Coriolanus
Banned
Isn't this gunna be a real big problem in terms of piracy?
Norp. Piracy already happens regardless thanks to cam/foreign web rips. This is the AppleTunes method of facilitating access to curb piracy.
Isn't this gunna be a real big problem in terms of piracy?
Norp. Piracy already happens regardless thanks to cam/foreign web rips. This is the AppleTunes method of facilitating access to curb piracy.
nah, i got a good system. first showings at every theater around me is sub 10 bucks and always less than 10 people in the theater.
i don't got a big ass screen or an 11.1 surround system. make it cheaper movie studios, then we'll talk.
$30?
What a rip. Needs to be $5-$10 max.
What's stops me from setting up a camera on my table and recording said movie?
What's stops me from setting up a camera on my table and recording said movie?
What's stops me from setting up a camera on my table and recording said movie?
id pay 30 bucks easily for stuff like big blockbusters on day 1
You're paying for early access. That's why it's more expensive than most rentals. I too think it's too expensive, but it's certainly to $10 cheap.Why not?
Is the idea to get more money for the studio?
As it is I haven't been to the movies (apart from kid movies) for about 10 years I reckon. Reasons are that it's far too expensive for 90-120 minutes of entertainment, you sit around with a load of strangers, ads play for the first 30 minutes.
I'm not the only one that doesn't go to the movies anymore for a variety of reasons. If they had a properly priced alternative I'd jump on it. Paying more to watch it at home rather than the cinema isn't pricing it properly.
People will always pay more to go to the cinema, I don't really understand why but some people like it.
So if they price it properly then there will be minimal impact to the cinema audience but a much greater take up of the home offering
I'll go ahead and upgrade that to $60 for Australia, if not $100, but I'm interested in it conceptually. Cinemas are kind of terrible with a few exceptions here and there, and I think the eventual death of cinemas is inevitable. They were once totally necessary for the distribution of films, but that's no-longer true, and now they are primairly just expensive middlemen. I don't want overpriced snacks, I don't want to deal with large crowds of people, and I'm assuming the studios don't want the cinemas to take half their ticket price away either.
The real question mark is the economics of doing this. There's not going to be anything stopping really good quality cam setups from pirating movies day 1 to a level that would not be possible in most cinema scenarios. On average, movie pirates don't offer high quality versions of films until the blu-ray release except in scenarios where some kind of press screener got stolen or whatever. There's also nothing stopping people from organizing impromptu cinemas where they rent it once for $30, and screen it for 15 of their friends as long as they have the equipment.
I could see it working out, but they will need to think long and hard about how much to charge so it's viable for everyone. Sucks if you own a cinema though, I guess. The exception to the "I don't want to deal with cinemas" rule is when I feel like going all posh and doing some kind of gold-class thing. The luxury cinema is an experience that might stick around, but if the regular cinema experience dies for the most part (or is reduced to like 10% of the cinema count we have today) then prices will necessarily go up for that even higher.
What I think is going to happen in the mean time is that cinemas will threaten to boycott major films if studios begin doing this. Eventually there will be a middle ground struck whereby cinemas have true exclusivity for 7-14 days, then the "home distribution" service will kick in beyond this. This will still eat into cinema profitability, but less so than it might otherwise, and the slow death spiral of cinemas will take 15-20 years to run it's course.
I think big cinemas are inevitably going to die, but smaller independent ones will stay around for quite a while longer. As horrible as most cinema experiences are, there is something special about seeing something on a big screen with excellent sound. There certainly won't be a huge business model in the future built around that, as there is now.
Damn, I picked the wrong thread.
I don't know about you guys, but at least 50% of the reason I watch a movie in the theater is because I want that theater experience. I don't care how good your home system is, unless you live in a theater, I'm always going to prefer that giant screen and ridiculous sound.
As a disabled person, this sounds great. I never get to go the movies.
As a person on disability, I'll never be able to justify spending that much for one film.
What's stops me from setting up a camera on my table and recording said movie?
But isn't that stuff relatively limited? Seems like this would just bust the door wide open, two months before it usually happens.
You don't even own the digital movie after $30?
Might as well enjoy the theater experience for that "deal"
Damn, I picked the wrong thread.
I don't know about you guys, but at least 50% of the reason I watch a movie in the theater is because I want that theater experience. I don't care how good your home system is, unless you live in a theater, I'm always going to prefer that giant screen and ridiculous sound.