Carlton Cinema (TV channel) explained

Carlton Cinema
Launch Date:[1]
Owner:Carlton Communications
Parent:Carlton Television
Availability Note:
(at time of closure)
Terr Serv 1:ITV Digital
Terr Chan 1:Channel 28

Carlton Cinema was a British digital film television channel, provided by Carlton Television. It launched in November 1998 on the ITV Digital platform and closed down in March 2003, five months after Carlton went off the air in the London region, being the last Carlton-branded television network to do so. Its sister channels were Carlton Select, Carlton World, Carlton Kids, and Carlton Food Network. The channel launched on cable in March 2000 as an evening only replacement for Carlton Select. The first film shown on the channel was the 1953 film Genevieve.

Closure

Carlton Cinema struggled to keep going after the ITV Digital platform ceased broadcasting on 1 May 2002. These struggles increased when the channel was removed from NTL's analogue channel line-up in September 2002. At the same time Carlton had been negotiating with BSkyB to get the channel onto Sky, but no deal was agreed. The closure was announced on 9 December 2002.[2] The channel closed on 31 March 2003. On that night came the last three films on Carlton Cinema, Genevieve which was the first film to be broadcast on the channel's launch night, The Inn of the Sixth Happiness and finally, the 1981 neo-noir Body Heat.[3] Following the conclusion of that film, continuity announcer Fiona Goldman made the closing announcement:

Then they aired a montage of scenes and quotes from all the films they showed, to the tune of Alice Faye's "You'll Never Know" which was regularly being shown on the channel during its final two weeks on the air. The farewell montage concluded with the last words ever heard on the channel:

The final image shown was a movie theatre screen curtain (one of the many icons of movie places during the Golden Age of Hollywood) closing, revealing (for the final time) the Carlton Cinema logo with the date of launch (15 November 1998) on the top and the date of closure (31 March 2003) on the bottom. After a final fade to black, the channel's DOG was still seen for twenty more minutes. The channel's transmitters were finally shut down at midnight.

References

  1. Web site: TVARK | Carlton Cinema . 2010-03-07 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080820080009/http://www2.tv-ark.org.uk/otherchannels/carlton_cinema.html . 2008-08-20 . dead .
  2. Web site: Carlton finally drops digital channel. Jason. Deans. 4 December 2002. Theguardian.com.
  3. News: 2003-03-31. General: BBC four. The Guardian (1959-2003). 2021-04-10. .

External links