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Best Blu-ray Movie Deals
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#3681 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Yes, the idea that every TT title belongs in the bargain bin is rubbish. Criterion is prepping Fritz Lang's Ministry of Fear for release next month, it is essentially barebones and thus at their lower price point of $30. The Big Heat, another Lang noir and typically considered the superior film, was released by TT for $30 too. It could have easily been Criterion instead.
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#3682 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#3683 | |
Special Member
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Uh-oh, Here we go again... ![]() |
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#3684 |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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Not necessarily SpartanIre. It might simply be a "signing opportunity", like they had for The Blue Lagoon via special screening in L.A. That wouldn't kill SAE's Amazon hosts, but it would limit the number of folks who could get one autographed.
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#3685 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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![]() And I agree The Big Heat is the superior film with a top notch video treatment from Sony worth the asking price. |
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#3686 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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I do own 2 releases, simply because I enjoy the films. I do not think they are 'worth' $30. But that's the way TT works, so if you want the release, you have to pay it. I think that was what the guy was complaining about originally, no? |
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#3687 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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#3688 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Twilight Time cannot do this for Amazon because they have a small, limited stock. They have a small, limited stock because they consist of two film fans putting up their own cash for the rights to print a small amount. They would not be able to afford these rights (or I imagine, the manufacturing costs) if they wanted to print 50,000 copies, so Amazon could buy in bulk and sell them for $15. It is not the case that TT artificially produce a small stock so they can charge a high price and rip off naive collectors. They produce a small stock because that is all they can afford. So it's either the disc for $30, or not at all. What's to complain about? Last edited by EddieLarkin; 02-03-2013 at 07:43 PM. |
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#3689 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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1) the limited edition (which is artificially created by the way) which has nothing special about it. The releases aren't individually numbered and even if they were if people are purchasing them simply because of the limited nature of the release then they're no longer purchasing it because they like the movie. They're simply collecting just to collect in which case they'd buy just about any movie released in this fashion. 2) The isolated score track which is the only thing which makes these releases unique. But this won't appeal to everyone. Other than that they're just like any other studio release (not speaking about Mill Creek or EBHE). I'm glad to see TT releasing titles which might not have been released otherwise but IMHO there's nothing collector about them. |
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#3690 |
Blu-ray Count
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Wouldn't any limited edition be 'artificially created'? If it isn't intentionally limited, then it isn't limited at all, unless we're talking about a title that eventually goes OOP because the company no longer has the rights to it.
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#3691 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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You can currently preorder Ministry of Fear direct from Criterion for $23.96 and from Amazon for $23.99. And that's the high point for Ministry of Fear. Barnes and Noble and Criterion routinely have 50% sales and even Amazon regularly offers select Criterions for about half SRP. Aren't those prices the relevant comparisons? |
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#3692 |
Blu-ray Prince
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Yes, you're quite right and IMO the "limited" nature of any limited release doesn't make them any more special than a normal release. That is unless you're simply collecting to collect.
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#3693 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#3694 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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And that's fine. I'm not criticizing their model here. I'm simply saying that if you want to compare their prices to other distributers you should compare actual prices and not meaningless placeholders. |
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#3695 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Maybe Flicker Alley is a more appropriate comparison? Regardless, TT said they were forced into this model. It's your right to think they're lying to further dupe us into supporting them. I don't think they are. |
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#3696 |
Blu-ray Champion
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I think it's rediculous. How much was the deal with Sony that means that they have sell copies at $30 a pop? I was thinking of going the limited edition and only printing a few thousand copies of Nosferatu, but, eh... $20 a copy is fine.
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#3697 | ||
Blu-ray Prince
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#3698 |
Expert Member
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I buy Twilight Time titles. My only critique is I wish their contracts with the studios allowed new exclusive extras to their releases besides the isolated score. Then the Twilight Time discs would be worth owning once a new format dominates the market.
I still have DVDs to movies I've double dipped on blu-ray because of the exclusive extras. Even an audio commentary is worth it or a visual essay on the making of the film. Something more to make these releases collectables. I don't own the Criterion edition of the Killer for it's picture quality ![]() Anyway, my two cents, from a fan. At least there's the isolated score. |
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#3699 | ||
Power Member
Oct 2011
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1. I love that they are there at all. Some of these TT titles, especially from the Fox library, are finally seeing their first home video release ever...others not since being crudely scanned for 60s network TV and VHS...and still others not since the Laserdisc days, previously letterboxed-only and not OAR. By my off-the-top count, the list of TT Blu-rays that did not receive even a single R1 DVD release is a cool dozen or more by now...they have been rescuing many of these formerly lost-in-the-vault movies from the 'Scope era beautifully (and thoughtfully)...stuff I'd previously only read about. Even their DVDs have been welcome since none of these pictures had an R1 release from the home label, or more importantly, any other licensee. 2. I love movie soundtracks, and TT has been a breathtaking showcase for deep vault ISTs from the likes of Bernard Herrmann, Hugo Friedhofer, Alex North, Jerry Goldsmith, and Henry Mancini. For some of these titles, I cherish the IST as much or more than the actual movie. In the case of The Sound and the Fury it was great to finally put a "face" to an already familiar "voice"...Alex North's magnificent score has been in my collection since the 70s on vinyl, and yet I had never actually seen the source film. Now I have it on a Blu-ray in OAR together with its long cherished score, which I have already listened to isolated 3 times. 3. I love the Sony titles because TT seems to have a tap into their latest and best transfers, many of which are from 4k sources with state of the art mastering. Mill Creek certainly didn't get their volume-peddler mitts on the 4k Bye Bye Birdie, Blue Lagoon, or Fright Night...soon to be joined by others, which might possibly include Major Dundee (TT admitted they waited for Sony's rework), and perhaps even Christine (unconfirmed, but I'd give it better than coin flip odds of being from a recent 4k rescan, like Fright Night). As for Criterion, they pick and choose from American titles with world cinema "importance" in mind...and most of this stuff just isn't tony enough to fit comfortably within 'The Collection'. H3ll would be a skating rink before you'd see them touch any of these less serious 'movie-movie' titles, regardless of their AQ and PQ specs. 4. I love the people behind this label. They have experience, savvy, and uncommon class. And at heart, they're just big 'ole movie fans themselves...which is why I'm so intrigued by what they decide to showcase this way...it's like someone looked into my own library to see what has been missing, or somehow read my mind. I just feel very comfortable with any product team that recognizes the worth in something like Experiment in Terror, or Rapture, or Pony Soldier, and is willing to front the hard dough to take a fly with it. If I seem like a TT cheerleader at times, it's because this label so often mirrors my own eclectic tastes in vintage cinema. As far as deep catalogue Blu-ray goes, TT is no longer the 'only game in town', but they are releasing The Only Game In Town, a movie I never thought I'd live to even see, since its been a total MIA on home video to date. I don't even care if I love or hate the damn thing. I just want to finally see it, and will be able to now thanks to the funky, arcane tastes of the TT gang. Worst case scenario: Maurice Jarre's IST will become yet another interesting addition to my score collection. Quote:
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#3700 | |
Power Member
Oct 2011
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3) Julie Kirgo's thoughtful, savvy, and fun essays reproduced in a *gasp* actual 4 to 8 page insert booklet. ![]() |
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