: 1995–98: Syndication Cartoon Network: Optimum Productions, General Mills [note 2] English dub of first 82 episodes, later episodes were dubbed and distributed by Cloverway. Rights have reverted to Toei Animation, with a new dub produced by Viz Media. Siegfried & Roy: Masters of the Impossible: 1996: Fox
H Is for Hawk (film) Happy-Go-Lucky (2008 film) Hard Truths; Hidden City (film) High-Rise (film) The History of Sound; Hot Milk (film) How I Live Now (film) How to Build a Girl; How to Have Sex; How to Lose Friends & Alienate People (film) How to Talk to Girls at Parties (film) Hunger (2008 film) Hush (2008 film) Hyde Park on Hudson; Hyena (film)
The Legend of the North Wind (1997) (with Episa and Euskal Pictures International) (English dubbed version) Donkey Kong Country: The Legend of the Crystal Coconut (1999) (with Medialab Studio L.A. and WIC Entertainment Ltd.) Cardcaptors: The Movie (2000) (with Madhouse) (English dubbed version)
The first 16-episode series was released on video between August 21, 1994 [10] and October 21, 1998, [11] while the second 16-episode series was released on video between March 1 [12] and March 17, 2001. [13] AnimEigo released the second series on DVD in 2012 in North America as Growing Up With Hello Kitty, with an English dub by Coastal ...
Most post-9pm films are unedited though. Prior to the arrivals of Movie Mix and Movies4Men on the Freeview platform, Film4 was the only free film channel available on digital terrestrial television. In 2007, the broadcasting hours were amended to 1.00pm to 4.00am. On 20 August 2007, Film4 +1 was removed from Freeview to make way for Channel 4 ...
The films were produced by Studio Pierrot and released in Japan theatrically, the first Yu Yu Hakusho: The Movie in 1993 and the second Yu Yu Hakusho the Movie: Poltergeist Report in 1994. Before Funimation Entertainment acquired the rights to the anime in 2001, the films were dubbed and released in North America by two other companies. [1]
Sesame Street Muppets have appeared in cameos in various feature films, including The Muppet Movie (1979), The Great Muppet Caper (1981), The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984), and Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009). These productions, however, were not produced by Sesame Workshop.