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German Kino Plus features German cinema, popular TV series and German documentaries. All programming is broadcast uncut and free of commercials, and the line-up is constantly updated with new films and TV series premiering every month. GKP programming is divided into the following four categories: Theatrical German films; Classic German films
Viasat Kino is a movie television channel targeting the Baltic countries. It is owned by the international broadcaster Viasat World [ 1 ] and was launched on 1 March 2003 by Swedish media conglomerate Modern Times Group .
Ale Kino+ is a Polish television channel owned and operated by Canal+ International.It is available on the networks of cable television and the digital platform Cyfra+ (now nc+) since 16 April 1999.
On February 28, 2022, the channel stopped operating in the Baltic States and was replaced by TV1000 World Kino, it was the decision of TV3 Group, after the beginning of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. [4] [5] In March 1, 2023, TV1000 Russkoe Kino renamed to Viju TV1000 Russkoe. [6]
Tricolor TV on CSTB-2009 exhibition, February, Moscow, Croсus Expo. Tricolor TV (Russian: Триколор ТВ) is Russia's largest direct-to-home provider based in Saint-Petersburg [1] and has broadcast two hundred TV channels in the European part of Russia and Siberia since 2005. As of October 2014, Tricolor TV provided satellite services ...
Operation Kino, in the 2009 film Inglourious Basterds; Kino Asakura, in the anime series Shaman King; Makoto Kino, in the manga and anime series Sailor Moon; Karen Kino, in the manga series Kaguya-sama wa Kokurasetai; Kino, in the light novel series Kino's Journey; Kino, a character in the video game Chrono Trigger
Kino Lorber was founded as Kino International in 1976 by Bill Pence, then vice president of Janus Films, and based in Colorado. [1] It began by importing and releasing international films that may have not otherwise reached the market in the United States. The first films distributed by Kino were in association with Janus Films.
In the following years around a dozen of Hyperkino DVDs were released by the Russian publisher RUSCICO under the series title “Kino Academia” containing the annotations of international film scholars specializing in Russian and Soviet film: Aleksandr Deriabin, Natascha Drubek, Bernard Eisenschitz, Jeremy Hicks, Nikolai Izvolov, Ekaterina ...