Turner Classic Movies (Asia)

This article is about the Asian television channel. For the USA and other countries' versions of Turner Classic Movies, see Turner Classic Movies and Turner Classic Movies (around the world).
Turner Classic Movies

Turner Classic Movies logo
Launched 6 October 1994 (1994-10-06)
Owned by Turner Broadcasting System Asia Pacific
(Time Warner)
Picture format 576i (16:9)
Country Hong Kong, India
Language English
Broadcast area Australia, India, Fiji, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Japan, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, Turkey, Vietnam, Malaysia
Headquarters New Delhi
Singapore
Formerly called Turner Network Television
(6 October 1994–1995)
TNT
(1995–2 April 2000)
Sister channel(s) Cartoon Network
CNN International
Boomerang
Website turnerclassicmoviesasia.com
Availability
Satellite
Foxtel Channel 428
SKY Network Television Channel 24
TrueVisions Channel 243
Indovision Channel TBA
Tata Sky Channel 357
Cignal Digital TV Channel TBA
Cable
Foxtel Channel 417
Optus Channel 417
Neighbourhood Cable Channel 35
TransACT Channel 15
TelstraClear InHomeTV Channel 24
StarHub TV Channel 616
SkyCable Channel 105 (Digital)
Destiny Cable Channel 36 (Analog)
Channel 105 (Digital)
Cablelink Channel 204
Cable TV Hong Kong Channel 47
Parasat Cable TV Channel 57
Macau Cable TV (Macau) Channel 131
IPTV
now TV Channel 126
Singtel TV (Singapore) Channel 420 (SD)
CHT MOD
(Taiwan)
Channel 166

Turner Classic Movies is a digital television channel featuring commercial-free classic movies, mostly from the Turner Entertainment and Warner Bros. film libraries, which include many MGM, United Artists, RKO and Warner Bros. titles, mainly classic films (e.g. The Wizard of Oz or Citizen Kane). It is the Asian iteration of the US Turner Classic Movies.

History

The channel originally launched as TNT in October 1994, and was time shared with Cartoon Network.[1] TNT aired from 21:00 CET to 6:00 CET (from 20:00 UTC to 5:00 UTC) and IST respectively and Cartoon Network the remaining time, mainly for analogue cable systems across Europe and India, although it was originally targeted at the Republic of Ireland, India and the United Kingdom. It was formerly free-to-air, but is now carried encrypted and provided only to cable companies and on some commercial satellite systems. It was one of the three movie channels available on Foxtel, and Austar in Australia. Turner Classic Movies and Cartoon Network became two separate channels operating in Europe and the Indian Subcontinent in 1999. TCM has four separate feeds: the Indian subcontinent, East Asia, Taiwan, and Australia and New Zealand.[1]

In April 2000 the channel was rebranded as Turner Classic Movies.[1][2]

In India, this channel was exclusively available on Dish TV until 15 March 2009. Now it is available on IN Digital Cable from the Hinduja Group and from 31 August 2009, on Tata Sky. The channel has been discontinued on Tata Sky from 15 September 2012.

From 1 July 2011, TCM's Australian and New Zealand feed began broadcasting in 16:9 widescreen.[3]

In Australia, the channel is ceasing to be available on satellite and cable provider Foxtel from 13 December 2016. It is believed the cause of the removal of the channel from the service is due to the repeated broadcasting of a limited catalogue of films.[4]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Thomas, Amos (2005). Imagi-Nations and Borderless Television: Media, Culture and Politics Across Asia. New Delhi: Sage Publications. pp. 33–34.
  2. "HBO movie channel to start from March 15 – TNT to go classical". The Times of India. 14 March 2000.
  3. "Mediaweek Australia – Sub TV". Mediaweek. Archived from the original on 10 October 2011.
  4. Knox, David (17 November 2016). "Foxtel to close TCM channel". TV Tonight. Retrieved 17 November 2016.
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