Made for TV Movie

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    If it were any good, it would have been in theaters!
    MarthaMartha Speaks

    A Made for TV Movie (also called a "telefilm") is a one-off two-hour program, made to be shown on television instead of a film in cinemas. Also, a Miniseries can be comprised of two or more 2-hour-long installments. Each episode will be approximately 90 minutes on DVD because of the lack of commercial breaks.

    Examples: National Lampoon's Thanksgiving Reunion, The Perfect Husband: The Laci Peterson Story.

    This was a popular format for feature programming in the 1970s, with a block of the schedule given an anthology title and the viewers (who didn't read TV Guide) not knowing which characters would fill the airtime that week. One memorable example is The NBC Mystery Movie, which alternated two-hour movies from McCloud, Columbo, McMillan & Wife, Hec Ramsey, Banacek, Cool Million, Madigan, Faraday & Company, Tenafly, The Snoop Sisters, Amy Prentiss, McCoy, Quincy, M.E., and Lanigan's Rabbi. (Columbo and Quincy, M.E. ended up outliving the anthology series as normal series, not telefilm series.) If one of the series was at risk of Schedule Slip, it could simply be replaced with telefilms from another series until they were back on track.

    The plots of later made-for-TV movies are often Ripped from the Headlines. For example, the Amy Fisher affair of the early '90s spawned at least three made for TV movies. They are often full of Glurge and/or melodrama, and are often marked for their low quality (a stereotype that is exemplified by Syfy Original Movies, which are often watched solely for the Narm Charm). The exception to this rule seems to be HBO, whose own TV movies are usually quite well-made and have even won awards, thus "making up" for the lack of act breaks. Most made-for-TV movies are targeted at female audiences (e.g.: Hallmark films; Mother May I Sleep With Danger?, or any other Lifetime Movie of the Week), while the aforementioned Syfy and other movies are targeted at men.

    Oftentimes, theatrically-released movies will get made-for-TV sequels, such as Revenge of the Nerds 3 and 4. Also, regular weekly series will sometimes get these as a variation of The MovieDoctor Who is perhaps the best-known example, the 1996 TV movie being its only episode in the extended hiatus between the 1989 and 2005 seasons. Going in the other direction, a Pilot Movie is by necessity a Made for TV Movie.

    A number of TV movies have been released theatrically overseas after airing in the United States, most notably Duel – a 1971 suspense thriller starring Dennis Weaver directed by an up-and-coming young filmmaker named Steven Spielberg.

    Western Animation took to doing this in the first decade of the 21st century due to CGI becoming the dominant animation in theaters, regulating most of 2D animated films to TV. By the end of the second decade of the 21st century, all western animation (and anime) was computer-generated, making this difference go away.

    At a time during the 1980s and '90s, having a theatrical film based on a animated TV series was quite an honor (if not mostly for marketing purposes). But nowadays[when?] if a show is very successful, getting a TV movie would be the highest they could take the show (with a few exceptions if the network is feeling lucky such as The Simpsons Movie). Many animators would also use a TV movie as a Grand Finale as well.

    One advantage of the form: situations can come to quite a head to build suspense to be retained over an Act Break. Another: there is usually no need to maintain a status quo; thus there is usually no Contractual Immortality. The possibility that Anyone Can Die (even the character the audience is rooting for) is far more likely, heightening dramatic tension. Then again, the latter can be said about cinema films. The downside, a reduced budget which can make production values look cheap. Special Effect Failure is much more likely here then on the big screen.

    In the United Kingdom, this is not called a "TV movie", but rather a "one-off drama", and is generally seen as being more serious and artistic than a series, rather than the reverse.

    Compare with Direct to Video, which is where the films that aren't good enough for TV end up.