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#12481 |
Twilight Time Insider
Feb 2012
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THE DOGS OF WAR (1980).
Includes both The International Cut (119 minutes) The U.S. Theatrical Cut (104 minutes) |
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Thanks given by: | ultlife2013 (08-12-2014) |
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#12482 |
Banned
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#12483 |
Super Moderator
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#12484 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#12485 | |
Blu-ray reviewer
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Pro-B |
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Thanks given by: | spawningblue (08-13-2014), wormraper (08-12-2014) |
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#12486 | |
Blu-ray reviewer
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Catalog titles sell and quite well at that, but the 'problem' is that they don't sell as fast as DVD did. Additionally, the consumer is much more demanding/selective nowadays. During the DVD era, the studios could dump any transfer on a DVD and there would be guaranteed sales. This isn't the case anymore. People demand quality for catalog titles. And quality requires investments, which coupled with the fact that sales are not as rapid as they were makes some studios reluctant to invest. The catalog market, especially for Blu-ray titles, is alive and well. In fact, there are so many great catalog titles released on Blu-ray that I personally have a harder time keeping up than I did back during the DVD era. Pro-B |
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Thanks given by: | spawningblue (08-13-2014), tama (08-13-2014) |
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#12487 | |
Special Member
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Not to mention you clearly contradict yourself: you say they're fine yet you cite their reluctance to invest in the market. You can't have it both ways. And the money many studios are getting from streaming deals - not just netflix - is substantial right now. Not sure how you have a different take on it. |
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#12488 | |||
Blu-ray reviewer
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2. You don't need to sell 10 000 units to be successful. An average of 5000 units is a very good number for a catalog release. A spread of an average of 3500 units is also good. Again, the issue some distributors have is how fast some catalog titles would sell. Quote:
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And one last point: Perhaps the biggest erosion in terms of DVD sales has been in the specialty catalog, which has been vastly underrepresented on Blu-ray for a variety of different reasons. This isn't the same as simply selling 'catalog titles', which many market observers fail to mention in their reports. Pro-B Last edited by pro-bassoonist; 08-13-2014 at 02:25 AM. Reason: Typo |
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Thanks given by: | spawningblue (08-13-2014) |
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#12489 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Ah yes, that brief period when the major studios were trying to sell Christopher Walken as a traditional leading man and action hero rather than their go-to-guy for sinister ****ers in supporting roles. How long ago it all seems.
Great news on both cuts, too. The Longer international cut is definitely the better option, and hopefully it won't have the synch problems of MGM/UA's DVD. |
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#12490 |
Blu-ray Champion
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Not to mention less affluent. Or at least more concerned with saving their money rather than spending it.[/QUOTE]
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#12491 |
Blu-ray Guru
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Never saw Dogs Of War, thanks for the tip. Gonna watch on Amazon Prime video for "free," since I just renewed for the old rate of $79.
![]() Edit : Yes ! Thank you ! JoBeth Williams !!!! ![]() Last edited by MikeZ.; 08-13-2014 at 03:27 AM. |
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#12492 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#12493 |
Blu-ray Champion
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Quite frankly, I found it dull. Then again, I haven't seen it since its initial release. I can't think of any John Irvin film I've seen that I thought was worth seeing a second time (one high notable exception: the TV mini-series of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy).
I'd say that I would be almost tempted just to see if the International Cut made it worth seeing again, but I have too many other titles on my wish list. |
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#12494 | |
Blu-ray Archduke
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#12495 |
Expert Member
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#12496 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Netflix charges people $8 a month for thousands of movies and TV shows at their fingertips, with no revenue from advertisements. There's only so much money they can throw around when it is divided across several studios and still make a profit. When you have a film like Frozen sell millions of DVDs/ Blu-rays compared to a small percentage that Disney would get from Netflix for a huge chunk of their catalog, you can guarantee the payout isn't as comparable and studios will want more once they are no longer getting the money from rental stores and retail sales. The payout from Netflix will no longer be enough, thus Netflix will have to increase their cost, as will Internet providers who are no longer making as much from cable, who is no longer getting as much from advertisements, etc. It's all one big chain and once revenue from one of the links disappears they will find other ways of getting it from us. If people think they will just be able to go from spending thousands of dollars a year on entertainment to a couple hundred and studios will be happy with that, they are dreaming. Netflix will and already has replaced rental stores, it will be quite some time before it replaces home media. I guarantee digital sales are not even close to the sales brought in from DVDs/Blu-rays, as it will be a long time before people want to pay $25 to buy a digital copy of a film. Last edited by spawningblue; 08-13-2014 at 06:48 PM. |
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#12497 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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There is still a big "collectors" market for Blu ray and DVD. Twilight Time and Shout Factory have both indicated how happy they are with sales. I would guess that Kino will end up reporting positive figures for the Studio Collection they just initiated. In addition Criterion's stand alone DVD sales are strong enough for them to go back to separating formats. There is no question that mass appeal of catalog titles has slowed down, but I think it is a long way from being extinct.
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#12498 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I don't see physical media disappearing in our lifetime, at worst, it will just become a niche like LPs. |
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#12499 | |
Blu-ray Knight
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They buy it because it's limited, it's high quality, and because it holds its value well. The "collector" in me it geared toward prioritizing my purchases on titles from distributors that hold their value reasonably well (not to mention buying movies I'm interested in before they go OOP). That's why it'll be interesting to see how well the value will hold on the those original TT titles that have later reissues, especially in light that they'll be packing more extras. |
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#12500 |
Blu-ray Guru
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I buy them because they're high quality, and I deserve the best.
I may not watch one, or all of them a second time, but I don't care. They're there if I reach for them. Future value ? I doubt anyone buying them from my son is going to have to pay more than a few bucks. ALL of it will be profit for him. We've discussed this at length. I just hope the buyers appreciate what's in my collection, and walk away just as happy to have that particular Blu ray, CD, DVD, record, whatever, as I was when I first bought it. Sure I watched Dogs Of War on Amazon streaming last night, because I already paid for Prime. I saved $34.30 doing so. But Killer Elite is a Robert Duvall, and those deserve a physical disc I can reach for. |
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