...and the Redman commentaries! You would think these two supplements would've kept TT viable for many years into the late evening.vidussoni wrote:But those isolated scores!domino harvey wrote:Once Kino Lorber and Olive started cannibalizing TT's releases and selling them for half what TT asked and direct to consumers via regular distro channels, TT's sales surely took a nosedive
Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
- FrauBlucher
- Joined: Tue Jul 16, 2013 12:28 am
- Location: Greenwich Village
Re: Twilight Time
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm
Re: Twilight Time
Excuse you, you mean the film historian Redman commentariesFrauBlucher wrote:...and the Redman commentaries! You would think these two supplements would've kept TT viable for many years into the late evening.vidussoni wrote:But those isolated scores!domino harvey wrote:Once Kino Lorber and Olive started cannibalizing TT's releases and selling them for half what TT asked and direct to consumers via regular distro channels, TT's sales surely took a nosedive
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Noiradelic
- Joined: Sun Jul 19, 2009 4:45 am
Re: Twilight Time
Arrow's expanded and started their U.S arm in the last few years. They wouldn't have done that if sales weren't at least steady. Kino's Studio Classics line only started two-and-a-half years ago and its ascent seems to be directly tied to TT's decline. Based on Kino's release schedule and the expansion of studios/catalogs they license from, presumably their sales were at least solid a year ago.Twilight Time wrote:Sales are cratering across the board for every label
Twilight Time wrote:third party licensees involved in a frenzy for the studios
Brian C wrote:his explanation is a garbled mess... There's so much enthusiasm for content to release that it's driving up licensing fees!
Yeah, if boutique labels are in a financial position to engage in a licensing fee war, then sales must not be bad at all.
Twilight Time wrote:We are entering the final phase of the physical media business with labels toying with more and more limited runs targeting those collectors that are left gamely trying to keep up
Agreed. In the long term, the prospects for physical media may not be rosy. As a label owner who used to work at a studio, he may have some insider perspective on its future.Brian C wrote:There's probably some truth in what he's saying
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm
Re: Twilight Time
If Mister Lime can be believed, Kino Lorber is doing so well that they can afford to outbid literally every other boutique label, including Criterion
- FrauBlucher
- Joined: Tue Jul 16, 2013 12:28 am
- Location: Greenwich Village
Re: Twilight Time
Noiradelic wrote:Yeah, if boutique labels are in a financial position to engage in a licensing fee war, then sales must not be bad at all.
These are two opposing thoughts.Noiradelic wrote:Agreed. In the long term, the prospects for physical media may not be rosy. As a label owner who used to work at a studio, he may have some insider perspective on its future.
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Costa
- Joined: Fri Sep 03, 2010 9:10 pm
Re: Twilight Time
If they improved their encoding a bit, it would be great too.domino harvey wrote:If Mister Lime can be believed, Kino Lorber is doing so well that they can afford to outbid literally every other boutique label, including Criterion
Kino's is always the inferior one, comparing to European labels.
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Noiradelic
- Joined: Sun Jul 19, 2009 4:45 am
Re: Twilight Time
No, the first quote applies to the present. I said "long term" in the second, meaning in five years or more. Redman's the one trafficking in opposing thoughts.FrauBlucher wrote:Noiradelic wrote:Yeah, if boutique labels are in a financial position to engage in a licensing fee war, then sales must not be bad at all.These are two opposing thoughts.Noiradelic wrote:Agreed. Long term, the prospects for physical media may not be rosy. As a label owner who used to work at a studio, he may have some insider perspective on its future.
- tenia
- Ask Me About My Bassoon
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 3:13 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
What's ridiculous in all this of course is that TT's commentary tries to explain their own personal decline through general points about the market... despite having a noticeably unique business model. "Oh, it's the economy !" Or maybe just your business model should have evolved with the market ?
There is a real question though, like Minkin pointed out, about how many independant labels can coexist in a market which isn't growing sales-wise (how much can you spread the butter) but that's really not what TT is talking about here. They're only talking about them as if they were representative of the whole market (which they clearly don't seem to be).
I also love how some people on blu-ray.com's topic say "oh they knew it when they called themselves Twilight Time". Yeah, they just had the timing wrong by roughly 50% and seem to be the first one to decline significantly enough to say it publicly but otherwise yeah, how precise their predictions were.
It's similar to all these articles that have been written for the past 10 years saying “it’s the end for the DVD !” “it’s the end for the physical market !”. And yet, it seems it still have at least 5 years in front of it...
There is a real question though, like Minkin pointed out, about how many independant labels can coexist in a market which isn't growing sales-wise (how much can you spread the butter) but that's really not what TT is talking about here. They're only talking about them as if they were representative of the whole market (which they clearly don't seem to be).
I also love how some people on blu-ray.com's topic say "oh they knew it when they called themselves Twilight Time". Yeah, they just had the timing wrong by roughly 50% and seem to be the first one to decline significantly enough to say it publicly but otherwise yeah, how precise their predictions were.
It's similar to all these articles that have been written for the past 10 years saying “it’s the end for the DVD !” “it’s the end for the physical market !”. And yet, it seems it still have at least 5 years in front of it...
- jedgeco
- Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 3:28 pm
Re: Twilight Time
With the recent releases of the Arrow Woody Allens and Alfredo Garcia, I've now been burned on every TT title I've purchased. And since the Indicator slates have every title that I've ever thought about buying from TT, I would have been burned on all of them too. That's a long way, I guess, of saying that I'm done with TT.FrauBlucher wrote:...and the Redman commentaries! You would think these two supplements would've kept TT viable for many years into the late evening.vidussoni wrote:But those isolated scores!domino harvey wrote:Once Kino Lorber and Olive started cannibalizing TT's releases and selling them for half what TT asked and direct to consumers via regular distro channels, TT's sales surely took a nosedive
- Drucker
- Your Future our Drucker
- Joined: Wed May 18, 2011 1:37 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
Twilight Time, to me, really is the perfect storm of a bad company. I am happy to pay a premium on a film I want to support an independent label (Criterion). I'm happy to take a chance on a film I'm not familiar with (lots of recent Arrow Academy boxes and old MOC releases). I'm even happier, at this point, to do it with more obscure catalog titles that I hadn't heard of that look interesting (Kino, Signal One). I don't mind lack of booklet/extra features (Kino). I sometimes even prefer to not support Amazon and buy from a label directly (Arrow/Criterion). And I'm getting away from the habit of double-dipping because a slightly better edition came along (Criterion 4k MGM titles).
But I'm not thrilled to do all of these things at the same time. Nearly everything I want from TT I can get a better deal and quality edition elsewhere. Unlike many of the posters on this and other forums, I am still a relatively new in my "being into film" and at any point there are dozens of titles I could blind buy. What am I, as a consumer, to do with that extra $30 I have leftover after a given pay period, and why on earth would I spend that on a Twilight Time release and not any other label I just mentioned where I can either get 1) a better edition of the same film or 2) more than 1 film for that price point?
But I'm not thrilled to do all of these things at the same time. Nearly everything I want from TT I can get a better deal and quality edition elsewhere. Unlike many of the posters on this and other forums, I am still a relatively new in my "being into film" and at any point there are dozens of titles I could blind buy. What am I, as a consumer, to do with that extra $30 I have leftover after a given pay period, and why on earth would I spend that on a Twilight Time release and not any other label I just mentioned where I can either get 1) a better edition of the same film or 2) more than 1 film for that price point?
Last edited by Drucker on Fri Mar 03, 2017 4:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- tenia
- Ask Me About My Bassoon
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 3:13 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
What bothers me more though is that, from a pure “US locked” consumer point of view, if TT releases a movie, you’re stuck with that too often. You’re stuck with a crappy limited way to buy it, with an inadequately high price point and too often with a release that isn’t future-proof enough for the price it’s asking.
But TT’s existence is solely due to how the video market is setup. We’re stuck with these because the consumer can’t choose. There’s no competition, nothing. If a label buys the rights and want to put a $50 barebones release with an obsolete master, there’s nothing consumers can do except getting equipped to see what is doing elsewhere which might be better and cheaper.
Very recent example : in France, Wild Side just released on BD Rumble Fish. We were all expecting to get the new 4K restoration but it turned out it’s the old Universal master. But on top of all the existing issues it has, Wild Side additionally pushed the contrast boost, so it’s now even worse. If you’re a regular French consumer, there’s nothing you can do about it. You’re stuck with that. Wild Side could have DNRed to death on top of it, there’s nothing you could do about it.
I’m not stuck with it because I’m region free and English-speaking so I can go to Criterion if I want. But otherwise, there’s no competition and that always bothered me.
Sidonis released Lang’s Man Hunt on BD through a visibly obsolete greenish HD master while a new award-nominated 4K restoration was being prepped up. In France, we’ll never get it and we’re, again, stuck with this state of things.
If there was any competition available on a given market at a consumer level, many many labels would have had to adapt their ways of working, business models and price points a very long time ago. Because there isn’t, some just do what they want. Take it or leave it. That’s what TT has been doing and it allowed them to do so for many years and they’re only now starting to decline. But still, as they said, their longevity certainly isn’t bad despite all the non-consumer oriented factors contained in their business model.
But TT’s existence is solely due to how the video market is setup. We’re stuck with these because the consumer can’t choose. There’s no competition, nothing. If a label buys the rights and want to put a $50 barebones release with an obsolete master, there’s nothing consumers can do except getting equipped to see what is doing elsewhere which might be better and cheaper.
Very recent example : in France, Wild Side just released on BD Rumble Fish. We were all expecting to get the new 4K restoration but it turned out it’s the old Universal master. But on top of all the existing issues it has, Wild Side additionally pushed the contrast boost, so it’s now even worse. If you’re a regular French consumer, there’s nothing you can do about it. You’re stuck with that. Wild Side could have DNRed to death on top of it, there’s nothing you could do about it.
I’m not stuck with it because I’m region free and English-speaking so I can go to Criterion if I want. But otherwise, there’s no competition and that always bothered me.
Sidonis released Lang’s Man Hunt on BD through a visibly obsolete greenish HD master while a new award-nominated 4K restoration was being prepped up. In France, we’ll never get it and we’re, again, stuck with this state of things.
If there was any competition available on a given market at a consumer level, many many labels would have had to adapt their ways of working, business models and price points a very long time ago. Because there isn’t, some just do what they want. Take it or leave it. That’s what TT has been doing and it allowed them to do so for many years and they’re only now starting to decline. But still, as they said, their longevity certainly isn’t bad despite all the non-consumer oriented factors contained in their business model.
- FrauBlucher
- Joined: Tue Jul 16, 2013 12:28 am
- Location: Greenwich Village
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
This is certainly because of luck and not any shrewd business decision. I would bet a paycheck that Redman would've thought he'd be flipping off the light switch as he leaves the room, instead he is the first one out the door.tenia wrote:But still, as they said, their longevity certainly isn’t bad despite all the non-consumer oriented factors contained in their business model.
- tenia
- Ask Me About My Bassoon
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 3:13 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
I don't think it's luck. I think it's the absolute anti-competitive state of the market at the consumer level that allowed even such a relatively poor business model to survive for so long.
- domino harvey
- Dot Com Dom
- Joined: Wed Jan 11, 2006 6:42 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
You can add Twilight Time to the list of labels getting preferential treatment from Blu-ray.com-- I saw some surprisingly critical posts earlier today and was like, "Wow, even the sycophants are calling them out" and then poof, they're gone. Maybe that forum seems like such a soulless, kissass place just because those are the only posts that ever remain undeleted?
- Reverend Drewcifer
- Joined: Sat Mar 09, 2013 9:16 pm
- Location: Cincinnati
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
May I ask from where the Redman hate derives? I think I missed the turn where we decided he's awful. I love a good pile-on like the next guy, but Redman seems to have offended by having a daytime gig I would kill for. Not asking for bullet points, but he's a villain because why?
- fdm
- Joined: Fri Apr 21, 2006 5:25 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
Here's TT's reaction to all this recent activity (taken from moderator's post at blu-ray.com):
(And yup can't post anything else about it over there now. Guess I missed the more venomous posts. Over there...)From Twilight Time:
.....[the] speculation about TT's future based on one out of context post taken from a site -- it would be a full time job to keep correcting all of these misinterpretations, but suffice to say, we are still here and going strong -- this misinformation about going to limited editions of 1,500 started at another site a couple of years ago and never goes away -- but if the readers would only look at the packaging they would know we have never done it -- and have no plans to do so in the foreseeable future. The reality is 2020 *is* being regarded by many companies in the industry as a make or break time, with the across-the-board decline in sales nationwide a factor in determining whether physical media will be viable beyond that point .....
- Ribs
- Joined: Fri Jun 13, 2014 5:14 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
I'm sure most industries set an arbitrary date to suddenly stop being profitable and just call it quits three years from now
- fdm
- Joined: Fri Apr 21, 2006 5:25 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
Not sure where I saw this, but Sony must be feeling that the end is getting near, at least according to this article. But then again it is Sony...
- matrixschmatrix
- Joined: Wed May 26, 2010 3:26 am
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
I don't think anyone deny that home video has gotten far less profitable for the majors, but that was basically the only reason TT's model worked in the first place- there's a lot of room for specialty and boutique labels in an industry that isn't worth a multi billion dollar international corporation's while.
- tenia
- Ask Me About My Bassoon
- Joined: Wed Apr 29, 2009 3:13 pm
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
Which is tremendously ironic as there was a time in the past where TT stopped sending them screeners for reviews because they felt they were being unfairly negative towards them.domino harvey wrote:You can add Twilight Time to the list of labels getting preferential treatment from Blu-ray.com-- I saw some surprisingly critical posts earlier today and was like, "Wow, even the sycophants are calling them out" and then poof, they're gone. Maybe that forum seems like such a soulless, kissass place just because those are the only posts that ever remain undeleted?
Note however that this notably happened with the old-as-crap master used for Heaven & Earth which actually got a much too good PQ grade at blu-ray.com.
- FrauBlucher
- Joined: Tue Jul 16, 2013 12:28 am
- Location: Greenwich Village
Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
I'm sure this is more about new releases than catalogue, especially of older films, which that profitability disappeared a long time ago. So, does that mean that the major labels will start licensing out new releases to boutiques who want to release new films?fdm wrote:Not sure where I saw this, but Sony must be feeling that the end is getting near, at least according to this article. But then again it is Sony...
- MichaelB
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 10:20 pm
- Location: Worthing
- Contact:
Re: Business Models: Twilight Time vs. Other Boutique Labels
Interestingly, after years of being one of the big major studio holdouts in the UK, Sony back catalogue titles are exploding onto the UK market via Criterion UK, Eureka and Indicator.