1 used to describe films that are shown in cinemas:
Her first big-screen success was in the movie "Rosemary's Baby".
Tim Burton's big-screen adaptation of Stephen Sondheim's hit Broadway musical
the big-screen version of "Sex and the City"
The profits helped pay for her daughter's wedding and a big-screen TV.
The crowd eagerly waited for news on the big-screen television.
Black market tickets are now changing hands for a big-screen broadcast outside the stadium.
They were hired to make the big-screen adaptation of "The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy".
He directed the big-screen, computer-animated feature "Star Wars: The Clone Wars".
Facilities include a drivers' lounge complete with a big-screen television.
The sport lent itself well to big-screen adaptations with its costumed heroes and villains, larger-than-life personalities, and impossible feats of strength played straight.
After honing his acting skills in television he tried for the big screen and soon appeared in various films.
The book largely describes his experiences with many big-screen actors.
It marks the first film appearance of the titular toy franchise since their big-screen debut in 1986.
Selvi who has never seen a movie on a big screen is visibly happy.