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#261 |
Blu-ray Guru
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It seems to me that Twilight Time's connection to the picture quality of their releases is the fact that they have only decided to release transfers that meet their high standards, even though they have not made the transfers themselves. As noted in other responses and TT threads, that accounts for some of the perhaps odd and eclectic selection of titles that they actually release. The fact that they also release films with strong, if sometimes eccentric or limited appeal to specific niches, combined with the guarantee of a high-quality image, makes blind buys that much more attractive even when one has never heard of the title before or has heard it dismissed as a minor film by various major critics.
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#262 | ||||
Power Member
Oct 2011
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Of course not all movies will get treated that well - some are already beyond rescue for SD much less HD - but anything that can be rescued - that still has any kind of fanbase - is no doubt in their corporate cross-hairs for upgrade. We can see that in these TT Blu-rays...or what KINO has been doing with those archival Eastman House prints. Film restoration and digitization might even become a minor growth industry over the next few years. Quote:
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The wake-up call here is As Good As It Gets...a hit movie...an award winner...from the year 1997. Last edited by ROclockCK; 02-27-2012 at 02:46 AM. |
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#263 | |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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#264 | |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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![]() My biggest disappointment with this As Good As It Gets release, is it means TT will be releasing one less deep catalogue title in June. But if their marketing needs that goose periodically from more pop-appeal titles like Fright Night and As Good As It Gets, then so be it. In Nick Redman's HTF interview, he said it would be a mixed-bag and mash-up... Last edited by ROclockCK; 02-27-2012 at 06:41 AM. |
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#265 | |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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#266 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Yet you seem almost giddy about it. ![]() I really don't even think it's correct to say that people who love this movie will go out and buy it for $29.99 or $34.99. Willingness to spend on a barebones plastic disc is not a sign of loving the underlying film. I can also pretty much guarantee you there are THOUSANDS of people who love this movie, that have NEVER EVEN HEARD OF SCREEN-ARCHIVES.COM and because of that lack of public awareness, will never know a blu-ray release exists. How many of their sales are probably being driven just through this site? Does the entire world population of film lovers reside and frequent blu-ray.com? I'm not so sure this is a signal of blu-ray's doom so much as it is "Sony being Sony". There are still plenty of catalogue titles coming from other studios... |
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#267 |
Blu-ray Prince
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What people don't realize is that Sony's current home video department couldn't manage a large volume of catalog releases right now, even if the catalog market miraculously got hot overnight. When the size of the DVD market started its decline, the studios all greatly downsized their home video departments. They simply do not have enough personnel at all levels (marketing, accounting, etc.) to support the number of catalog releases people here want from them.
That is why good masters are being licensed out to independent companies. It's much easier for an independent distributor with little overhead to turn a profit on a catalog release than it is for a large Hollywood studio. I've seen the numbers for what it costs Warner Bros. to turn out one regular catalog Blu-ray and the costs are ridiculous. The studios have all these insane union contracts that inflate their costs beyond profitability for niche movies that may only sell 5000 units. |
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#268 | ||||
Power Member
Oct 2011
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About what? You're reading between lines I certainly didn't write. The only thing I'm excited about these days is that f-i-n-a-l-l-y 6 years after the Blu-ray format was introduced, one little 'David' label has found a way to crack the vaults of two of the industry's 'Goliaths' and is not only delivering many of the lost treasures I want to see, but doing so with impeccable quality. If "giddy" is your word for that renewed enthusiasm for this format, then so be it, "giddy" I am. ![]() Quote:
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For 4 straight weeks now, I've walked into all of our big boxes on street date, and come away with zip, zero, zilch - in store after store, all that was on their shelves were new/recent movies and TV shows. During that same period, my online sales of Blu-rays have totalled over $400.00...almost exclusively catalogue titles from the 'minors'. |
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#269 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#270 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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I don't know if MGM is going to make any money releasing something like Spellbound at $24 SRP but they seem to think it's worth doing so... Now, do releases like this say anything about whether the likes of The Egyptian could support a wide release? No, of course not. But then, people aren't scratching their heads over titles like The Egyptian. ![]() |
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#271 | |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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Three or four weeks later, Amazon would have slashed it to $9.49, and soon thereafter it would have been pulled from retail shelves and dumped into the blowout bins. The few thousand fans who really wanted to own this title on Blu-ray would have gotten a great bargain, pretty much everyone else would have ignored it, and SPHE would have taken another retail bloodbath. This is such a typical retail timeline for catalogue titles, you can practically set your watch by it. Last edited by ROclockCK; 02-27-2012 at 01:32 AM. |
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#272 |
Active Member
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I don't know enough about how the business works to comment on TT's limited edition approach and pricing strategy. I'm supporting them with selected purchases but do wish for a little more extra content for the asking price.
One publisher that does impress me with their overall approach is EUREKA! and their Masters of Cinema series. They lost most of their inventory in last year's London riots and have since decided to simplify their catalog by offering most titles with both a Blu and a DVD in the package. Lots of extras on the disc and a booklet too for usually less than $25, shipped. One downside is region B locking on some titles. Is it fair to compare the business cases of these two publishers? |
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#273 | |||
Power Member
Oct 2011
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#274 | |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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#275 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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No, not one. AgentOrange said other studios are releasing catalog titles and he's right. They're out there whether you buy them or not. Fort Apache, Shakespeare in Love, She's All That, Serendipity...these are all mainstream releases. Now maybe those titles are all going to lose tons of money. Maybe Sony knows something that Lionsgate and MGM and Paramount and Universal don't. That's certainly possible. Or maybe catalog releases aren't the black pits of doom people are trying to make them out to be. And just to be clear, I'm not claiming to know what's true here. Catalog releases could very well be money pits. I just don't see how anybody can set their watch based on the scant information publicly available. I'd love to read these announcements if you can point me in the right direction. |
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#276 | |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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![]() Ditto. Last edited by ROclockCK; 02-27-2012 at 05:16 AM. |
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#277 | |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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#278 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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If Sony only has so many "open" slots to release movies on Blu-ray, is that movie a good pick? Probably not. I'm honestly surprised Twilight Time would take a shot on it, though it probably fits their customer base better than most other distributors. |
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#279 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I also don't see how this can POSSIBLY be a good thing to consumers. Other than the prospect that Criterion gets their hands on more Columbia Pictures titles and loads them up with extras. The prospect of these Twilight Time bare-bones/limited releases is only truly interesting when it's something that nobody really expected a blu-ray for. My only thought at seeing this 90's oscar winner was surprise that it wasn't already on blu-ray 2 or 3 years ago, and yes, in a bargain bin... |
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#280 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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If I were to invent a theory to argue against it selling out quickly, it would be that customers of Twilight Time/Screenarchives might ignore it as a "boring" non-niche title. Basically it's too common to really be appealing to someone looking for "deep cut" catalogue titles that in a couple of examples were not even available on DVD. Are these film afficianados REALLY going to flock towards a title that routinely airs on cable and can probably still be found in every walleyworld in North America? Yet the people used to scooping it out of Wal-mart bargain bins might not have an awareness of the blu-ray's/Screenarchive's existance. In effect they are not even offering this title to the films original intended audience. I really do believe this title would hit 10's of thousands of units quite easily at retail. I honestly don't understand why there isn't some middle ground between these "limited edition" 3000 releases and a 100% risk wide release. For some titles swinging 3000 seems like a stretch, for others 3000 seems absurdly low. |
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