Perkins Cobb wrote:peerpee wrote:Future acquisitions will be geared around Blu-ray releases.
Ominous, given how many of MOC's best releases thus far (i.e., black & white Academy ratio) are not exactly poster children for Blu-ray upgrades. It's hard not to interpret this as pressure for MOC to release a larger ratio of films from the '80s & beyond.
I, too, am distressed to learn that the Mizoguchi and especially the Naruse DVDs undersold and that this may have delayed or cancelled plans to license more. A real shame.
I have real concerns that just when we hit the brightest time ever for high quality films released for the home market, it will all be taken away from us as companies pursue the Blu-ray market and instead of continuing with the tremendous releases of back catalogues items, never available before and never shown on-screen due to the decline of rep cinema, we will get more of the same, and the companies will become very conservative with their releases. To me it is a bit like hi-fi where you can spend enormous amounts of money on minor improvements to the sound-been there done that,-instead of buying loads of records or CDs (sniff) to listen to. So, no Blu-ray for me for a long time yet and I still have my (slight) doubts whether it will really take off. When folk say Blu-ray has won the format war, they mean against HD, not SE. Things could get very, very bad in Europe, especially the UK, and ditto the US, and there is a whole generation out there who do not know what recession really means. New players and replacing pretty damn good DVDs with even better ones, to encourage you to buy bigger and better equipment for viewing it on could be pretty low on people's priority lists when things do get messy. (And those Blu-ray cases are really, really fucking ugly...)
wrt both the Mizoguchis and the Naruse, I don't know that MoC did themselves any favours with the way they were released. For the Mizoguchis, it was a lot of films in a short space of time and for that reason I think the sales may well remain steady and look not too bad in a year's time. Clearly, MoC and BFI know something I don't but I think releasing a relatively unknown, even for members of this forum, director such as Naruse in 3-disc sets would not encourage casual viewers to take a chance, whereas a single release first might have encouraged folk to dip their toes in the water.
MoC distribution seems very poor, in Scotland at least, and since FOPP went belly-up, I have not seen an MoC in the shops, which discourages the casual buyer for any of their releases. That may be as much to do with the now almost complete domination of HMV/Virgin on the high street.
For myself, and perhaps for others in the UK, a reminder to buy MoC releases new, not secondhand, unless there is an enormous price difference, and to go for MoC as opposed to Criterion where they are broadly similar (Vampyr). I am gagging for Phantom but after reading Nick's post I will wait until MoC get round to it. Criterion have a bigger market over there while the exchange rate will be hurting MoC and Europe already offers so many good releases (not too many MoC Mizoguchis sold in France I wager). It is also easy to forget that Nick and co do not run Eureka, they manage the MoC offshoot and we should be very thankful that Eureka let them do so and hope they too do not go belly up. Whatever the future release schedule and regardless of any criticism in my comments above, MoC have released probably as many Mizoguchis and Naruses as were ever available in the VHS days, certainly in the UK and for that alone, my great thanks (and for the 70-80% of other MoC releases which I have). Us old timers certainly appreciate how lucky we are... (I am old enough to remember early sell through videos going for nearly £50 and I still have later ones with the common price sticker of £16 from the early 90's.)
Lord knows how the Ichikawa releases will go though The Key could certainly do a La Notte if marketed correctly... I also think Terayama could do the same but I live more in hope than expectation. (And I would love to see Le Grand Meaulnes released to target the enormous The Magus market, so woefully catered for by that dismal film...)