sara_jane_12
New member
While there are many people out there who happily pirate stuff just to avoid seeing it at the cinema, there are other reasons too.
Take the film "Eurotrip": Out in cinemas here in the UK this week. This was originally released in the US back in January and they already have the unrated retail DVD available. Given the choice of downloading the US "unrated" version with all the bits left in, or the UK theatrical version with bits cut out and in a couple of cases, items in the background digitally altered/removed because of "rights" issues, which would you rather see? The f*cked about version or as the directors intended?
I will freely admit to downloading the odd movie occasionally (for "testing" purposes"), but I do go see them in theatres too. The Telesyncs you get off the net are nowhere near as good as seeing it in the cinema. What the studios have to watch now is that there are good (and I mean VERY good) Telecines (reel-to-video conversions) that are available now for most of the recent films. Harry Potter 3 and Day After Tomorrow are already available in TC sourced DVDR - as a previous poster, almost as good as DVD but with no extras. The only drawback to this is that DVRAB are usually digitally "cleaned" of scratches that are on the source film if it wasn't mastered from a digital print.
If the studios want to cut down on piracy (they'll never get rid of it completely), the answer is to release stuff simultaneously throughout the world, both in theatres and on DVD say 1-2 months later. But of course they won't do that.....
DP.
Take the film "Eurotrip": Out in cinemas here in the UK this week. This was originally released in the US back in January and they already have the unrated retail DVD available. Given the choice of downloading the US "unrated" version with all the bits left in, or the UK theatrical version with bits cut out and in a couple of cases, items in the background digitally altered/removed because of "rights" issues, which would you rather see? The f*cked about version or as the directors intended?
I will freely admit to downloading the odd movie occasionally (for "testing" purposes"), but I do go see them in theatres too. The Telesyncs you get off the net are nowhere near as good as seeing it in the cinema. What the studios have to watch now is that there are good (and I mean VERY good) Telecines (reel-to-video conversions) that are available now for most of the recent films. Harry Potter 3 and Day After Tomorrow are already available in TC sourced DVDR - as a previous poster, almost as good as DVD but with no extras. The only drawback to this is that DVRAB are usually digitally "cleaned" of scratches that are on the source film if it wasn't mastered from a digital print.
If the studios want to cut down on piracy (they'll never get rid of it completely), the answer is to release stuff simultaneously throughout the world, both in theatres and on DVD say 1-2 months later. But of course they won't do that.....
DP.