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#229881 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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If Disney needed to sell discs to make a profit we'd get more discs but they don't. |
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Thanks given by: | rickmiddlebrooks (03-26-2025), Shane Rollins (03-27-2025), sherlockjr (03-26-2025), StarDestroyer52 (03-27-2025) |
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#229882 | |
Expert Member
Jan 2025
Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Those involve high res scans of the best available film elements and perhaps restorations from those scans if there's thought there might be a release on some medium (DCP, streaming, cable, etc). Restorations, color grading, digital format output, etc can be done anytime after those scans are created, even years after, once the assets are protected. It seems that some studios do a lot of that expensive and time consuming work soon after scans are done, at least on some titles, others just save the scans for later potential use. WAC takes advantage of the asset protection work Warner Motion Picture Imaging (MPI) is already doing for WB asset protection. Don't know how the restoration, color grading, etc is divided up between them, though certainly WAC does the final digital work to create a releasable BD master. DCP, streaming, cable etc versions are likely left to other groups. There's a lot--many, many years--of critical digital work left to do. I saw a talk on this a year ago: out of roughly 10,000 classic 1930-1949 Hollywood titles at only 330 titles were currently available on theatrical DCP rentals prepared for public exhibition. |
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Thanks given by: | bergman864 (03-26-2025), cgpublic (03-29-2025), D.I.T.C. (03-30-2025), everygrainofsand (03-26-2025), halationsummer (03-26-2025), RoboDan (03-26-2025), Shane Rollins (03-27-2025), StarDestroyer52 (03-27-2025) |
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#229883 | |
Expert Member
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We're much better off hoping that the studios continue to focus on preservation and mastering for home media, which is the best pathway to maintain wider public access to these older properties. There's a lot of work to do there as well, but I'm encouraged by the progress even if (like everyone else on these forums) I wish it was moving faster. |
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Thanks given by: | cgpublic (03-29-2025), Shane Rollins (03-27-2025) |
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#229884 | |||
Expert Member
Jan 2025
Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Often there are film prints still available, but the infrastructure, both hardware and human, is often lacking now. And the cost of booking and shipping a film print--if the distributor trusts the theater to run it without damage--is often 2-3 times more than the same title on DCP, which makes that financially untenable. Most of that surging audience for classic cinema--including movies on 35mm film--is actually under 35. The younger audience--at least those who go to independent theaters--seems to be looking for something different than the multiplex superhero fare. Especially on film, which has taken on a retro flavor similar to vinyl records--which now are the by far the largest dollar amount of physical music sales. Quote:
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As mentioned above, it seems that for younger people, the theatrical experience is becoming the way they're being exposed to and enjoying older properties, whether DCP or film. I attend an annual nitrate film festival in a small city, and the audience last year was the largest it has been since it started in 2016. This year they introduced premium assigned seating and at the higher price those sold out in less than a week. Meanwhile the older/classic films I've gone to see theatrically near also tend to be very full. Last night I attended a screening (sadly on DCP) of MULHOLLAND DRIVE that was sold out in a 430 seat venue. On a Tuesday night with BD, 4K, and streaming options all readily available now and for the past several years. The theatrical audience for older films is real. |
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Thanks given by: | BadBart (03-29-2025), cgpublic (03-29-2025), D.I.T.C. (03-30-2025), everygrainofsand (03-26-2025), Hatchet Jack (03-27-2025), RoboDan (03-26-2025), Shane Rollins (03-27-2025) |
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#229885 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Thanks given by: | Shane Rollins (03-27-2025) |
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#229886 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Thanks given by: | cgpublic (03-29-2025), Shane Rollins (03-27-2025) |
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#229887 |
Blu-ray Guru
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#229888 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Thanks given by: | sherlockjr (03-26-2025) |
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#229889 |
Blu-ray Guru
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#229890 |
Senior Member
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I'd like to think that if you just showed someone under 35 (or under 65!), say, The Lady Eve, they would be delighted and their eyes would be opened and they would realize that there's a whole world of movies they're missing out on.
But really, I think 999 out of 1000 would say, "What the hell is this. Give me more Barbenheimer." |
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Thanks given by: | Shane Rollins (03-27-2025) |
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#229891 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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Yeah, it's not what it once was. Disney has left other markets and have even stopped producing some shows on Blu-ray and 4K only. They seem to slowly be distancing themselves form physical media. With two out of three of the big boys no longer carrying physical media, I could see Disney bowing out soon enough.
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#229892 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I would really love to see The Spook Who Sat By The Door. |
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Thanks given by: | Jope (03-27-2025) |
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#229893 | |
Expert Member
Jan 2025
Cambridge, Massachusetts
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Could well be that even those "heartland" locations are located near colleges and universities, since those tend to have a major concentration of people 18-35 even when no longer students. But university areas have long been the locations of major audiences for revival theaters, and there are more than 3,000 colleges and universities around the country. There's hundreds of independent theaters around the country, and they have to build an audience for films that aren't just the usual multiplex titles, since it's pretty hard for them to book those titles over the chain cinemas. |
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Thanks given by: | ophone (03-26-2025) |
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#229894 | |
Expert Member
Jan 2025
Cambridge, Massachusetts
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In 2013 physical and streaming media were both about $7 billion in the US. It doesn't take a business genius to see where the trend lines are and to decide not to make any further effort in physical, even if they can still do it profitably. Licensing out to boutique distributors is a way to still make money on physical media without a major investment in staff, effort and money. Very happy but surprised that Warner Bros, Paramount, Universal are still doing their own. My guess is that it's something of a prestige and nostalgia thing for the executives who still actually care about movies and movie theaters. As well as one additional revenue outlet for their asset protection programs that otherwise might not be bringing in any other funds. Disney being mostly in the theme park and tent pole business likely doesn't care at all about a measly $100 million or so they can make off physical when streaming and licensing are so much easier and have no up front investment in physical goods. |
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#229895 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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The Sony release in the US features the newer restoration of Modern Romance.
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#229896 | |
Senior Member
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#229897 | |
Senior Member
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I suspect that 4k's prosperity is going to look a lot like vinyl in the long run. Enthusiasts will pay for the best possible quality and they'll pay for it in the long run. I think even the stubborn studios will realize this at some point. |
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#229898 | |
Expert Member
Jan 2025
Cambridge, Massachusetts
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It's like re-typesetting a book and correcting spelling errors--that doesn't give you a new copyright on the words. If you add, say, illustrations, annotations, introductions, all that new material has its own copyright. But not those original words. Unfortunately there is nothing in US copyright law that exempts apparent orphaned or abandoned works from copyright. There ought to be such a rule, but there's not. The closest you can get is a film (or other work) that didn't have a copyright renewed after 28 years when that was still required. That renewal is no longer required for works created after 1963. But almost all major studio films were renewed. There's a small number of exceptions that got their paperwork overlooked--often because the property was sold by one studio to another and the new owner didn't enter it into their own copyright renewal system, or similar errors. The other example is from small poverty row studios or tiny production companies that went out of business and didn't have a successor to acquire those properties and then renew the copyrights. In most cases those are all films that nobody ever heard of or has much interest in seeing anyway! Last edited by sherlockjr; 03-26-2025 at 08:25 PM. |
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Thanks given by: | Yearbook (03-26-2025) |
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#229899 | |
Expert Member
Jan 2025
Cambridge, Massachusetts
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I sure hope it continues to be viable, cause that's what I want to buy. But DVDs are still around 50% of the physical market with the rest divided between BD and 4K. |
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#229900 | |
Active Member
Aug 2022
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Thanks given by: | Shane Rollins (03-27-2025) |
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