| Updated
August 27, 2008
DVD
NEWS DIGEST
(July
18, 2008)
July
26 issue - Billboard: Top 10 DVD Sellers in US
1 -
Vantage Point [Sony]
2 - Tyler Perry's Meet The Browns [Lionsgate]
3 - 10,000 BC [Warner]
4 - The Spiderwick Chronicles [Nickelodeon]
5 - Drillbit Taylor [Paramount]
6 - The Bucket List [Warner]
7 - Fool's Gold [Warner]
8 - National Treasure 2: Book Of Secrets [Walt Disney]
9 - Definitely, Maybe [Universal]
10 - Welcome Home Roscoe Jenkins [Universal]
Wired: DVD Sales Defy Gravity
Blu-ray
and DVD spending climbed 1.6 percent, to $10.77 billion, for the
first half of the year, up from $10.6 billion last year, according
to data gathered by Home Media Magazine's market research department.
The group also found rental spending increased 2.6 percent to $3.9
billion for the first six months of the year.
DVD
sales haven't totally dried up, despite widespread piracy and increased
availability of download-on-demand services.
PC World: Movie Piracy May Not Impact DVD Sales After All
DVD
sales have increased for the first half of 2008 over 2007. Admittedly
the growth is small, with DVD sales increasing by 1.1 percent from
$6.8 billion to $6.87 billion.
Tom
Adams, the President of Adams Media Research who performed the analysis
of DVD sales doesn't seem worried about the DVD sales though. He
told Hollywood Reporter, "The fact is, despite what many on
Wall Street seem to think, there is very little digital downloading
going on. We're talking about $118 million in 2007 spending, and
about $254 million this year -- so against a $24 billion packaged
media market it's really not making much of a dent at this point."
MLB.com: New DVD Explores History of 'Ball Talk'
"Ball
Talk: Baseball's Voices of Summer," available now on DVD, features
in-depth interviews with some of the masters of the baseball announcing
craft, including Mel Allen, Red Barber, Jack Brickhouse, Jack Buck,
Curt Gowdy and Ernie Harwell.
"I
got the rights to the film back and thought it was important to
put it out now," said the producer, "especially considering
that five of the six (save Harwell) have unfortunately passed away
in the meantime."
Wired: DVD Piracy Is Up and Boys Are to Blame, Says Research
Group
A study
conducted in the U.K. and the U.S. found that one-third of all respondents
made illegal copies of DVDs over the last six months -- that's up
from a little over 25 percent last year.
Roughly
5,300 people participated in the survey. As you'd expect, the most
likely pirates were boys aged 18 to 24, according to the study.
About
62 percent of the so-called "pirates" in the U.S. said
they copied DVDs that they legitimately owned or purchased.
The
Telegraph [UK]: China launches fake DVD crackdown
The
once familiar cry of peddlers selling pirate DVDs on the streets
of Beijing is disappearing as the government finally acts on pledges
to end the practice – at least until after the Olympics.
The
authorities ordered a "100-day drive against pirate copies",
with officials on call 24 hours to act on reports of illegal CDs
and DVDs going on sale.
"Strike
hard against all kinds of pirate copies violating rights and against
illegal publishing activities," their notice said. "Go
all out to create a healthy cultural market environment for the
Beijing Olympic Games."
In
the most prominent location for street sellers of Hollywood films
- on the main avenue near the old Friendship Store - peddlers who
until last month would approach foreigners with a plastic bag full
of films have been replaced by signs warning that they will not
be tolerated.
New York Times: DVDs That Do All the Work to Back Up Your
Photo and Video Vaults
Hard
drives are fast becoming huge photo and video archives, but not
everyone has the foresight or patience to install a backup system
in case that drive takes a dive. Memorex eliminates the need for
a dedicated backup program with its SimpleSave Photo & Video
Backup DVDs, which include the necessary software right on the recordable
disc.
The
SimpleSave discs work with Windows 2000 and later and require a
computer with a DVD burner.
Once
the disc is inserted, the onboard software starts automatically
and searches the PC for photo and video files. In addition to the
common JPEG, MPEG, QuickTime and Windows Media Video files, the
disc’s program can recognize dozens of other picture and movie
file formats.
Each
DVD stores about 4.4 gigabytes of files and can be used only once.
The backup program lets you know when one disc is full and when
it’s time to insert another.
Minneapolis Star-Tribune: New Films Get DVD Boost
Hollywood
is revisiting some related DVDs to help prop up the new films.
Six
titles were released recently not only with extras related to their
contemporary counterparts, but with certificates good for significant
discounts on tickets to see the new flicks.
It
has been more than six years since "The X-Files" ended
its prime-time run on TV and 10 years since it spawned its only
theatrical outing, "Fight the Future." So creator Chris
Carter and executive producer Frank Spotnitz have selected eight
meaningful episodes from the Emmy-winning TV series to reacquaint
casual fans or initiate new ones.
The
DVD adds a fan-convention Q&A panel that runs 27 minutes and
a trailer for "I Want to Believe." It also includes a
coupon good for $8.50 off a ticket to the new film.
The
four DVDs serving as a prelude to "The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon
Emperor" -- opening in theaters Aug. 1 -- are more typical
cross-promotional efforts.
The
two-disc "deluxe editions" of 1999's "The Mummy"
and 2001's "The Mummy Returns" (Universal, $20 each) add
documentaries on the making of the films, digital copies (for portable
video players) and a look at the new movie -- all three films starring
Brendan Fraser. Many extras from previous editions are carried over,
such as outtakes and commentary tracks.
Studios
hope DVD sales will translate into box-office sales for their new
films.
end
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