

- #SHERLOCK THE ABOMINABLE BRIDE MOVIE THEATER SHOWINGS SERIES#
- #SHERLOCK THE ABOMINABLE BRIDE MOVIE THEATER SHOWINGS TV#
#SHERLOCK THE ABOMINABLE BRIDE MOVIE THEATER SHOWINGS TV#
Such playfulness seemed radical at the time, but it is now common for TV dramas to deviate in style and timeline. The Simpsons has accumulated a large number of non-canonical episodes, through the Tree House of Horror fantasies that have become a Halloween tradition, and, on other occasions, flash-forward stories, including Bart to the Future, first broadcast in the year 2000, in which Lisa Simpson becomes American president, saving the nation, in what now seems a spooky detail, from Donald Trump’s term in the White House.Ī non-cartoon family saga from the same era, Thirtysomething, maintained a continuous through-story about a group of self-absorbed middle-class friends, but sometimes depicted them non-naturalistically: the keyboards of the scriptwriters yielded cadenzas including a black-and-white parody of a Dick Van Dyke TV show and another edition written and shot as an homage to the films of Hitchcock. Subsequently, two American shows that were first broadcast in 1987 were influential in introducing a similar narrative fluidity to fiction that was generally located in contemporary reality. This special was also shown in over 500 theaters in the United States for two nights on January 5th and 6th, 2016 at 7:30pm local time. It was shown the same day at 9/8c in the United States on the PBS show Masterpiece.
#SHERLOCK THE ABOMINABLE BRIDE MOVIE THEATER SHOWINGS SERIES#
Series in this country have also broken from story or form in spoofs in aid of Comic Relief, as when actors from EastEnders and Doctor Who combined for a one-off mash-up in 1993. Sherlock: The Abominable Bride The Abominable Bride is a special episode of Sherlock which aired on New Years Day 2016. Startling departures in form have included the sitcom One Foot in the Grave spending half an hour in a car in a traffic jam, and a half-hour monologue from Dot Cotton in EastEnders. Casualty, the British hospital drama, has collaborated with its schedule-sister, Holby City, on a number of episodes that stand apart from the two soaps. High-profile examples include, in the long-running American medical-military comedy MASH, a 1976 edition filmed as a black-and-white news documentary in which a war correspondent interviewed the characters about their experiences in the Korean war. In the television industry, such digressive scripts are generally called non-canonical or canon discontinuity – a term borrowed from academia, where it refers to disputed or late-discovered works by a particular writer – or, in a metaphor taken from the improvised individual flourish that a star instrumentalist will sometimes add within an established piece of music, as cadenza episodes. June Brown as Dot Cotton in EastEnders: half-hour non-canonical monologue.
