dbo:abstract
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- Au cinéma, un omnibus est un type de film à sketches, plus précisément une compilation de plusieurs « segments », ou « séquences », souvent réalisées par des cinéastes différents, autour d'un même thème. Le terme est particulièrement employé en cinéma d'animation. À la télévision, un omnibus désigne la diffusion en une seule séance de plusieurs épisodes, ou parties d'épisodes, d'une série. (fr)
- An omnibus (or omnibus edition) is a compilation of several television or radio episodes into a single instalment. An omnibus is similar to, but distinct from, what is called a marathon in other countries; In an omnibus, individual episodes are edited together (with the first episode having its closing credits removed, the final episode having the opening credits removed, and each episode in between lacking any credits whatsoever) into a single programme, whereas in a marathon the episodes are aired separately but in sequence. The term has been most frequently used in the United Kingdom, though it has also been used in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. Brookside was the first television soap to have what was called an omnibus edition, in 1991; it continued until the series ended in 2003. EastEnders introduced the equivalent of an omnibus edition starting in the 1980s, but the term "omnibus" was not used until the 1990s. (en)
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rdfs:comment
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- Au cinéma, un omnibus est un type de film à sketches, plus précisément une compilation de plusieurs « segments », ou « séquences », souvent réalisées par des cinéastes différents, autour d'un même thème. Le terme est particulièrement employé en cinéma d'animation. À la télévision, un omnibus désigne la diffusion en une seule séance de plusieurs épisodes, ou parties d'épisodes, d'une série. (fr)
- An omnibus (or omnibus edition) is a compilation of several television or radio episodes into a single instalment. An omnibus is similar to, but distinct from, what is called a marathon in other countries; In an omnibus, individual episodes are edited together (with the first episode having its closing credits removed, the final episode having the opening credits removed, and each episode in between lacking any credits whatsoever) into a single programme, whereas in a marathon the episodes are aired separately but in sequence. The term has been most frequently used in the United Kingdom, though it has also been used in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa. (en)
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