definición y significado de Miniseries | sensagent.com


   Publicitad R▼


 » 
alemán árabe búlgaro checo chino coreano croata danés eslovaco esloveno español estonio farsi finlandés francés griego hebreo hindù húngaro indonesio inglés islandés italiano japonés letón lituano malgache neerlandés noruego polaco portugués rumano ruso serbio sueco tailandès turco vietnamita
alemán árabe búlgaro checo chino coreano croata danés eslovaco esloveno español estonio farsi finlandés francés griego hebreo hindù húngaro indonesio inglés islandés italiano japonés letón lituano malgache neerlandés noruego polaco portugués rumano ruso serbio sueco tailandès turco vietnamita

Definición y significado de Miniseries

Definición

definición de Miniseries (Wikipedia)

   Publicidad ▼

Frases

'Salem's Lot (2004 TV miniseries) • 10.5 (TV miniseries) • A Rumor of War (miniseries) • A.D. (miniseries) • Alice (TV miniseries) • Amerika (TV miniseries) • Angels in America (TV miniseries) • Arabian Nights (TV miniseries) • Around the World in 80 Days (TV miniseries) • Attila (TV miniseries) • Backstairs at the White House (miniseries) • Band of Brothers (TV miniseries) • Battlestar Galactica (TV miniseries) • Battlestar Galactica (miniseries) • Beach Girls (TV miniseries) • Beautiful Minds (TV miniseries) • Ben Hur (TV miniseries) • Benjamin Franklin (TV miniseries) • Boiling Point (1998 miniseries) • Bordertown (TV miniseries) • Burn Up (TV miniseries) • Centennial (TV miniseries) • Changi (miniseries) • Chiefs (TV miniseries) • Children of the Dust (TV miniseries) • Comanche Moon (TV miniseries) • Comic book miniseries • Como Ama una Mujer (miniseries) • Confession (miniseries) • Costume Designers Guild Award for Best Costume Design – Miniseries or TV Film • Countdown to Infinite Crisis (2005 DC Miniseries) • Davy Crockett (TV miniseries) • Dice (TV miniseries) • Dinotopia (TV miniseries) • Dolmen (TV miniseries) • Elizabeth I (TV miniseries) • Elvis (TV miniseries) • Empire Falls (TV miniseries) • Fallen (ABC Family miniseries) • Frankenstein (US TV miniseries) • Fresno (TV miniseries) • From the Earth to the Moon (TV miniseries) • Gallowglass (miniseries) • George Washington (TV miniseries) • Golden Globe Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film • Golden Globe Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film • Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Television Film • Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television Film • Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film • Gulliver's Travels (TV miniseries) • H2O (miniseries) • Helen of Troy (TV miniseries) • Hercules (TV miniseries) • Hollywood Wives (TV miniseries) • Holocaust (TV miniseries) • Human Trafficking (TV miniseries) • Héroes (Chilean miniseries) • I'll Take Manhattan (TV miniseries) • Ike (TV miniseries) • Impact (TV miniseries) • Into the West (TV miniseries) • Jane Eyre (1973 miniseries) • Jane Eyre (2006 miniseries) • Jason and the Argonauts (TV miniseries) • Jessica (TV miniseries) • Jesus of Nazareth (miniseries) • Joan of Arc (miniseries) • John Adams (TV miniseries) • Julius Caesar (TV miniseries) • K (TV miniseries) • Kennedy (TV miniseries) • King (TV miniseries) • Les Liaisons dangereuses (TV miniseries) • Liquidation (miniseries) • Little House on the Prairie (TV miniseries) • Maneater (2009 miniseries) • Marco Polo (TV miniseries) • Masada (miniseries) • Meteor (TV miniseries) • Napoléon (miniseries) • Noble House (TV miniseries) • North and South (TV miniseries) • Oklahoma Passage (miniseries) • Oliver Twist (1985 TV miniseries) • Oliver Twist (TV miniseries) • Oppenheimer (TV miniseries) • Out (miniseries) • Pandemic (TV miniseries) • Pearl (miniseries) • Pope John Paul II (TV miniseries) • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Casting – Miniseries, Movie, or a Special • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Costumes for a Miniseries, Movie or a Special • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Directing for a Miniseries, Movie or Dramatic Special • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor – Miniseries or a Movie • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress – Miniseries or a Movie • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Miniseries • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor – Miniseries or a Movie • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress – Miniseries or a Movie • Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Miniseries, Movie or a Dramatic Special • Queenie (miniseries) • Rebecca (TV miniseries) • Red Planet (TV miniseries) • Red Planet (miniseries) • René Lévesque (TV miniseries) • Revelations (TV miniseries) • Rich Man, Poor Man (TV miniseries) • Rocket Raccoon (Miniseries) • Rocket Science (miniseries) • Roots (TV miniseries) • Rose Red (miniseries) • Salem's Lot (1979 TV miniseries) • Satellite Award for Best Actor – Miniseries or Television Film • Satellite Award for Best Actress – Miniseries or Television Film • Satellite Award for Best Miniseries • Satellite Award for Best Miniseries or Television Film • Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actor – Series, Miniseries or Television Film • Satellite Award for Best Supporting Actress – Series, Miniseries or Television Film • Scales of Justice (TV miniseries) • Scarlett (TV miniseries) • Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie • Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Miniseries or Television Movie • Scruples (TV miniseries) • Sheer Perfection (TV miniseries) • Shōgun (TV miniseries) • Sins (TV miniseries) • Sins (miniseries) • Sleeper Cell (TV miniseries) • Small world (TV miniseries) • Snapphanar (miniseries) • Space (miniseries) • Spetsnaz (TV miniseries) • Stark (TV miniseries) • Taken (TV miniseries) • Tales of the City (TV miniseries) • The American Revolution (miniseries) • The Andromeda Strain (TV miniseries) • The Atlanta Child Murders (TV miniseries) • The Black Tower (TV miniseries) • The Borrowers (TV miniseries) • The Champions (documentary miniseries) • The Children (2008 miniseries) • The Citadel (1960 British miniseries) • The Company (TV miniseries) • The Count of Monte Cristo (1998 miniseries) • The Dismissal (TV miniseries) • The Duke (TV miniseries) • The First Circle (TV miniseries) • The Forsyte Saga (2002 miniseries) • The Gathering (TV miniseries) • The Kingdom (TV miniseries) • The Langoliers (TV miniseries) • The Last Days of Pompeii (TV miniseries) • The Last Frontier (miniseries) • The Last Templar (TV miniseries) • The Martian Chronicles (TV miniseries) • The Master and Margarita (TV miniseries) • The Mists of Avalon (TV miniseries) • The Monkey King (TV miniseries) • The National Dream (TV miniseries) • The Newcomers (TV miniseries) • The Odyssey (TV miniseries) • The Old Curiosity Shop (1979 miniseries) • The Pacific (miniseries) • The Phantom of the Opera (1990 miniseries) • The Planets (TV miniseries) • The Prisoner (2009 miniseries) • The Scarlet Letter (TV miniseries) • The Scene (miniseries) • The Shining (TV miniseries) • The Stand (TV miniseries) • The Starter Wife (miniseries) • The Storm (TV miniseries) • The Temptations (TV miniseries) • The Thorn Birds (TV miniseries) • The Tommyknockers (TV miniseries) • The Triangle (TV miniseries) • The Trojan Horse (miniseries) • The Wedding (TV miniseries) • The Women of Brewster Place (miniseries) • Thief (TV miniseries) • Tin Man (TV miniseries) • Titanic (TV miniseries) • Tom Brown's Schooldays (TV miniseries) • Traffic (2004 miniseries) • V (1983 miniseries) • V (TV miniseries) • V (miniseries) • Wives and Daughters (1999 miniseries) • World War III (TV miniseries) • XIII (miniseries)

Wikipedia

Miniseries

                   

A miniseries (also mini-series), in a serial storytelling medium, is a television show production which tells a story in a limited number of episodes. The exact number is open to interpretation; however, they are usually limited to fewer than a whole season. The term "miniseries" is generally a North American term. Various British television productions dating as far back as the 1950s can technically be labelled as miniseries, though in the UK these are referred to as "serials".

Contents

  Television

The term "miniseries" is used to refer to a single finite story told in separately broadcast episodes. Before the term was coined, such a form was always called a "serial", in the same way that a novel appearing in episodes in successive editions of magazines or newspapers is called a serial. Several commentators have offered further qualifications. Leslie Halliwell and Philip Purser argue that miniseries tend to "appear in four to six episodes of various lengths",[1] whilst Stuart Cunningham defines them as, "a limited run program of more than two and less than the 13-part season or half -season block associated with serial or series programming."[2] Francis Wheen states, "Both soap operas and primetime series cannot afford to allow their leading characters to develop, since the shows are made with the intention of running indefinitely. In a miniseries on the other hand, there is a clearly defined beginning, middle, and end, (as in a conventional play or novel) enabling characters to change, mature, or die as the serial proceeds."[2] In North America the format began in 1974 with the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's The National Dream, featuring Pierre Berton (which aired from 3 March 1974 to 28 April 1974) and the American Broadcasting Company's QB VII, which starred Anthony Hopkins (and which began on 29 April 1974). Following these initial forays, broadcasters used miniseries to bring other books to the screen. Rich Man, Poor Man, based on the novel by Irwin Shaw, was broadcast in 12 one-hour episodes in 1976 by ABC. Alex Haley's Roots in 1977 can fairly be called the first blockbuster success of the format. Its success in the USA was partly due to its schedule: the 12-hour duration was split into eight episodes broadcast on consecutive nights, resulting in a finale with a 71 percent share of the audience and 130 million viewers, which at the time was the highest rated TV program of all time. TV Guide (April 11-April 17, 1987) called 1977's Jesus of Nazareth "the best miniseries of all time" and "unparalleled television."In British television, the term "miniseries" is almost never used, except in reference to American imports. The term serial is preferred for serialised dramas, which have been a staple of UK television schedules since the early 1950s when serials such as The Quatermass Experiment (1953) established the popularity of the form.

  Comic book

A comic book miniseries (also referred to as a limited series), is a commonly used format of comic book distribution, as it allows creators to tell a single specific story focusing on a character or set of characters, whether that story stands alone (Watchmen), or is heavily interlinked with other events in the same fictional universe (Civil War). Most miniseries is anywhere from two to 12 issues (a story contained in a single issue is termed a one-shot; for a time DC Comics used the term "maxi-series" for a 12-issue miniseries, but this term has been abandoned). 52 was arguably the longest comic book miniseries at the time it was released, running for 52 weekly issues (its publisher, DC Comics, has since used the 52-part weekly series structure twice more). A comic series that does not have a planned endpoint—in other words, one which is not a miniseries—is an ongoing series.

Comic book series intended from the beginning to tell a specific, finite story can become longer still, for example Sandman, which lasted 75 issues, or Cerebus the Aardvark, which ran for 300, a goal creator Dave Sim set for himself fairly early in the series' run, but did not plan from the beginning. These are not considered miniseries, partly because of their sheer size and partly because no fixed number of issues was announced at the outset. Similar to a canceled television series, a series intended to be ongoing, but which is discontinued after a dozen or fewer issues (usually due to poor sales), is not considered a miniseries, though they are sometimes described as such by the publisher after the cancellation is announced.

  See also

  References

  1. ^ Halliwell, Leslie, and Peter Purser, Halliwell's Television Companion, London: Paladin, 1987
  2. ^ a b Stuart Cunningham, "Miniseries", Museum of Broadcast Communication web site

  External links

   
               

   Publicidad ▼

 

todas las traducciones de Miniseries


Contenido de sensagent

  • definiciones
  • sinónimos
  • antónimos
  • enciclopedia

 

4581 visitantes en línea

computado en 0,031s