Home Video (VHS, DVD, Blu-ray, 4k)

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On Reddit we have r/dvdcollection, r/boutiquebluray, r/4kbluray, r/steelbook, r/vhs, etc but let's start simply with a community to cover all the forms of home video collecting.

So, do you feel nostalgic for a format? Are you looking forward to a release? Heard any exciting news? Want to show us your shelves? Then post away.

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Feel the Sting of Jason Statham Pollinating 4K UHD and Blu-ray with 'The Beekeeper' on April 23

Tom Landy

3--4 minutes


David Ayer's The Beekeeper starring action icon Jason Statham from Discovery Home Entertainment and Amazon MGM Studios will be buzzing to 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray and Blu-ray on April 23.

In The Beekeeper, one man's brutal campaign for vengeance takes on national stakes after he is revealed to be a former operative of a powerful and clandestine organization known as "Beekeepers."

***The Beekeeper - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray ***

The Beekeeper - 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray 

***The Beekeeper - Blu-ray ***

The Beekeeper 

There doesn't appear to be any supplements, but both releases are listed to have Dolby Atmos soundtracks.

Pre-orders for The Beekeeper are up and included below is the press announcement:


"Wildly entertaining"

Tribune News Service / Katie Walsh

THE BEEKEEPER

ARRIVES ON 4K UHD, BLU-RAY AND DVD ON APRIL 23

**Burbank, CA, March 6 **-- The first action-thriller of 2024, The Beekeeper, from Amazon MGM Studios, will be available for purchase on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD on April 23.

Directed by David Ayer ("Fury", "End of Watch") from a screenplay by Kurt Wimmer ("Salt", "Expend4bles"), the film is produced by Bill Block, Jason Statham, David Ayer, Chris Long, Kurt Wimmer.

The Beekeeper stars Jason Statham ("The Meg," "Furious 7", "The Fate of the Furious," The "Transporter" films), Emmy Raver-Lampman (TV's "The Umbrella Academy"), Josh Hutcherson ("The Hunger Games" films), Bobby Naderi, Minnie Driver ("Good Will Hunting"), Phylicia Rashad ("Creed") and Jeremy Irons (TV's "Watchmen").

The Beekeeper will be available on April 23 on 4K UHD for $27.99 (ERP), Blu-ray for $22.99 (ERP) and DVD for $17.99 (ERP).

ABOUT THE FILM:

In The Beekeeper, one man's brutal campaign for vengeance takes on national stakes after he is revealed to be a former operative of a powerful and clandestine organization known as "Beekeepers."

Directed by: David Ayer

**Written by: **Kurt Wimmer

Produced by: Bill Block, Jason Statham, David Ayer, Chris Long p.g.a., Kurt Wimmer

Cast: Jason Statham, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Josh Hutcherson, Bobby Naderi, Minnie Driver with Phylicia Rashad and Jeremy Irons

Amazon MGM Studios presents, a Miramax presentation, a Miramax, Cedar Park, Punch Palace Productions production. A film by David Ayer.

BASICS

PRODUCT                                                                            ERP

4K UHD                                                                                 $27.99

Blu-ray                                                                                   $22.99

DVD                                                                                       $17.99

Languages: English ATMOS, Eng-ADS-US

Subtitles: English SDH, LSP

Running Time: 105 minutes

Rating: Rated R for strong violence throughout, pervasive language, some sexual references and drug use.

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Hi.

As you may be aware, the UK isn't getting a 4K release of The Abyss. I've been looking into importing and not getting very far. I don't know if it is because it hasn't actually been released yet.

Amazon.de removes if from my basket once I login.

Amazon.com keeps bringing up the streaming version on Prime.

Amazon.ca won't ship to the UK.

Amazon.fr don't seem to have it.

Finally, Rarewaves don't list it either.

I'm guessing I should try again when these places actually have physical stock, which for Europe is around the last week of April.

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Here are two projects I've come across by accident that I thought were fascinating.

The first is the Domesday Duplicator. This rather expensive open source project rips the raw laserdisc data, ensuring the best possible way to archive the material. One small drawback, one side of laserdisc data will give you a 160GB file!

The system can also be used to get the raw data from VHS tapes as well. I was quite surprised, as long as the tape was properly made in the first place, how good VHS looks in its purest form. Obviously, depending on your connection to the TV, the quality would be degraded somewhat.

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Physical media is the best. Maybe it’s the fact that the internet has taken over our lives and is now swiftly being enshittified. Maybe it’s the nostalgia factor. Maybe it’s the fact that streaming offers reduced quality and no actual ownership. Maybe it’s the fun and the community that comes with collecting. Or, maybe it’s just nice to have a beautifully packaged product sitting on your shelf. Whatever it is, one thing’s for sure: Whether you’re into Blu-rays, vinyl records, VHS tapes, or a cartridge of your favorite ‘90s video game, physical media is just plain fun.

The physical media market is at an interesting juncture right now. For years, intense but concentrated interest has consistently driven sales for a slew of boutique media labels that specialize in resurrecting old music and movies. At the same time, mass consumption of physical media has plummeted in recent decades and the opportunity to buy at big box stores is swiftly declining. Yet while the convenience of digital delivery has been enough for most consumers to ditch their physical players, a resurgent interest in physical products also appears to be in the works. So, is physical media doing well or not? It’s hard to say. One thing is certain: For the people who do appreciate a hard copy, there can be intense loyalty to a brand or a medium—enough to convince them to shell out exorbitant sums of cash. And remember if you own it on digital, you don’t really own it.

In that spirit, here are some of the coolest physical media releases we’ve seen lately, some of which are recent while others are coming soon.

The home video releases mentioned are:

  • Slaughter in San Francisco from Eureka Entertainment
  • Trainspotting on 4K from Criterion
  • Saul Bass’s Phase IV from Vinegar Syndrome
  • New VHS from Terror Vision Records
  • Arrow Video is Releasing Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1978) on 4K
  • Body Double Soundtrack on Vinyl by Waxwork Records
  • Jeremy Saulnier’s Green Room is Coming to 4K
  • Stanley Kubrick’s Fear and Desire Is Out on 4K from Kino Lorber
  • Necropolis: A Troma Film Soundtrack Compilation from Mystic Vault Records
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According to Circana, the January 2024 top 10 by units sold were:

  1. Trolls Band Together (Universal)
  2. Oppenheimer (Universal)
  3. Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (Disney)
  4. Five Nights at Freddy’s (Universal)
  5. The Expendables 4 (Lionsgate)
  6. Barbie (Warner)
  7. The Equalizer 3 (Sony Pictures)
  8. The Holdovers (Universal)
  9. Thanksgiving (Sony Pictures)
  10. Transformers (Paramount)
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Hello, I am looking at a CED player and 50 ish discs for $50 on Marketplace, I an interested in the format and have a small laserdisc collection, I know CEDs are lower resolution and most discs only have mono audio but I like oddball stuff like that. The seller did not mention if anything works but replacement belts seem fairly inexpensive though a replacement sytlus is pretty spendy if needed. Any advice you could give would be appreciated. Thanks.

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Looking at releases from the end of February and March, there are several titles worth checking out — a couple of current titles arriving on disc after their theatrical runs, some upgraded or featuring expanded supplemental material, and still others never before released in a physical format.

They are:

  • Fear and Desire directed by Stanley Kubrick from Kino Lorber
  • Wonka directed by Paul King from Warner Home Video
  • Dream Scenario directed by Kristoffer Borgli from Lionsgate
  • The Abyss / Aliens / True Lies directed by James Cameron from Walt Disney Studios Home Entertainment
  • Ferrari directed by Michael Mann from Neon/ Decal Releasing
  • To Die For directed by Gus Van Sant from Criterion
  • Primal Fear directed by Gregory Hoblit from Paramount
  • Phase IV directed by from Saul Bass from Vinegar Syndrome
  • The Warriors directed by Walter Hill from Arrow
  • Simon Killer directed by Antonio Campos from IFC Films
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submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

A decade-plus into the streaming revolution, you’d be forgiven for thinking physical media has had its day. Late last year, Best Buy announced it would no longer be selling DVDs and Blu-ray, just months after Netflix got out of the disc rental market that kick-started its business. According to a 2021 report from the Motion Picture Association, global physical media sales more than halved between 2017 and 2021, falling from $14.9 billion in 2017 to $6.5 billion in 2021.

But more recently, 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray has been making headlines for a very different set of reasons. The 4K Blu-ray release of Christopher Nolan’s Oppenheimer promptly sold out at major retailers just weeks after its director stood onstage to proudly talk about the amount of care and attention that the team was putting into it. Aside from new releases, there’s also been a steady flow of older titles coming to the format. James Cameron is currently in the midst of rereleasing films including Titanic, Aliens, and The Abyss on 4K discs, and last year, Disney reissued Cinderella and Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

It’s probably too early to claim that 4K Blu-ray is leading a vinyl revival-style resurgence of physical media. But these headlines piqued my interest as someone who fondly remembers building a respectable DVD collection as a teenager. “It’s such a good time to get into it right now,” Jeff Rauseo, a YouTuber (who formerly published under the channel name “Films At Home”) who specializes in reviewing physical media releases, tells me. “It’s getting a lot of traction.”

...

Nolan suggests there are at least two different benefits to a 4K Blu-ray disc: AV quality and ownership. “I’m known for my love of theatrical and put a lot of effort into that, but the truth is, the way the film goes out at home is equally important to me,” the director said at a screening last year. “In the case of Oppenheimer, we’ve put a lot of care and attention into the Blu-ray version but also in particular the 4K UHD version and trying to translate the photography and sound that we formatted for the IMAX format, the 70mm releases, and putting that into the digital realm for a version that you can buy and own at home and put on a shelf so no evil streaming service can come steal it from you.”

...

What’s particularly nice about owning a 4K Blu-ray is the sense that it has a good chance of being the final physical release a film might get. Cas Harlow, AVForums’ lead 4K Blu-ray reviewer, doesn’t think he’s going to have to replace all his 4K Blu-rays with 8K discs anytime soon like he had to do with VHS, DVDs, and Blu-rays in the past. “If they do 8K you’re edging past what you can justify,” he says. “We’re talking about [4K Blu-ray] as being probably the end physical format, the final physical format.”

...

Aside from the objective benefits, the collectors I spoke to talked about having an almost emotional attachment to their discs. “There’s just something about human nature and collecting and just having a representation of who you are,” says Rauseo, who estimates he has around 2,500 movies in his collection, including roughly 600 4K Blu-rays.

That’s where smaller boutique Blu-ray labels have been able to carve out a niche for themselves with deluxe packages that can often include additional collectibles like books and art cards in the box. Harlow points toward Second Sight Films’ recent rerelease of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre as a key example of this trend. “What you’re getting there is a classic film that perhaps no one expected to hit 4K, let alone look great in 4K, that’s been given a loving and not controversial restoration and put in a lavish box set,” he says. According to market research firm Circana, the market for collector’s editions like these rose 85 percent to reach $80 million in the 12 months ending March 2023, and boutique label Arrow Films recently told Variety that its US sales increased 72 percent between 2020 and 2021.

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Top 20 Selling Blu-ray Discs

  1. The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes
  2. The Marvels
  3. Trolls Band Together
  4. Oppenheimer
  5. Priscilla
  6. The Conan Chronicles: Conan the Barbarian/Conan the Destroyer
  7. Planet Earth III
  8. Footloose
  9. Thanksgiving
  10. Barbie
  11. Five Nights at Freddy'a
  12. The Expendables 4
  13. Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
  14. Hypnotic
  15. Silent Night
  16. Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths, Part One
  17. Dune: Part One
  18. John Wick: Chapter 4
  19. Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning, Part One
  20. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3

Source: NPD VideoScan First Alert (based on unit sales from reporting retailers)

Top 20 Selling 4K Ultta HD Blu-ray Discs

  1. The Marvels
  2. The Hunger Games: The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes
  3. The Conan Chronicles: Conan the Barbarian/Conan the Destroyer
  4. Planet Earth III
  5. Footloose
  6. Oppenheimer
  7. Universal Classic Monsters: The Essential Collection
  8. Columbia Classics 4K Ultra HD Collection Vol. 4
  9. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
  10. Willy's Wonderland
  11. Dune: Part One
  12. Kindergarten Cop
  13. The Expendables 4
  14. Avatar: The Way of Water
  15. Starship Troopers
  16. John Wick: Chapter 4
  17. Titanic
  18. Trolls Band Together
  19. Misaion: Impossible - Dead Reckoning, Part One
  20. 2 Guns

Source: NPD VideoScan First Alert (based on unit sales from reporting retailers)

https://www.mediaplaynews.com/research/top-20-selling-blu-ray-and-4k-discs-for-week-ended-2-17-24/

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I listened to a podcast recently that recommended McPherson so pretty excited for that. Also embarrassed to admit these are all blind buys but yeah, I have never seen a Wong Kar Wai movie! 😱

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I don't know how old you guys are, but back in the VHS era, widescreen films were more expensive.

I can only imagine that widescreen copies of films on VHS were really a niche product as TVs were predominately square, or rather 4:3. So to get more money out of the punter, they were often packaged with extra gubbins.

This copy of Dances With Wolves I found today in a charity shop just brought up a lot of memories of that time. This copy includes the almost 4-hour cut, the soundtrack CD (which was still sealed) and an exclusive colour brochure (which was missing). Also, it was exclusive to WH Smith. This was a UK chain of glorified newsagents that also sold books and films.

Interview With A Vampire, which I owned, came in a box like this and was packaged with an abridged version of the original novel spread over two cassettes.

In case you were thinking of waiting out for a plain plastic box version, there was a disclaimer informing you that this was the only version of the widescreen VHS tape that was going to be available.

One of the best VHS box sets I had was The 5th Element. The tape came with this huge making of/ art book, which I still have today.

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Here I am at Walmart, elbow-deep in decades of movies as other shoppers wheel by without so much as a glance. The bin, about four feet tall, is overflowing with DVDs, to the point where I have to start piling them up on one side just to get anywhere near the center. I’m picking out the movies I’m going to indulge in over the weekend, shuffling through copies of Sonic the Hedgehog, an all-in-one Ben Affleck movie collection, Gremlins, and a hodgepodge of other flicks.

I pull out some old films I’ve never gotten around to watching, like The Ring and the Crank collection (yes, I know I’m behind), and toss them into my shopping cart. The variety in Walmart’s DVD bin is seemingly endless: and for a price of about $5 per disc that you can hang onto forever, you can’t really go wrong. (So long as you don’t care about the highest-quality viewing experience.) The movies will soon make their way into my PlayStation 4 and will hopefully save me from having to pick something out on a streaming app. Walmart isn’t the only place I’ve started looking for DVDs, either. Thrift stores, flea markets, the library, and even my local mall’s FYE have also become places I frequent to get my hands on oft-ignored discs.

After spending years reassuring myself that I don’t need physical copies of movies because of streaming, DVDs have officially reentered my life.

There’s just something far simpler about sifting through a mountain of DVDs that I can pick up and hold in my hands, as opposed to flipping through the thousands of movies across the several different streaming services I’ve subscribed to. Plus, unlike streaming, the cost of DVDs is only going down. I also don’t have to worry about triggering auto-playing trailers when I just want to read the synopsis on the back of the case, and I’m certainly not stuck staring at a screen for hours as I exhaust myself with too many choices. The pile of movies at Walmart is another form of chaos, but it’s the one I’d rather deal with.

...

The overwhelming amount of content isn’t the only thing that’s giving me streaming fatigue; the cost of having a digital library available has also become a factor. Within the past year, nearly every streaming service has raised its prices, including Netflix, Disney Plus, Hulu, Paramount Plus, Discovery Plus, and Apple TV Plus. Not to mention that Netflix is cracking down on password sharing, which means I can’t even leech off of my parents’ subscription anymore.

...

It’s not just the cost of streaming that I have to worry about, either. Last year, I nearly exceeded my ISP’s data cap after I downloaded Baldur’s Gate 3 and kept up my heavy streaming habits. That was all the more reason for me to invest in DVDs.

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A familiar label for horror fans is getting a resurrection. Umbrelic Entertainment co-founders Thomas Zambeck and Brian Katz are bringing back a new iteration of Anchor Bay Entertainment with the goal to curate a new library of films for distribution, projects that range from new release genre films, undiscovered treasures, cult classics, and remastered catalog releases.

...

“We had an opportunity to take the name of a beloved genre film brand, one we feel a personal connection to, for our new company,” says Zambeck in a press release statement. “This is a new venture, unaffiliated with any previous incarnations. We aim to honor the history and spirit of the past as we look for interesting films that break the mold, and will be discovered by new generations for years to come.”

In Lionsgate’s acquisition of Starz in December 2016, the studio absorbed the North American branches of Anchor Bay Entertainment. The Anchor Bay Entertainment trademark was up for acquisition so Zambeck and Katz took the opportunity to acquire it. That means that the new Anchor Bay Entertainment doesn’t include the previous label’s library, but Zambeck and Katz are quickly looking to build up the new library.

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Top 20 Selling Blu-ray Discs

  1. Trolls Band Together
  2. Oppenheimer
  3. Thanksgiving
  4. Silent Night
  5. Five Nights at Freddy's
  6. The Expendables 4
  7. Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny
  8. Barbie
  9. Justice League: Crisis on Infinite Earths, Part One
  10. The Exorcist: Believer
  11. Dune: Part One
  12. Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning, Part One
  13. Avatar: The Way of Water
  14. John Wick: Chapter 4
  15. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3
  16. The Mandalorian: The Complete First Season
  17. Meg 2: The Trench
  18. The Mandalorian: The Complete Second Season
  19. Waitress: The Musical
  20. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem

Source: NPD VideoScan First Alert (based on unit sales from reporting retailers)

Top 20 Selling 4K Ultra HD Blu-ray Discs

  1. Oppenheimer
  2. The Exorcist: Believer
  3. Dune: Part One
  4. Meg 2: The Trench
  5. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
  6. Kindergarten Cop
  7. The Expendables 4
  8. Creed III
  9. Shazam! Fury of the Gods
  10. Halloween Ends
  11. Thor: Love and Thunder
  12. Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning, Part One
  13. Army of Darkness
  14. Avatar: The Way of Water
  15. Titanic
  16. 2 Guns
  17. The Fugitive
  18. The Thing
  19. Trolls Band Together
  20. John Wick: Chapter 4

Source: NPD VideoScan First Alert (based on unit sales from reporting retailers)

https://www.mediaplaynews.com/top-20-selling-blu-ray-and-4k-discs-for-week-ended-2-10-24/

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Updated box shot (lemmy.world)
submitted 8 months ago by dlundh to c/[email protected]
 
 

The 4K library is on the rise and a whole bunch of ”vanilla” blurays has been moved to less prominent shelving - that other shelf is getting really full too. Not sure my wife would be thrilled with more shelves. 🤷🏼‍♂️😔

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Blind buys, except Schlock.

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EXCLUSIVE: Disney & Sony Ink Deal for Sony to Take Over Disney's Physical Media Production, Disney Movie Club to Shut Down as a Result

by Bill Hunt

There are some significant developments happening within the home video industry of late, developments that I've been spending a lot of time investigating and really digging into these past few weeks here at The Digital Bits.

And I can now confidently report that one of them is this:

Disney and Sony have just inked a major deal for Sony Pictures Home Entertainment to take over all of Disney's physical media production going forward.

This means that Sony will handle and oversee the actual authoring and compression of discs, that they'll work with the replicators and packaging vendors, and that they'll oversee the titles as they go out to the distributors and on to retailers.

I first received word of this deal about two weeks ago, apparently within twenty-four hours of the ink drying, and I've now confirmed it with multiple independent sources within the industry---people that I trust and have known and worked with for many years.

This deal makes sense for Disney for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that Sony is far more efficient and cost effective at producing their discs, whereas Disney's physical media operation has been subject to no small amount of internal/organizational turmoil recently.

First, they were trimmed down in late 2019 and early 2020, after Disney's infamous and year-long 4K Ultra HD catalog title blow-out, then they were subject to many of the cost-cutting pressures and personnel losses that all the majors suffered during the COVID-19 pandemic.

It hasn't helped that the studio's physical media operation---which is now almost an afterthought in the shadow of its Disney+ business and activities---has been organizationally tied to Disney's digital and streaming operation ever since.

Based on reporting from multiple sources, what this has meant in recent months is that virtually every decision about which catalog titles to release on disc, and which features to include on them, not to mention every technical decision that naturally arises during the course of the production of those titles, requires scores of people to be involved at Disney. And the people who are actually working on the discs don't have decision-making power about anything---they have to kick decisions upstairs to their bosses, who have to kick it upstairs to their bosses, and so on. Multiple levels of management are involved, which means that decisions that should take two people five minutes instead take thirty people a week or more.

It would be pretty tough for anyone to make money on physical media doing it like that.

What's more, with Disney's constant cost-cutting measures, and the fact that the studio has wildly overspent on its streaming operation, everyone involved is naturally afraid for their jobs. So few people at Disney are willing to stick their necks out to make a decision, for fear of getting fired. Unfortunately, that includes the very people who know how to do physical media best.

Ironically, Disney turning over their physical media operation to Sony means that a lot of these people now probably are likely to lose their jobs, which is regrettable. (We hope at least that the studio is wise enough to keep the people who actually know what they're doing, as opposed to the middle-managers who aren't adding value to the process.)

But the hope for physical media consumers going forward is that---if Disney does get more efficient and profitable at releasing discs via this arrangement---they might actually start releasing more of them.

As cinephiles are well aware, Disney is currently sitting on a vault that's chock full of great live action film titles from the classic Disney, 20th Century (Fox), Hollywood Pictures, and Touchstone libraries. In fact, there are at least twenty classic Fox catalog titles that we've confirmed have recent 4K remasters, that Disney is doing absolutely nothing with---they aren't going to streaming or digital, they aren't appearing on Disney+, and they certainly aren't being released on Blu-ray or physical 4K Ultra HD.

This at a time when many other major studios are not only digging deep into their film libraries for Blu-ray and 4K Ultra HD releases, they're also licensing many very deep catalog titles to boutique labels like Shout! Factory, Arrow, Kino Lorber Studio Classics, Indicator, Powerhouse, and more---an arrangement that is generating good profits for those other studios, even as production costs increase and vendor and retailer options shrink.

One way that indie studios in particular are working to adjust to this new climate is by creating their own online stores and thereby selling discs to their fans and consumers directly.

Unfortunately, as part of the Disney and Sony arrangement, we've learned that Disney plans to shutter their Disney Movie Club, which for several years now has been doing exactly that.

This is sadly also confirmed: We've now learned from Bits readers that DMC is beginning to inform their customers of this fact. Here's an example of the message DMC is currently sending out via email:

Disney Movie Club to close after 23 years

We think this is actually a terrible idea. It would be much better for Disney to let Sony take over DMC, and to ramp it up in order to more effectively communicate with the diehard cinephiles who are now the core of the physical media business.

Speaking directly to your best consumers, making them feel heard, and giving them what they want in terms of titles, A/V quality, and features is exactly how you build a thriving physical media business in 2024.

In any case, we've contacted Disney and asked for an official comment and clarification about this new physical media production deal, in particular what it means for Disney catalog physical releases going forward, and we'll share that with all of you here if and when the studio responds.

Rest assured, we'll continue investigating and reporting on this news in the days and weeks ahead.

Stay tuned...

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I think they're just trying to get more people to subscribe to Disney Plus. Physical media just can't win lately, can it?

UPDATE: The reason Disney Movie Club is shutting down is because Disney struck a deal with Sony for them to take over their physical media production.

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It’s been an interesting time in the world of 4K Blu-ray. There has been recent news that several critically acclaimed, award nominated movies will not be getting a 4K Blu-ray release, or even any type of physical release in some cases. But, there are also instances where movies being decimated by critics and audiences alike are somehow getting the 4K Blu-ray treatment.

Take, for instance, All of Us Strangers and Madame Web.

...

All of Us Strangers received universal critical acclaim for its powerful story and incredible acting, particularly from Scott. It has been nominated for a slew of awards, including several BAFTAs. Madame Web, on the other hand, is being savaged by critics and audience members alike. It currently has a Rotten Tomatoes score of 15% and 59% from critics and audiences respectively, with many citing the poor writing, bad effects and overall dull feel.

Yet, only one of these movies is getting a 4K Blu-ray release: Madame Web. All of Us Strangers, on the other hand, isn’t getting a physical release at all (as reported by World of Reel). I admittedly have not seen either of these movies, but from what I’ve read and what I’ve been told by people who’ve seen it, All of Us Strangers belongs on 4K Blu-ray and it’s a crime that it’s not.

I don’t want to speak for anyone, but from what I read in several comment sections and forums such as Reddit, home theater fans and cinephiles are not okay with the fact that this is the state of 4K Blu-ray and physical media releases at the moment. So just what is going on?

...

This isn’t the first time this has happened in recent memory. It was announced that Best Picture Oscar-nominated movies Poor Things, starring Emma Stone, and The Holdovers, starring Paul Giamatti, will only be getting standard Blu-ray releases, not 4K. These movies are both generating a lot of buzz in the awards scene, with both Stone and Giamatti already having won best actor Golden Globes, and yet movie fans won’t get to enjoy them at home in their best possible quality.

Barbarian, starring Bill Skarsgård, is another movie that has been seemingly denied a physical release (as a press release mentioned a streaming date only). And Barbarian is a cult horror movie – a genre that particularly suits 4K Blu-ray and physical media – that has enjoyed great success. Understandably, fans in forums far and wide have cried out for a physical copy.

These are the kind of movies the best 4K Blu-ray players were made for. Home theater fans, in general, are movie-goers, and they will be wanting to add these movies to their collections, but can’t as it stands. What connects three of these four movies? You guessed it, they’re all owned by Disney. (The Holdovers is from Focus Features).

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Excited about this one, but there's currently no news on any extras yet.

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Coming this May: Three Revolutionary Films by Ousmane Sembène, three powerful 1970s works by the trailblazing Senegalese auteur; Anatomy of a Fall, Justine Triet’s masterful examination of the line between truth and fiction; and Girlfight, Karyn Kusama’s singular tale of a young woman’s path to self-realization. Plus: a Blu-ray upgrade of A Story of Floating Weeds / Floating Weeds: Two Films by Yasujiro Ozu, a silent classic from one of cinema’s greatest directors alongside his color remake, and Peeping Tom, Michael Powell’s still-shocking masterpiece of British cinema, now on 4K UHD.

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Today we have made public the difficult decision to cancel the 4KUHD for Meet John Doe (1941). While this isn't something we even remotely anticipated, the extremely poor pre-sales for the release leaves us no alternative.

The Blu-ray and DVD releases of Doe are still on, but with a revised street date of April 30th. These releases will still be derived from our 4K restoration of the beloved Capra film, but 4KUHD produced discs are upwards of 3 to 4 times as expensive to produce as standard Blu-ray making our chances of recouping that extra cost from sales very slim.

All orders placed at ClassicFlix.com for the 4KUHD of Doe have been canceled. All those awaiting shipment of the Doe 4KUHD on an order with other titles purchased have had the Doe 4KUHD removed from the order and the remainder of the order shipped.

If you'd still like to pre-order the Blu-ray of Doe you may do so by clicking any link on this page or by clicking the image below.

Thank you for your understanding.

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Its that time… (lemmy.world)
submitted 9 months ago by dlundh to c/[email protected]
 
 

I’ve been to the second hand store again!

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