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#6681 |
Senior Member
Oct 2008
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Hi Penton-Man,
I searched for a loooong time yesterday and could only find a few selected numbers so maybe you can help me out here as actually some of the number I found where posted earlier in this thread. Is there some kind of resource that gives accumulated sales figures for Blu-Ray or even DVD titles that do not sell in the top 20 of any given year ? I am talking about titles like The Sand Pebbles, Battle of the Bulge or The Professionals. I am asking because I have a feeling that with certain classic titles the studios have a hard time to break even and it would also be interesting from the viewpoint of smaller companies like The Criterion Collection, that need to get by with lower numbers for most of their titles. Just today on HTF somebody posted that Weinstein does not continue its Miriam series with the two remaining Bronston Epics as Fall of the Roman Empire did not sell as good as expected so I wonder how hard it would be to make ends meet with lesser known classic titles like The Professionals or The Sand Pebbles on Blu-Ray when even DVD sales are too low for some rather prominent titles. |
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#6682 | |
Senior Member
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#6683 | |
Active Member
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And your joke was pretty funny, though I thought the punch-line was going to be something about ravens flying in over the walls. ![]() |
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#6684 | |
Senior Member
Oct 2007
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http://www.nielsen.com/solutions/videoscan.html As I understand it, break-even for a standard def disc is around 7,500 units, with Blu being twice that. With today's much more tech savvy marketplace, a quality disc is generally better reviewed (at least by those who know what they're looking at) and sales numbers are aided by positive press. The lack of proper transfers for the Bronston films is a sad situation. Cost vs. quality seems to have won out. As transferred, the Bronston films would not have been good material for Blu-ray. These are wonderful productions, that did not receive fair treatment on home video. Had quality been more than just half decent, numbers could have been far greater. Make no mistake, properly handled -- and these films are NOT in need of any real restoration -- they would make glorious Blu-ray releases of distinction. RAH Last edited by Robert Harris; 01-13-2009 at 01:36 PM. |
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#6685 | |
Active Member
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I think injuries will play a big part. Not only with Suggs and Rice and many others on the Ravens, but also in-game. The last time the two teams played in Pittsburgh, Baltimore knocked out Parker and Mendenhall in the first half. As long as the game isn't decided on a phantom touchdown where the player is in the end zone but the ball isn't, it should be a good game. Sad thing is, that bad call is the reason this game is in Pittsburgh and not Baltimore and their seeding wasn't flipped. To keep on topic. What are the chances of getting the Super Bowl on disc, blu-ray or standard? |
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#6686 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#6687 | |
Active Member
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![]() I just want a hard-hitting smackdown. Back to Blu-ray, I want to comment that I finally got to sit down and watch hours and hours of BLADE RUNNER (my first purchase back in August before my home theater was even started), and I LOVED it! The FINAL CUT was exquisite, and the workprint was one of the most interesting 'archival' pieces of film I've ever seen. |
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#6688 | |
Active Member
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These things tend to balance out. In the first meeting with Tennessee, Baltimore lost on a bad call. I want a Ravens win. If Pittsburgh wants to put on kid gloves, I'd be fine with that, as long as Ravens win. I just wish they would put out full games on DVD/Blu, not just highlights. |
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#6689 |
The Digital Bits
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Vittorio Storaro is a longtime advocate of the 2:1 ratio, because he finds scope letterboxing too small. Univisium, a 3-perf full negative system
He's a great cinematographer, but you can see how his single thought and love is for the theatrical presentation, and he misses a lot of the technical hurdles to realizing it at home ![]() |
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#6690 | |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#6692 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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Are we likely to see the Theatrical versions of these on home video? I'm sure people who have scope home theatres, like Mr. Sturgeon, would appreciate that the film would be presented in it's OAR.
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#6693 | |
The Digital Bits
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#6694 |
Power Member
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I think Vittorio Storaro needs to revisit this 2:1 idea.
When Vittorio Storaro first decided to use the 2:1 framing method most home video viewers were watching movies on standard 4:3 television sets and hardly anyone watching movies in high definition at all. It has probably been more than a decade since he made this choice. The black bars with a 2.39:1 ratio movie shown on a 4:3 television are pretty big, so there is a valid point with making a 2:1 compromise. Today, the home viewing environment is different. Many more people have large HDTV sets than ever before. The Blu-ray format shows 6 times the native pixel count of DVD. Letter box black bars for 2.39:1 movies are not very obtrusive at all. Even the black bars for 2.55:1 movies like Sleeping Beauty aren't all that large in proportion to the screen. Black bars for 1.85:1 movies are barely visible. In short, today's 16x9 HDTV monitors are much more friendly to the idea of showing a movie in its original aspect ratio. The other problem I have with the 2:1 philosophy is the "one size fits all" approach. As an illustrator I would be kind of pissed if someone told me I could only create drawings or paintings within a certain shape of canvas. That's pretty restrictive. Flat and Scope ratios both have a very different visual feel to them. They require different compositional approaches to be properly affective and visually pleasing. Even production design and set decoration has to adjust for the different framing. In trying to fudge somewhere in between you get "play it safe" composition -by far my biggest complaint with most Super35 lensed movies. I know good 'scope composition when I see it -and when some of the image is cropped off at the ends I sense that as well and don't like it very much. It's not much different than HBO doing minor panning and scanning work to crop anamorphic filmed movies to 1.77:1 on HBO-HD. |
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#6695 |
The Digital Bits
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Bobby, I totally agree with you, unfortunately I don't think he's going to change his mind
He's a brilliant cinematographer (I'd love to talk to him about Dune sometime, it really does look like he was shooting a stage play, especially with the greens). I just wish he was a little more flexible when it comes to this. In the end, he's the boss of his work, and we have to respect that |
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#6696 | ||
Banned
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On the flipside is Roger Donaldson's The World's Fastest Indian, 2.35 theatrically, 1.78 on BD & DVD, and 2.35 on HDNet Movies. It looks great 2.35 (matches the profile of the bike perfectly). Quote:
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#6697 | ||
The Digital Bits
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#6698 | |
Blu-ray Guru
Mar 2008
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2.35:1 (21:9) could be the future aspect of super-wide TVs. This is a goldmine for the manufacturers (as well as for the studios if think strategically). http://www.computerbild.de/artikel/a...s-3844758.html Blackbar subtitles will be a big issue for the future super-wide TVs since current blu-ray technology cannot manage blackbar subtitles. It appears that Sony, WB and BDA need to reconsider black-bar-subtitle strategy. Last edited by syncguy; 01-14-2009 at 01:32 AM. |
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#6699 |
Power Member
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Storaro may be the "boss" when it comes to the DP work on his movies. However, the problem is movies like The Last Emperor, Apocalypse Now and Tucker: A Man & His Dream were not originally filmed in a 2:1 aspect ratio. Their OAR was 2.35:1. Those movies were originally composed for 2.35:1 and I certainly believe they look better in 2.35:1.
Cropped down to a 2:1 aspect ratio, I feel like someone is trying to make a 'scope movie look like a flat movie. Regarding Robert Rodriquez' opening of the frame to 1.77:1, I don't have much of a problem with that. The movies are using the same "play it safe" rules in composition seen all too often with Super35. And they weren't even shot on film. So I feel the 'scope treatment of video imagery is even more pretentious than what goes on with Super35. A specialized HDTV camera fitted with Panavision lenses is still going to have a native 1.77:1 image. Considering the limited amount of native image detail (due to what is lost in the Bayer pattern effect), it's not so great cropping video-sourced imagery to 2.39:1 and transferring it to 'scope release prints. It really stinks when a HD video image is blown up to IMAX. That original video imagery can still look very good on a HDTV screen at home. |
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#6700 | |
Blu-ray Count
Jul 2007
Montreal, Canada
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