The Movie Channel (British TV channel)

The Movie Channel was a British television channel, which only aired movies. Launched on BSB in 1990, The Movie Channel was a predecessor of some of the Sky Movies channels, having survived the merger with Sky Television, another satellite service launched by Rupert Murdoch's News International later in 1990 to form British Sky Broadcasting.

The Movie Channel
Logo as a BSB channel
Ownership
OwnerBritish Satellite Broadcasting (1990)
British Sky Broadcasting (1990–1997)
History
Launched25 March 1990
Closed31 October 1997
Rebranded to Sky Movies Screen 2
Availability (At time of closure)
Satellite
AnalogueMarcopolo 1, 12.0919

History

The Movie Channel began in 1990 as one of the channels of British Satellite Broadcasting, a consortium formed in 1986 by Granada Television, Pearson, Virgin, Anglia Television and Amstrad. Prior to its launch, BSB signed an exclusive first-run deal with UIP Pay TV (which distributed Paramount, Universal and MGM/UA releases). One of its first film premieres was the James Bond film, The Living Daylights, starring Timothy Dalton.[1]

In 1990, BSB and Sky Television suffered heavy losses and merged, operating as the newly formed British Sky Broadcasting. The Movie Channel, along with The Sports Channel, remained on air, keeping its name, and the channel launched on the Astra 1B satellite on 15 April 1991. The Movie Channel continued to broadcast until 1997 when it was rebranded as Sky Movies Screen 2. From 1993, it just also called "Sky: The Movie Channel" during idents.

References

  1. "BSB TV Month" (1). April 1990. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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