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This is a non-diffusing subcategory of Category:1983 films. It includes 1983 films that can also be found in the parent category, or in diffusing subcategories of the parent. Television films released in the year 1983
The third-generation Mustang was manufactured and marketed by Ford from 1979–1993, using the company's Fox platform and colloquially called the Fox body Mustang.During its third generation, the Mustang evolved through several sub-models, trim levels, and drivetrain combinations during its production and seemed destined for replacement with a front-wheel drive Mazda platform.
CFSO-TV; Channel 8 (Tucumán, Argentina) Chicago Access Network Television; CHNE-TV; CIRE-TV; CMT (American TV channel) Corporació Catalana de Mitjans Audiovisuals; Crave (TV network) CTS Education and Culture; CTV 2 Atlantic
Dee Bryant jams on the gas as her Mustang rockets forward toward a line of plastic bollards at the Irwindale Speedway. Suddenly, she takes her foot off the gas. The growling car whips around 180 ...
NBC broadcasts the TV movie Special Bulletin, a fictional—yet realistic—depiction of a TV network's coverage of a nuclear terrorism threat in Charleston, South Carolina. The movie is an early collaboration between Edward Zwick (who directed) and Marshall Herskovitz (who wrote the teleplay); both men would create and produce thirtysomething ...
In 1983, Ford again offered a convertible Mustang, after a nine-year absence. The front fascias of all Mustangs were restyled, featuring new grilles, sporting "blue oval" Ford emblems for the first time. 1984 introduced the high-performance Mustang SVO, which featured a 2.3 L turbocharged and intercooled four-cylinder engine and unique bodywork.
1979–1983: "All Movies, 24 Hours a Day" (alternately "All Movies, Only Movies, 24 Hours a Day"; used as an alternate slogan from 1983 to 1988) 1980–1982: "We're Taking the Movies to America" [67] 1981–1983: "You've Got The Movie Channel, The Movies You Want to See, 24 Hours a Day" [67] 1982–1983: "We Do Movies Better Because Movies Are ...
Much of this programming was made up of children-focused made-for-TV movies produced in Canada in the 1970s and 80s, short films originally made for the ABC Afterschool Special and CBS Schoolbreak Special anthology series, sports specials (often with the time purchased from Nickelodeon by the event's distributors), and some unsold television ...