Outer Space Astronauts is a comedy television series airing on Syfy, created by Russell Barrett.
The main characters have live-action "real" heads connected to computer-generated and animated bodies in a completely digital environment.
The crew travel through space on a ship named the O.S.S. Oklahoma.
Hammerhead: Shark Frenzy, also known as Sharkman or simply Hammerhead, is a 2005 Syfy original movie, written by Kenneth M. Badish and Boaz Davidson, and directed by Michael Oblowitz. The film stars William Forsythe, Hunter Tylo, and Jeffrey Combs. The film premiered on Syfy June 18, 2005.
Carny, also known as Jersey Devil in Australia, is a 2009 Canadian television horror film by Syfy and the 22 film in the Maneater Series. The film was directed by Sheldon Wilson and stars Lou Diamond Phillips.
Killer Contact is an upcoming American paranormal television series on Syfy that was scheduled to debut on July 16, 2013. The series features a group of researchers who investigate reported paranormal activity around the world. Several press releases regarding Syfy's upcoming programming have not mentioned the series, nor has a new premiere date been announced.
Sci Fi Investigates is a six episode reality television series featuring skeptic Rob Mariano, forensic specialist Deborah Dobrydney, archaeologist Bill Doleman, and paranormal investigator Richard Dolan, as they look at paranormal and supernatural phenomenon and try to explain them. The show debuted in October 2006 on the American SyFy channel following Ghost Hunters. There have also been two webisodes.
Wraiths of Roanoke, is a 2007 Sci Fi original movie, directed by Matt Codd and stars Adrian Paul, Frida Show, Rhett Giles, Michael Teh, and George Calil.
The film follows the 16th–century English settlers in America, who are besieged by wraiths. Ostensibly, it is based on the disappearance of the third Roanoke Colony. The film premiered on the Sci Fi Channel on October 13, 2007. It was rated TV–14.
Mothman is a 2010 Syfy television film starring Jewel Staite and Connor Fox. The film premiered on Syfy April 24, 2010 and was released on DVD on October 25, 2011. The film features the song "Fuel" by Surfact in the end credits and on the DVD menu.
Dr. Havoc's attempts to take over the world will not be stalled by a midlife crisis; after discovering his wife has been sleeping with his arch-nemesis, he realizes that his life of master plans and world domination isn't all it's cracked up to be.
Attack of the Sabretooth is a 2005 horror film that premiered on the Sci Fi Channel, directed by George T. Miller, and starring Robert Carradine, Nicholas Bell, Brian Wimmer, Stacy Haiduk, and Robbie Williams. It was filmed on location in Fiji.
Niles, a multimillionaire, creates a new resort and theme park on an island in Fiji that features genetically-engineered sabre-tooth cats. He brings a huge group of investors, and a group of student tourists to the island to show off his creation, only to have a power failure result in the cats getting loose. The students and the park personnel try to avoid the bloodthirsty cats as they munch their way through every human in sight.
The series is a coming of age story of an ordinary teenage girl who discovers that a prophecy has made her responsible for protecting the balance of all good and evil on Earth.
Caved In: Prehistoric Terror is a 2006 "Sci-Fi Original" motion picture, created by the Sci-Fi channel. It follows a party of tourists who become trapped underground by a cave-in, and who are then killed one by one by giant prehistoric rhinoceros beetles.
The movie is infamous for its not-so-subtle "kill lines". These kill lines are lines said by actors right before they are killed, essentially telling the viewer how they will be killed; e.g. right before getting one's head sliced open, one would say: "Argh, I have a splitting headache!" The film is one of many Sci-Fi originals that focuses on being trapped in a confined area while being hunted by mutated species.
Alien Express is a 2005 film directed by Turi Meyer and stars Lou Diamond Phillips, Amy Locane, Barry Corbin, and Todd Bridges. The film was released direct-to-video on August 13, 2005.