This is cool but not really an issue for any movie that would make it to "Sundance, Caanes, or Tribeca"
The people who watch "films" aren't really a mass market. Those same people stayed with laser disk becuase it had no compression, thus better video quality.
This is good it may get a lot of films seen in high def that might not have been seen at all.
It will pair well with netfilx's willingness to let indie filmmakers distribite via netflix.
Of course the BD alliance can afford this, 1 million in mastering fees waived for 1000 movies is small change for the combined columbia, MGM, Fox, Disney(Buena Vista, Sony screen gems etc...
Typically they do better than that. If a film is worthwhile it gets picked up and distributed. So insetad of just getting a marginal release on a fledgling format it will get a theatrical release, a dvd and a blueray. The members of the BD association can do this 1 because they have money. 2 They are mostly MOVIE studios and stand to profit greatly by purchaing worthwhile independent content and profiting off it's release.
Not to knock anyone supporting the smaller indie films, like student projects. It's just not really important to the format war at all. Movies of any commercial quality are bought by studios.
Let the hive mind of Engadget get that for you.
"I've found myself using my PC for a lot of conversations lately, and I'm also considering recording a podcast to share with anyone who will listen. There are tons of USB headset / microphones out there, and I'm hoping someone has some solid recommendations based on experience. I'll consider both headsets and standalone mics, by the way, but I'd like to keep the bill under $100 if possible. Help!"
The most commented posts on Engadget over the past 24 hours.
Now that we've thrown 'em off the trail, use the form below to get in touch with the people at Engadget. Please fill in all of the required fields because they're required.
The people who watch "films" aren't really a mass market. Those same people stayed with laser disk becuase it had no compression, thus better video quality.
This is good it may get a lot of films seen in high def that might not have been seen at all.
It will pair well with netfilx's willingness to let indie filmmakers distribite via netflix.
Of course the BD alliance can afford this, 1 million in mastering fees waived for 1000 movies is small change for the combined columbia, MGM, Fox, Disney(Buena Vista, Sony screen gems etc...
Typically they do better than that. If a film is worthwhile it gets picked up and distributed. So insetad of just getting a marginal release on a fledgling format it will get a theatrical release, a dvd and a blueray. The members of the BD association can do this 1 because they have money. 2 They are mostly MOVIE studios and stand to profit greatly by purchaing worthwhile independent content and profiting off it's release.
Not to knock anyone supporting the smaller indie films, like student projects. It's just not really important to the format war at all. Movies of any commercial quality are bought by studios.