[Videolib] MovieDetective. Net

2013-05-24 Thread Karsten, Eileen
Dear CW,

Is anyone familiar with the website moviedetective.net?  One of our faculty 
members is interested in a Michael Powell movie being sold by them.  It is 
Herzog Blaubarts Burghttp://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077672/ (1963).The 
description on their website is:

This is a region-free DVD-R without case or artwork.

In German with English subtitles. This is a VHS transfer.

Peerless British filmmaker Michael Powell found his career in tatters after 
directing the still-controversial crime thriller Peeping Tom (1960). 
Bluebeard's Castle, Powell's first film in four years, constituted an 
cinematization of the 1911 opera Bluebeard's Castle, by Bela Bartok, about the 
nefarious exploits of the 19th century Parisian murderer (here played by Norman 
Foster) who woos his female victims, then dispatches them. Because the British 
industry was, for all intents and purposes, still blacklisting Powell in 1964, 
he had to travel to Germany to make this one. Legal issues kept Bluebeard's 
Castle out of circulation for decades.

Are the materials offered by them legit?

Thank you for any information on this site.

Sincerely,

Eileen Karsten
Head of Technical Services
Donnelley  Lee Library
Lake Forest College
555 N. Sheridan Road
Lake Forest, IL 60045
kars...@mx.lakeforest.edumailto:kars...@lakeforest.edu
847-735-5066

VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.


Re: [Videolib] MovieDetective. Net

2013-05-24 Thread Jessica Rosner
A complete and total seller of illegal bootlegs. Rule of thumb is that when
you can't find a studio title from any standard source but some site is
filled with them it is a bootlegger. Also no major titles are release
region free. It would NOT be legal copy if you bought it so the professor
will just have to wait.


On Fri, May 24, 2013 at 10:50 AM, Karsten, Eileen kars...@mx.lakeforest.edu
 wrote:

  Dear CW,

 ** **

 Is anyone familiar with the website moviedetective.net?  One of our
 faculty members is interested in a Michael Powell movie being sold by
 them.  It is *Herzog Blaubarts Burg http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077672/
 *(1963).The description on their website is:

 ** **

 This is a region-free DVD-R without case or artwork.

 In German with English subtitles. This is a VHS transfer.

 Peerless British filmmaker Michael Powell found his career in tatters
 after directing the still-controversial crime thriller Peeping Tom (1960).
 Bluebeard's Castle, Powell's first film in four years, constituted an
 cinematization of the 1911 opera Bluebeard's Castle, by Bela Bartok, about
 the nefarious exploits of the 19th century Parisian murderer (here played
 by Norman Foster) who woos his female victims, then dispatches them.
 Because the British industry was, for all intents and purposes, still
 blacklisting Powell in 1964, he had to travel to Germany to make this one.
 Legal issues kept Bluebeard's Castle out of circulation for decades.

 ** **

 Are the materials offered by them legit?

 ** **

 Thank you for any information on this site.

 ** **

 Sincerely,

 ** **

 Eileen Karsten

 Head of Technical Services

 Donnelley  Lee Library

 Lake Forest College

 555 N. Sheridan Road 

 Lake Forest, IL 60045

 kars...@mx.lakeforest.edu kars...@lakeforest.edu

 847-735-5066

 ** **

 VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of
 issues relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic
 control, preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in
 libraries and related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as
 an effective working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of
 communication between libraries,educational institutions, and video
 producers and distributors.


VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.


[Videolib] world cat Previews

2013-05-24 Thread nahum laufer
Dear Dorcas  other friends
It's not for me to change the rules  laws, I have to continue to work
distributing I accept the First sale rulings but my position is what about
no sale copies, Previews  even Presents, when there was no first sale.
The advice to make the festivals sign an agreement is not practical, I
subscribe online to forms, pay on-line submission fee and then get an
address where to send the preview, no way to get an agreement most festivals
will just disregard me, I prefer to trust them and be a part of their
festival.
From your mail (also Anthony's) your library and most others respect the
rules, I'm letting the issue go I don't have the energy or will to quarrel
over one copy.
 One Day After Peace was last week at 3 festivals, New-Jersey, Italy 
North Ireland, next month another one in Italy also in Poland  40 university
libraries  have the film 
For me our message of Peace , Salaam, Shalom is more important than one not
polite librarian.

Nahum Laufer
http://onedayafterpeace.com/index.php
http://docsforeducation.com/ 
Sales
Docs for Education
Erez Laufer Films
Holland st 10 
Afulla 18371
Israel



 


--

Message: 2
Date: Thu, 23 May 2013 21:30:32 +
From: Haller, Dorcas W. dhal...@ccri.edu
Subject: Re: [Videolib] more on World Cat
To: videolib@lists.berkeley.edu videolib@lists.berkeley.edu
Message-ID:
5422b4f40bd6d74fa6a68212df338be93c3d2...@kwmbox02.campus.ccri.edu
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

Dear Nahum,

Rhode Island may be a little state but we do have more than one institution
of higher education. Granted, they all have similar names. I work at the
Community College of Rhode Island (CCRI). The University of Rhode Island
(URI) was the library that received the large donation of films from RIIFF
(Rhode Island International Film Festival). While URI may have received your
two films in that donation, I can tell you they do not appear in the
library's catalog, and are probably not available for borrowing or showing
publicly.

You say your slogan is I trust you, trust me, but apparently you don't
really mean it, if you spend time checking up on who has a copy of your
films via WorldCat. Perhaps, like Reagan, your motto is really Trust but
verify?

You ask a good question about the transfer of the PPR. If one library has
bought a film from you, with PPR, and then withdraws that film from its
collection and transfers it to another library -- this could happen in a
library consortium, for example -- do the performance rights transfer, too?
They have been paid for, haven't they? I don't know the answer to this, I'm
just speculating. Perhaps it would be necessary to state in the sales
agreement that the PPR are not transferable?

Furthermore, you say, ... on every private sale invoice is stated for
private personal Home Use.  So selling or donating to a library is a break
of trust Here at CCRI (and, no doubt, other libraries), we have a few
thousand films on DVD and VHS, both feature films and documentaries. We lend
them, including the ones that have been donated,  for private personal Home
Use.  We do not lend them to movie theatres, or to student groups for
parties. If someone wants to borrow one of our films to show to publicly, we
advise them about securing performance rights.  I'm not sure I understand
your belief that libraries are lending out their films for public
performance. 

Surely, if you want to make sure your preview films aren't donated to
libraries (or private persons) after a film festival, all you have to do is
request that the films in question be returned to you after the festival? 

Dusty Haller

Dorcas Haller
Librarian/Professor/Department Chair
Community College of Rhode Island Library
One Hilton Street, Providence, RI 02905
dhal...@ccri.edu
Phone: 401-455-6085 
Fax: 401-455-6087




VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of issues 
relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic control, 
preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in libraries and 
related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as an effective 
working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of communication 
between libraries,educational institutions, and video producers and 
distributors.


Re: [Videolib] world cat Previews

2013-05-24 Thread Jessica Rosner
A practical solution would be to make sure all your screeners are clearly
marked screener and are heavily watermarked with SCREENER throughout the
film. As I mentioned this probably does not afford you legal protection but
it would make the copy unsuitable for a library and would tip the librarian
off that it is not intended for circulation. Also as Dennis mentioned VIMEO
or a similar service would protect you from ever letting them have a copy.

On an unrelated side note I am not a fan of 'pay to submit festivals and I
have never done this.


On Fri, May 24, 2013 at 11:19 AM, nahum laufer lauf...@netvision.net.ilwrote:

 Dear Dorcas  other friends
 It's not for me to change the rules  laws, I have to continue to work
 distributing I accept the First sale rulings but my position is what
 about
 no sale copies, Previews  even Presents, when there was no first sale.
 The advice to make the festivals sign an agreement is not practical, I
 subscribe online to forms, pay on-line submission fee and then get an
 address where to send the preview, no way to get an agreement most
 festivals
 will just disregard me, I prefer to trust them and be a part of their
 festival.
 From your mail (also Anthony's) your library and most others respect the
 rules, I'm letting the issue go I don't have the energy or will to quarrel
 over one copy.
  One Day After Peace was last week at 3 festivals, New-Jersey, Italy 
 North Ireland, next month another one in Italy also in Poland  40
 university
 libraries  have the film
 For me our message of Peace , Salaam, Shalom is more important than one not
 polite librarian.

 Nahum Laufer
 http://onedayafterpeace.com/index.php
 http://docsforeducation.com/
 Sales
 Docs for Education
 Erez Laufer Films
 Holland st 10
 Afulla 18371
 Israel






 --

 Message: 2
 Date: Thu, 23 May 2013 21:30:32 +
 From: Haller, Dorcas W. dhal...@ccri.edu
 Subject: Re: [Videolib] more on World Cat
 To: videolib@lists.berkeley.edu videolib@lists.berkeley.edu
 Message-ID:
 5422b4f40bd6d74fa6a68212df338be93c3d2...@kwmbox02.campus.ccri.edu
 
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii

 Dear Nahum,

 Rhode Island may be a little state but we do have more than one institution
 of higher education. Granted, they all have similar names. I work at the
 Community College of Rhode Island (CCRI). The University of Rhode Island
 (URI) was the library that received the large donation of films from RIIFF
 (Rhode Island International Film Festival). While URI may have received
 your
 two films in that donation, I can tell you they do not appear in the
 library's catalog, and are probably not available for borrowing or showing
 publicly.

 You say your slogan is I trust you, trust me, but apparently you don't
 really mean it, if you spend time checking up on who has a copy of your
 films via WorldCat. Perhaps, like Reagan, your motto is really Trust but
 verify?

 You ask a good question about the transfer of the PPR. If one library has
 bought a film from you, with PPR, and then withdraws that film from its
 collection and transfers it to another library -- this could happen in a
 library consortium, for example -- do the performance rights transfer, too?
 They have been paid for, haven't they? I don't know the answer to this, I'm
 just speculating. Perhaps it would be necessary to state in the sales
 agreement that the PPR are not transferable?

 Furthermore, you say, ... on every private sale invoice is stated for
 private personal Home Use.  So selling or donating to a library is a
 break
 of trust Here at CCRI (and, no doubt, other libraries), we have a few
 thousand films on DVD and VHS, both feature films and documentaries. We
 lend
 them, including the ones that have been donated,  for private personal
 Home
 Use.  We do not lend them to movie theatres, or to student groups for
 parties. If someone wants to borrow one of our films to show to publicly,
 we
 advise them about securing performance rights.  I'm not sure I understand
 your belief that libraries are lending out their films for public
 performance.

 Surely, if you want to make sure your preview films aren't donated to
 libraries (or private persons) after a film festival, all you have to do is
 request that the films in question be returned to you after the festival?

 Dusty Haller

 Dorcas Haller
 Librarian/Professor/Department Chair
 Community College of Rhode Island Library
 One Hilton Street, Providence, RI 02905
 dhal...@ccri.edu
 Phone: 401-455-6085
 Fax: 401-455-6087

 


 VIDEOLIB is intended to encourage the broad and lively discussion of
 issues relating to the selection, evaluation, acquisition,bibliographic
 control, preservation, and use of current and evolving video formats in
 libraries and related institutions. It is hoped that the list will serve as
 an effective working tool for video librarians, as well as a channel of
 communication between libraries,educational institutions, and video