Jon Delfin wrote
Your geographical bias is showing. Lots of people live nowhere near a
movie theater, and I know a few who refuse to go out to them (but
that's another matter entirely).

On Tue, Jul 6, 2010 at 11:31 AM, David Risner <[email protected]> wrote:

> Because the viewing experience in movie theaters is too expensive,
> uncomfortable and very difficult to get to for those with young kids.
>
> Usually when my wife and I get a chance to see a movie, it is a
> surprise -- the kids fell asleep early or something like that, so
> being able to stream a movie when we get a chance, is great.
>

I live in a relatively rural area. I am not sure how you define "nowhere
near" - we are 40 minutes from the nearest theater, 90 minutes from an IMAX
screen (well, there is a nice, single screen theater in town that shows
first run films (usually a couple of weeks after they premier), but you have
to want to watch that one film (I think they had Mama Mia for two weeks). I
know there are hundreds of thousands of people who live in truly rural or
remote areas that are hundreds of miles from anything that might qualify as
a "town" - but I wonder how many Americans really live more than 60 minutes
from a movie theater?

I also remember what it was like to have several young children in the
house.

But my point  was not to criticize or condescend to people who don't want
to, can't or can't afford going to a movie theater. My point was to ask what
the real value is of accessing films so close to the DVD release date. It
seems to me the only real reason to see a film when it first comes out is to
avoid spoilers. What is the value of seeing a film within 24 hours of it
being released on DVD? I really wanted to see Inglorious Basterds** when it
first came out, but work and family issues kept me out of the theater for
several months. I saw it when it came out on DVD (and loved it) but I don't
recall any pent up urgency to see it the first week it was on DVD - the
first weekend I had spare time after it came out I went and got it and that
was it.

It just seems like the claim to having access to "new" movies the day they
are released to DVD, rather than waiting an additional 28 days, does not add
that much additional value.

OTOH, making more films available online, rather than just on DVD, does seem
like a big added value.

-- 
TV or Not TV .... The Smartest (TV) People!
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