TV 2 Film

TV 2 Film
Launched November 1, 2005
Closed January 9, 2015
Network TV 2 Denmark
Owned by TV 2 Denmark
Picture format 4:3/16:9
Audience share 1.1% (2008, [1])
Slogan Go'e film uden afbrydelser
Country Denmark
Broadcast area Denmark
Headquarters Copenhagen, Denmark
Replaced by TV 2 Sport
Sister channel(s) TV 2, TV 2 Zulu, TV 2 Charlie, TV 2 News, TV 2 Sport
Website tv2film.dk
Availability
Terrestrial
Satellite
Canal Digital Also in HD
Cable

TV 2 Film is a 24-hour two-star movie channel owned by TV 2.

It was launched on November 1, 2005, at 9 p.m. First to air was the Danish feature film The Green Butchers.

The channel mostly shows American two-star movies. Each movie is shown many times over the course of several days.

In August 2008, the channel started broadcasting in the widescreen format. This was followed by the launch of a high-definition simulcast of the channel on January 1, 2009.

The channel was developed from a film strand on TV 2 called "en go' film uden afbrydelser" ("A good movie without interruptions"). Initially, the channel carried advertising between the films, but this practise was discontinued in 2007 as the advertising sales had remained modest.

On satellite, TV 2 Film (as well as TV 2 Charlie and TV 2 Film) was initially exclusively available via Canal Digital. The competing Viasat platform started broadcasting the channels in January 2009.[2]

Since 1 November 2009, the channel also became available terrestrially (via Viaccess-technology by Boxer-approved digital boxes and cards), the same date as Denmark closed down all analogue terrestrial broadcasting and started up DVB-T and MPEG2/MPEG4 digital terrestrial broadcasting. Since then, DVB-T2 has been introduced for HD and TV2 Film is now terrestrially broadcast both as HD (through DVB-T2 & MPEG4) and SD (through DVB-T and MPEG4).

In January 2012, the channel was dropped by Denmark's leading cable provider YouSee after they failed to agree on pricing and conditions.[3] The penetration dropped further in January 2013, when Viasat dropped TV 2 Film.[4] After that, the channel would only be available via Canal Digital, Boxer, Stofa and smaller IPTV and cable providers.

In August 2014, TV 2 announced that TV 2 Film was to be closed down and replaced by a then unnamed sports channel in early 2015.[5]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, January 11, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.