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#3401 | |
Super Moderator
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#3403 | ||
Blu-ray Guru
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But their wives are probably ugly. ![]() Last edited by Grubert; 02-06-2009 at 11:28 AM. |
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#3404 | ||
Active Member
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Another way to phrase my question would be: Any titles that the studios are not planning to release on BD because of the cost involved in doing so and the slim or absent ROI or it's more than making money here? (protecting their property) |
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#3405 | |
The Digital Bits
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#3406 | |
Active Member
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Thanks, as always, for your comments.
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1) With the technology evolving, did it cost about the same to release (including all the process needed: remastering, restoration, encoding, etc.) DVDs a few years back than it costs now to produce a well done BD title? I assume we also have to take into account the present status of the economy. 2) It seems the quality standards for BD are higher now than it was in 2000, also 2 1/2 years after the format debuted. Do we simply have better tools and technology or it takes more hours and man work to achieve that level of quality? I know this is kind is fluffy (??) but I always assumed the Blu-Ray format couldn't really be compared to the DVD format in its time. I kind of assumed it was trickier now since of the greater resolution and level transparency to the master. But if you tell me the comparison is a fair one - then great. It means in a few years we'll have tens of thousands BD released and even some of the most niche stuff will find its way... ![]() |
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#3407 | ||
The Digital Bits
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There are more options now to spend money on when it comes to digital restoration. BD-J is far more complex than DVD scripting ever was If you're doing a straight up disc, where you don't have to do any new coding and can use the templates you've already created, and nothing really extraordinary has to be done, then yes it's probably comperable to DVD 1999-ish. Quote:
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#3408 |
Active Member
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OK Jeff. Thanks.
I hope you won't be too fed up one day to come over here and answer questions... I can only observe the time you spend here so hats off to you. (and to you other contributors as well... ![]() With what you said in your last post, my level of doubt remains about the same though concerning some niché titles. I still wonder if the cost and time involved in releasing some titles will at one point become a non-issue. Well time will tell... To wrap this up, the 100$ question from Bob ![]() Do you think in - say - 2015 we'll have about the same titles released on BD than now on DVD? ![]() I know it's a stupid question (I'm still waiting for some titles to be released on DVD) but I'm curious to see what you're going to say. |
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#3409 |
The Digital Bits
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Prices will come down on Blu-ray authoring.
A DVD can be compressed and authored on a good desktop, full stop using professional level gear (the Sony encoder is a PCI card) in real time. A blu-ray takes a GIGANTIC investment just to get started with encoding. You need a HUGE multiprocessor server with very expensive encoding software to even get started. This is a stumbling block for the smaller houses to get going. Authoring prices go down as number of installations, trained techs, and speed of turnaround goes up. An expert at Panasonic told me he believes that real-time Blu-ray encoding is well beyond 5 years away in any practical level server, so I don't think it'll go down as fast simply because more hours are required for end product I'm sure Criterion will try to get everything out they still hold rights on in a timely fashion, but remember they STILL haven't finished Kurosawa's catalog, didn't Do des ka den just come out? Criterion and the former Anchor Bay are/were special companies that cater to the niche audiences, and are willing to take a chance. I hope Blue Underground and others will be standing up big time as well. I want My Best Friend is a Vampire, which has STILL not come out on DVD, ANYWHERE. yes I'm looking at you Lionsgate who now owns Trimark I believe. All I have is the EP VHS commercial release. *pouts* EDIT, well, it was announced last week, pre-order today! http://www.amazon.com/Best-Friends-V...3971799&sr=1-1 I will throw this in though, another former Trimark title IS coming to Blu-ray that I want, to replace the godawful DVD they put out, but the rights have reverted back to someone else. You'll see it in summerish if all goes well |
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#3410 |
Banned
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Any word from WB about fixing the Matrix Revolutions glitch? I don't expect a press release or anything - but just word that they've fixed the problem and have replacement discs available would be great.
I have hopes WB will actually eventually follow through on this, considering they fixed the Terminator 3 issue as well as the Led Zeppelin TrueHD dropout (though that Led Zeppelin fix was never announced nor even acknowledged by customer support, you just had to go out and buy another copy with the same UPC and hope for the best, which was frustrating - and certainly not feasible with as high-priced an item as the Ultimate Matrix Collection). If this was Fox, I'd just give up all hope - considering "replacement copies" for both Die Hard 2 and For Your Eyes Only are the exact same discs as the original problem ones, same disc ID and authoring dates and all. |
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#3412 |
Banned
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#3414 |
Blu-ray Knight
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Hey Jeff,
Much to my surprise the Bourne Collection ended up being the number one selling bluray last week, which is awesome. I would like to know whether this is a case of it selling better than expected or were dvd and bluray volumes so low that it was easy for it to appear at the top. Nevertheless, I consider it a great sign that a catalog title can take the number one spot. Any idea of how many units it moved? |
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#3416 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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X-men Trilogy, 9 discs, $79.99 list price from Fox.
Bourne Trilogy, 3 discs, $100+ list price from Universal. Jeff...what's wrong with this picture? Fox has been (rightfully) lambasted about their high pricing ever since they released on BD, yet they have done a great job pricing this set. Both of these franchises are hugely popular. Why is there such a gap on the pricing? Especially between these two studios. Fox almost always is higher than everyone else. Universal's upcoming Fast and the Furious set is also $100 list price. Why are they pricing these sets so high? |
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#3417 |
Active Member
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You are getting three movies. You expect Distributors
to mark down a list price so that you get each movie for $15. It looks like they are all in a range for a premium product. At least to me. X-men Trilogy, 9 discs, $79.99 list price from Fox. Amazon.com $55.99 $18.66 Each Bourne Trilogy, 3 discs, $119.99 list price from Universal. Amazon.com $64.99 $21.66 Each The Godfather Trilogy, $124.99 list price from Paramount Amazon.com $58.99 $19.66 Each Ocean's Trilogy, $79.98 list price Warner Home Video Amazon.com $51.99 $17.33 Each Spider-Man Trilogy $92.95 list price Columbia Pictures Amazon.com $56.49 $18.83 Each Pirates of the Caribbean Trilogy $82.99 list price Walt Disney Amazon.com $53.99 $17.99 Each The Mummy Trilogy $94.98 list price Universal. Amazon.com $59.99 $19.99 Each Resident Evil Trilogy $89.95 list price Sony Amazon.com $49.99 $16.66 Each |
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#3418 |
The Digital Bits
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You're going to see catalog prices start coming down this year. I totally agree with you that the Bourne price is way out of line (it was brought down to $96.99 list IIRC). I really think part of the strategy is to test the price. Throw it out high, wait for people to go WTF, and then see what the market will stand until they can better establish the sweet spot between profit and sales, especially in these uncertain times. They KNOW that there's a certain segment that will pick up Bourne at any price, and they need to find out what that is.
Look at LOST, $129.99 until the outcry got it down to $99 for season 3, and again for season 4 given it's 8 eps shorter to $69.99. Personally I think $79.99 is about where we should be right now. It allows a solid sale price on release week, and if you're charging $29.99 for the singles gives incentive to buy all 3 at once. Make no mistake about how expensive Blu is to do right now, especially with all the bells and whistles on Bourne(they replicated all the gimmicks right? I don't have it), which is no longer being coded up for free by Toshiba or Microsoft. So they set the upfront higher in hopes of recouping that quicker. Building studio confidence is the key. If they're confident they'll sell a certain number of copies that will meet their profit goals, they'll get those prices as low as possible to snag as many as they can. In this case, between Wolverine tickets, the grand popularity of the franchise, and the extreme demographic match with the PS3 crowd, I'd say Fox's confidence is high ![]() Last edited by Jeff Kleist; 02-07-2009 at 04:21 PM. |
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#3419 | |
Active Member
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blu-ray for the week ending 1 February. Evidently it was priced right. And it is still in the top three on Amazon this week. Last edited by BluDomain; 02-07-2009 at 04:53 PM. |
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#3420 | |
Blu-ray Guru
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With BD, it seems the studios are trying to keep the prices high. Look at some of the most high profile releases recently. KFP, IJ&KotCS, Iron Man... all were near $25 when released even with "sale" pricing. Within two months some these could easily be found for under $20. It is not taking long for BD customers to catch on that buying during release week is not the best time to buy. BDs need to be hitting the $20 mark on release week. It is one reason that customers are becoming turned off. I learned my lesson with KFP, I preordered at $27.95 figuring Amazon would lower it before release. Well Amazon got rid of their thirty day gurantee and they did not lower the price until after pre-orders had been processed. The title was $20 within a week or two after release. I have such a huge stack of unopened titles now, that I am in no hurry to buy on release day. I can wait it out for better prices. On Amazon right now the price difference between Madagascar2 DVD and BD is $10. I bet this title is on sale for under $20 within a month. Last edited by Tok; 02-07-2009 at 05:24 PM. |
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