![]() |
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
The guy has a very good point! Cult films are going to be going OOP and their value will only increase. I'll bet his point is one of the most prophetic in this thread. See you in 20 years.
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
I have yet to read the above replies.
My first thought is I do not mind the idea of having all my current media backed up to a harddrive is full quality. I do not like the idea of downloads replaces media, no deals to be had that way, everything would cost full retail most the time or close to it which is a price I will not even pay for a master copy of the film, plus it would limit my ability to play it on different systems with ease, at least at this time. |
Re: Am I The Only One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by dino88
(Post 9977662)
Now show us some pics of your collection!!!!!
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by dkedvd
(Post 9977810)
LOL! I love it! DVD Collectors... The Next Gen Comic Book Geeks! I'll totally be opening my own strip mall store!
Originally Posted by zyzzle
(Post 9977959)
The guy has a very good point! Cult films are going to be going OOP and their value will only increase. I'll bet his point is one of the most prophetic in this thread.
And what if all these movies and more are available for streaming by then, and the next generation, which will make up the majority of the purchasing public for them, doesn't care about owning a physical product (kind of like many under-25's do already)? The value of a bunch of old DVDs will only be high if the content can't be found anywhere else, and will the previously mentioned, yet-to-be-born movie fanatics really care enough to track down an "antique" player to play them on! :lol: Even 20 years from now, a LOT of the stuff in some of these massive collections (including my own) won't fetch anything near what we paid for them simply because they're too common, and by then, too commonly available for streaming. Granted, someone like dkedvd could indeed open his own storefront, but the potential inability to replenish stocks means it wouldn't likely be in business very long. Oh well, I suppose eBay will still be around in 20 years, so there's that. Of renting a table at a flea market. Classy. ;) |
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Some people are going to be in for a really rude and unpleasant surprise when the future arrives and they find out it isn't going to be what they thought it would be.
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by Brian T
(Post 9978305)
And what if all these movies and more are available for streaming by then, and the next generation, which will make up the majority of the purchasing public for them, doesn't care about owning a physical product (kind of like many under-25's do already)?
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by dkedvd
(Post 9976695)
Am I the only one who is worried that our days of collecting are coming to an end?...
Originally Posted by dkedvd
(Post 9976695)
...I bring this up time and time again on here and it seams to just get looked over...
just imho. |
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
I would not want to "log in" to any site to watch anything I owned, downloading would require backups like anything else that one has on their computer, a bit of hard drive space for that, at least for now, just easier to have a disc.
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by Ash Ketchum
(Post 9977666)
I've got thousands of old movies on tape and another thousand or so on DVD. Plus dozens of anime series of varying lengths (average: 26 episodes). Enough to last me the rest of my life...
I've bought new VCRs and DVD players and keep them in storage for when the current ones break and in case they stop selling new ones. I'm prepared. |
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by Jon2
(Post 9978405)
Some people are going to be in for a really rude and unpleasant surprise when the future arrives and they find out it isn't going to be what they thought it would be.
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
My prediction is that.. streaming/downloading is a great way for distributors to get the movies into more homes than before. not just to computers but to Television.. if they discontinue physical media I think it be foolish and probably will not happen for a very long time if that even happens.. which I doubt it. however, they might be more selective and release limited titles to both streaming and physical media and charge more for physical discs.. this might even bring back the Hollywood golden age where they produced soooo many films. low budget b films can go directly to streaming and skip out on physical discs and they will make money (given that streaming is in virtually every home).
technological factors such as big screen LCD/Plasma tvs.. and faster internet connection.. cable companies providing digital TV or something now days (plus Hulu..) it's gradually moving towards that anyway. I really like the idea of streaming.. just turn on TV, select the movie I wanna watch and not have to worry 'bout returning the rented DVD for late fee or hoping the new release will be available for rental. anywayz I just don't want the film companies to come up with some bs like piracy is forcing them to switch over.. etc etc |
Re: Will our collecting come to an end? [merged]
Know it has been bought up somewhere, how much is someone willing to pay for a new release film that is just a download? Fifteen is about as much as I will go on a newer blu-ray of a physical disc of something major, a digital download would just have to be cheaper then they would ever be for to go that way.
|
Re: Will our collecting come to an end? [merged]
If theres to be a future in streaming/downloaded media, we're going to have to come up with a better distribution method first. Our existing bandwidth infrastructure is already being stretched to its limit. I can't imagine a hundred thousand people all trying to download a new HD film on release day.
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by Brian T
(Post 9978305)
But if there's still a demand for all these discs you folks can't part with now, why would you want to part with them then? Or is 20 years the cut-off point for a true, died-in-the-wool "collector" to actually make a transition? ;)
And what if all these movies and more are available for streaming by then, and the next generation, which will make up the majority of the purchasing public for them, doesn't care about owning a physical product (kind of like many under-25's do already)? The value of a bunch of old DVDs will only be high if the content can't be found anywhere else, and will the previously mentioned, yet-to-be-born movie fanatics really care enough to track down an "antique" player to play them on! :lol: Even 20 years from now, a LOT of the stuff in some of these massive collections (including my own) won't fetch anything near what we paid for them simply because they're too common, and by then, too commonly available for streaming. Granted, someone like dkedvd could indeed open his own storefront, but the potential inability to replenish stocks means it wouldn't likely be in business very long. Oh well, I suppose eBay will still be around in 20 years, so there's that. Of renting a table at a flea market. Classy. ;) Maybe I'm wrong but, I find it hard to believe entire catalogs of the studios will be available for instant viewing via on demand/streaming. It would be nice but I don't think so. And what about the zillions of foreign, independent and silent films. Just as there are people still interested in silent films today, there will be people interested in 1960's Hell's Angel biker films far into the future. If they can't stream it they will hunt it down in whatever format they can find. And since those that had a dvd release were underpressed and distributed compared to a big new releases they will be hard to find and those that want it will pay to get it from those who have it. I didn't see entire pallets of Kingdom Of The Spiders in Wal-Mart and Best Buy. Nor an entire wall devoted to rental in Blockbuster. Netflix didn't even get it(the new version). There will always be people who will want it, as long as there are people interested in older movies. As for playability. There will exist some device in our homes to retrieve data from 5" disc through our lifetimes. Even so, those motivated enough to track down obscure movies are the type of people motivated to find a way to retrieve it. |
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by Gobear
(Post 9977496)
This is silly. I own 1500 DVDs/HD-DVDs/ Blu-Rays. They are mine; they belong to me. The streaming media police are not going to confiscate my movies or yours.
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by Brian T
(Post 9977737)
Sony Pictures laid off 450 people in it's home entertainment and info-tech divisions today, almost entirely because of declining DVD sales. We could place bets on which companies will follow suit.
Just more writing on the wall, as if there wasn't enough there already. Once people really stop buying DVDs, companies will have every incentive to move to protected streaming so they can charge per access. If they can't sell you a copy, they want to rent you viewing rights. You owning something for life isn't in their interests. Neither is selling a digital copy that they can't fully control. One of the things reducing piracy now is the desire for many to have an actual physical copy with all the packaging and materials. If all you get is a file, you won't care as much where it comes from. |
Re: Will our collecting come to an end? [merged]
Originally Posted by clckworang
(Post 9923934)
There are obviously still people who care about the quality of the product they purchase. Why do you expect that to change?
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by meshershark
(Post 9978776)
One of the things reducing piracy now is the desire for many to have an actual physical copy with all the packaging and materials. If all you get is a file, you won't care as much where it comes from.
|
Re: Will our collecting come to an end? [merged]
Netflix streaming is the shit, and the only thing that's holding it back is they don't have the majority of their catalog available. Still, I greatly prefer that experience of watching movies, over owning a bunch of dvds. There was a time when I thought having a bunch of dvds was awesome, but I'm well past that now. Like someone else said, I like looking at other people's collections, but I don't want to have one of my own. I have a handful of dvds now, and I'm really contemplating putting them in a cd binder so they will take up even less space.
Bring on the digital! |
Re: Will our collecting come to an end? [merged]
Originally Posted by boredsilly
(Post 9978847)
Netflix streaming is the shit, and the only thing that's holding it back is they don't have the majority of their catalog available. Still, I greatly prefer that experience of watching movies, over owning a bunch of dvds. There was a time when I thought having a bunch of dvds was awesome, but I'm well past that now. Like someone else said, I like looking at other people's collections, but I don't want to have one of my own. I have a handful of dvds now, and I'm really contemplating putting them in a cd binder so they will take up even less space.
Bring on the digital! |
Re: Will our collecting come to an end? [merged]
Space limitations aside , I would think that anyone (especially on this board) that has invested in a good size movie collection has very limited need for streaming.
I have over 900 DVD's and a good portion is from the 30's,40's,50's and especially the 70's. For me streaming would be attractive but just for newer movies and maybe stuff since the beginning of the nineties that I don't have well covered in my collection. I don't even watch TCM any longer because basically they are showing big chunks of my collection every night! Last week a Fios rep told me I could get HBO/Showtime Free for the next 3 months and I turned her down. She was surprised and I told her that I didn't need HBO/Showtime that had a movie collection that would blow those stations away...well at least for my taste. So I guess streaming will be great for the average family who come home from a hard days work and don't have time to stop and look for videos to watch, they can sit on the couch and pick from a menu. |
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by dkedvd
(Post 9978422)
Then the physical media will be for those who enjoy knowing that in however many years when streaming is over with and something else comes along that they will still own what they bought (or in the case of streaming "long term rent") instead of logging onto their account one day only to find out their entire collection is gone because it's a dead format. What a waist of money that will be.
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by Brian T
(Post 9979005)
DVD is a dead format. Some folks just haven't realized it yet. They tend to be the ones who've spent tens of thousands of dollars building "collections" they may not be able to watch in their entirety more than once in a lifetime (depending on how long that lifetime is, of course), and now they're concerned enough about being stuck with a massive white elephant with no residual value to routinely gauge the opinions of others on forums like this one, where at least half of the respondents will probably make them feel better. ;) The rest will be labeled traitors, especially if watching takes precedence over owning! :lol:
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by dkedvd
(Post 9978803)
For the studios to only offer long term renting (streaming) for all their films is just wrong and should not be in any way legal.
|
Re: Am I The On'y One Who Is Worried?
Originally Posted by WallyOPD
(Post 9979072)
Is this serious? It's their content, why should it be illegal for them to control the way they distribute it?
|
| All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:34 PM. |
Copyright © 2026 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Use of this site indicates your consent to the Terms of Use.