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#1 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I am confused about Criterion's decision to lock all their BDs. I mean I dont understand it. They have rights to some of the best catalog titles out there. They produce finest BDs then other studios. They only do business in US and they dont release BDs in UK or overseas so if they make their BDs region free the rest of the world can enjoy them but due to region locking its just worth for American audience mostly. Region Free means more money and more sale so why they lock there bds?
What I know is that Region Locking is worth for a studio who operates in both regions but since Criterion is only operating in US they should not region lock their bds! Your comments please? |
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#3 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#5 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Warner Brothers is the same entity in the US and in other countries hence the region free discs. Criterion on the other hand only acquires the rights to release the films in the US.
Last edited by madlost1; 01-20-2012 at 02:27 AM. |
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#8 |
Moderator
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#9 | |
Expert Member
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It isn't that they are required to lock every blu, they just have a lock every blu policy. Other similar companies (like MoC) only lock when they are required to by the licenser. |
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#10 |
Blu-ray Guru
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It's up to the studio that owns the films.
Since Warner, Columbia, Paramount, Sony ect. all distribute their own films, they can do as they wish Criterion has permission to release certain titles, but are under strict guidelines from the studio about details of each release. |
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#11 | |
Blu-ray King
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1) Move to Canada, the U.S., Mexico, Japan, Hong Kong, or South Korea 2) Buy a region free BD player |
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#12 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Eureka from UK doesn't have the rights to most of the titles they release in other countries, but at least they have the courtesy not to region lock the ones where they do, like the new Punishment Park release. I have a region free player BTW, but I do remember what's been like without one and my frustration with Criterion. |
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#13 |
Banned
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When Criterion licenses a movie from another company, the contracts usually include non-competition clauses. This is because the rights holder may wish to release its own version in other countries, or perhaps yet another third-party company wants to release the movie in other countries, too.
Criterion doesn't have to lock movies that are in the public domain, such as My Man Godfrey and Charade. If those titles are locked, my guess is that it's easier for the company to leave certain default settings intact when creating masters, on the off chance that someone forgets to switch region locking back "on" for titles that aren't in the public domain. |
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#14 | |
Banned
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The region locking is not depending on the countries you can release in, but on the contract you sign. MoC have the ability to negociate to be region free, but it is completely independant. You will also find out that their BR are now mostly Region locked when their DVDs were mostly region free. |
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#15 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Criterion films, IMHO, are also a bit of a niche market in addition to the film rights they hold that cause them to region lock all of their releases. A lot of people aren't interested in what they release, except for one or two titles, and even then, they don't like paying the price Criterion charges. I think your best bet to enjoy Criterion films is to invest into a region free player, or check to see if your current one is moddable. If you have a computer with a BD disck drive, there's software out there that allows for region free playback, that might be cheaper than a whole new player.
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#16 |
Expert Member
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Easiest way around this problem is to invest in a BD-R drive (I recently picked up an 8x Sony model for €80) buy the Criterion movie, rip & remove region protection and burn the resultant files to a blank BD-ROM disc. For the completist download some software to make disc covers
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#17 | |
Blu-ray King
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#18 | |
Senior Member
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I imported a PS3 from Canada, I play all my Criterion discs on that, and the games are all region-free so that's not an issue. |
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#19 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks a lot guys for your valuable comments. Now I get it. But I must say that studios intention to make money is ruining art! If they dosent allow Criterion to release their movies without protection outside then atleast they should do the effort and release the gems by there-selves!
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#20 |
Member
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I still don't get the logic behind region coding: if the movies are supposed to be available for sale just in North America, why did they change the zones, so that region A includes both South America and parts of Asia? I am therefore not allowed to watch a film released by Criterion, living in SA?
Would that also mean that region free players, and people who order from stores in other continents are doing something actually unlawful? |
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