Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Thanas »

Kanastrous wrote:You're wrong because (a) news of plans for an expanded and re-released cut was circulated before the DVD became available. In other words, anyone who preferred to put off their DVD purchase until they could choose between the original and expanded cuts had the opportunity to do so, and (b) you make it sound as though the studio is attempting to lay some kind of obligation upon people, to buy the new cut. Which is bullshit. You're interested, and you want a copy? Fine, buy it. You're not interested, and you don't? Fine, don't buy it. There's just no grounds at all for moral outrage (or any other kind) because no one is pulling any kind of fast one, no one deceived you, and no one is trying to corral you into anything that you don't feel like doing.

You don't feel that nine extra minutes are worth the price of admission? That's totally fine. Don't buy a ticket. See how easy that is? If someone else decides that they *are* interested, well, they can buy their ticket without having the slightest impact upon you, at all. So how are *you* harmed, or even affected? How is anyone who decides they're not interested going to be affected? It will be just one more film they choose not to see, along with all of the other films they choose not to go and see.

Now, if there was some kind of effort - or even some kind of method - try try and pressure or force people to see a re-release, then that would be dickish, all right. But simply putting something in theaters for people to view or not-view completely and totally at their discretion without any threat or pressure at all is not 'dickish,' at all. Not one bit.
So why the heck have you been railing against people who have been bitching about this practice? If they do not like it and you are of the opinion that people have freedom to voice their opinion about it, why all this from you?

And yes, it is a dickish move. That you find it absolutely okay for a movie studio to do what they want as long as it makes them money shows how much of a company shill you really are. Why don't you just do what you promised several posts ago and answer Bakustra's (very valid) points?

Or how about you post the statements about the board and piracy you apparently know about?
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Phantasee »

I think y'all are a little emotional about a total non-issue. I haven't even seen the movie, nevermind reas any threads here about it, and I knew there was a rerelease coming. My sister and her friends aren't going since they already saw it. I might go, since I didn't. Shit, I remember I saw a film in 1996 that was released three times in theatre, and was made in 1993 or something.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Kanastrous »

Thanas wrote:
So why the heck have you been railing against people who have been bitching about this practice?
Because their perception of the practice, and their basis for bitching, are wrong. This was not some kind of pre-planned conspiracy to leave people holding obsolete product, so complaints along those lines are bullshit. There is no pressure exerted upon anyone to see or not-see the re-release, so complaints regarding the re-release are invalid because anyone who's not interested in seeing it are free to pass on going, just as they are free to pass on going all of the other films they don't want to see, which for some reason they're not bitching about. And the purpose of a studio business is to legitimately earn money, so complaints that a studio is somehow doing anything wrong, at all, by re-editing and re-releasing their property to theaters, using their private resources to do it and violating no law or moral principle to do it are likewise without any merit, at all.
Thanas wrote:If they do not like it and you are of the opinion that people have freedom to voice their opinion about it, why all this from you?
Because like any opinion offered on this board at all, what people have to say is fair game for anyone to respond. The right (well, privilege, really) to express an opinion does not equal the right for your opinion to go unchallenged. The right to stay away and not see a movie <> the right to blow chunks of stupid untrue BS all over the topic and expect it to go un-challenged.
Thanas wrote:And yes, it is a dickish move. That you find it absolutely okay for a movie studio to do what they want as long as it makes them money
Slow down there, cowpoke. I *never* said that they can do whatever they want. I said that it's okay for a studio to re-release a property that they own, in total compliance with the law if they figure they can earn some more $$$ in the process. Unless you feel that earning $$$ on a property that you own, to which you enjoy full legal rights, taking not one penny from any person who doesn't care to pay, is morally wrong - which is certainly what you appear to feel. If you feel that putting a film back in theaters, so people who want to see it again can, and people who don't want to see it don't have to is a bad act, you should expand on it. Because calling someone 'dickish' simply because they hold a valuable property and decide to earn some more $$$ off it, without taking anything away from anyone, without inflicting harm on anyone just looks like you hate them for legally and legitimately making some money in a way that harms no one.
Thanas wrote:shows how much of a company shill you really are.
*shrug* I know the industry in which I have worked for 20 some years better than you do, and probably better than most of our SDNet friends. If what I know based on that experience appears shillish to you, well, too bad. Sometimes the facts do align in favor of the large company, and in this case those facts are that no one was dealt with dishonestly in any way at any stage of this film's release, video distribution, or theatrical re-release.
Thanas wrote:Why don't you just do what you promised several posts ago and answer Bakustra's (very valid) points?
Because being to a degree valid, they're going to require more time and thought in response than your nonsense does.
Thanas wrote:Or how about you post the statements about the board and piracy you apparently know about?
I'll track down the year-or-two-old pertinent thread when I get around to it. Probably this evening, along with Bakustra's response.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Molyneux »

I am very glad that I thought to read the entirety of the thread before commenting...at first glance I thought this was talking about the other Avatar movie, which I doubt I will bother to see at all.

Re-releasing movies with multiple bits of bonus is a somewhat silly tactic, but I can't deny being interested in the extras. Haven't bought the original version yet, don't own and don't intend to own a Blu-Ray player, but I might see if it's playing anywhere near me. The original film was interesting enough to enjoy on second viewing, even if it wasn't anything special in the writing department.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by MKSheppard »

But the first statement is an inadequate representation of what appears to be a prevalent attitude here: anti-piracy measures aren't just laughable, they're morally wrong since people have the right to take whatever content they please, wherever they can find it.
I'd like to point out something.

Right now, the popular thing in Blu Ray releases is to bundle them with "DIGITAL COPIES" as a measure to entice people to buy them at prices of $26-29 and to fight piracy.

My copy of the Star Trek (2009) Blu Ray came with one of these "copies".

But they show how brain dead Hollywood is in regards to technology.

There are two copies typically on these things.

1.) The Apple version. To play this you need to install iTunes.

2.) The Windows Media Version.

But here's where it gets fun.

There's a code that comes on a slip inside the Blu-Ray Case. If you lose that code; so sad, too bad, you can't watch the movie on your laptop or whatever.

Even more fun, on my slip it says: "The enclosed code that permits authorization may not be valid after 11/17/2010."

Additionally, if you installed the Windows Media Version; guess what? You only get ONE INSTALL. That's it.

If your laptop goes kaplut, wiping out the WMV file on your hard drive, you can't reinstall.

The only way you have multiple reinstalls is with the iTunes version.

And even then the iTunes version isn't that great. For one...NO SUBTITLES. COME THE FUCK ON. (see my signature for why I get annoyed at this).

Instead of putting up with trying to figure out this; I could just have torrented a DVD rip of Star Trek (2009), and then had a digitally clean version of the movie that I could recompress to whatever portable media I wanted (Laptop, Phone, etc) without having to fuck with whatever damned hoops the Studio wants me to leap through.

Plus as a bonus; subtitles are available for the most "popular" DVDRips it seems.

This is a result of our fucked up copyright system. Thanks to the Mickey Mouse Protection act, works are copyrighted out to 70 years after the death of the author; and for coporate created stuff; it extends out to 120 years after creation or 95 years after publication.

Meanwhile, if I suddenly discovered the secret of cheap fusion power and also a cheap faster than light drive; I would only be able to patent it for 20 years. I could try to get the US Patent office to grant me an extension; but those seem to be only good for a few years.

So within 25 years at the most; nobody has to pay me royalties or come to me to learn how to make cheap fusion power or FTL drives...while if I instead spent my time creating something trivially useless like a popular new science fiction universe; I'd be able to have control of it for my entire lifetime plus 70 years for my heirs.

If I incorporated to publish my SF universe; I could then extend it to a cool 120 years.

This of course is incredibly fucked up and shows our sense of priorities.

Mike said it best in my signature file; which is below this line.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Stark »

So just rip your Blu Ray and burn the subtitles (or use MKV). I own a shitload of DVDs; do you think I put a fucking plastic disk in a stupid tray when I want to watch them?

I think things like the 'digital copies' are intentionally useless, because media companies are stupid.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by MKSheppard »

Stark wrote:So just rip your Blu Ray and burn the subtitles (or use MKV).
I only have a blu ray consumer player; I don't have a blu ray optical drive for my computer. Though I'll probably have one for my next build since they'll probably be cheap by then.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Stark »

BR ripping seems kind of flakey right now anyway, by then it should be a one-click deal like DVD. BR gives way better performance with compression like h.264 too; at 1.5gibbies I can't tell the difference without pausing.

Ironically that would fit on a DVD disk. Poor DVDs and poor MPEG2. :)
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Molyneux »

Stark wrote:So just rip your Blu Ray and burn the subtitles (or use MKV). I own a shitload of DVDs; do you think I put a fucking plastic disk in a stupid tray when I want to watch them?

I think things like the 'digital copies' are intentionally useless, because media companies are stupid.
I believe that that is technically illegal in the US - or are Blu-ray discs covered under the same umbrella as DVDs?
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Alyeska »

Uraniun235 wrote:
Alyeska wrote:Fucking greedy studios. I ain't buying the movie on Blu-Ray again. You can kiss my ass. I will download the special edition.
This is kind of a funny reversal from the guy who banned discussion of the 2009 Star Trek film before the official release because you didn't want to "encourage piracy". Image
Downloading something you already own is not piracy. I have spent Forty Fucking Dollars on Avatar already. Two theater showings and the Blu-Ray (I don't even HAVE a BR player). I don't give a flying fuck what the law says. Morally I am covered. I paid my fucking dues and I want fair value in return. This isn't even nickle and dimming. Its outright tricking people to buy the fucking movie a 2nd time when they already own it. I do not download movies to avoid paying for them. I don't pirate video games because I can't afford them. I don't download TV shows to avoid cable. I pay for what I consume. But when a company tries to fuck with me after I've already paid them, I stop playing by the rules. I already paid my value into them and I am not costing them a cent.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Alyeska »

Molyneux wrote:
Stark wrote:So just rip your Blu Ray and burn the subtitles (or use MKV). I own a shitload of DVDs; do you think I put a fucking plastic disk in a stupid tray when I want to watch them?

I think things like the 'digital copies' are intentionally useless, because media companies are stupid.
I believe that that is technically illegal in the US - or are Blu-ray discs covered under the same umbrella as DVDs?
Only very recently has ripping DVDs become legal. BR ripping also became legal with the same court ruling. The courts decided that breaking encryption for the purpose of fair use backups cannot in itself be a DMCA violation. Intent is what defines copyright violation. Users who already have a purchased copy of the product and merely want to format shift the product have no intent to pirate. Ergo, no DMCA violation.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Stark »

Molyneux wrote:I believe that that is technically illegal in the US - or are Blu-ray discs covered under the same umbrella as DVDs?
Is there some special law for BRs, or is it just the usual 'wah don't break our encryption'?
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Alyeska »

I want to make something very clear to you Kanastrous. I didn't steal your precious movie that you worked on. I watched it in the threaters twice. Once in 2d, once in 3d (god 3d sucks ass). I then purchased it on Blu-Ray. So don't get all bent out of shape acting like I am threatening your existence. I have paid for the movie three times and spent $40 on it. I am considering a Copyright Violation, but I damned well didn't steal it.

Copyright Violation DOES NOT equal theft. You already have my money. I simply have no desire to give it to you again because some company pulled a dick move. Just because it is their legal right does not make it morally right.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Eldy »

Alyeska wrote:This isn't even nickle and dimming. Its outright tricking people to buy the fucking movie a 2nd time when they already own it.
How the hell is it trickery to release two versions of a movie when it was clear before ANY home video release that there would be multiple versions? I could understand the complaint that by staggering the releases Fox is trying to double-dip, but they've been honest about things.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Alyeska »

Theo Nering wrote:
Alyeska wrote:This isn't even nickle and dimming. Its outright tricking people to buy the fucking movie a 2nd time when they already own it.
How the hell is it trickery to release two versions of a movie when it was clear before ANY home video release that there would be multiple versions? I could understand the complaint that by staggering the releases Fox is trying to double-dip, but they've been honest about things.
I saw none of that. I shouldn't have to do online research to buy a damned movie.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Gil Hamilton »

All arguments aside, Kanastrous has convinced me not to purchase a ticket. I see where he's coming from, I don't have a problem with his arguments. However, the revelation that I'd be buying 9 minutes of new content distributed in a way where I probably wouldn't even be able to tell where exactly I was seeing new material for the cost of taking myself and my fiance to the movies? Hah, no way.

That's what I think is bugging people here, Kanastrous. It takes alot of balls to call 9 minutes of footage that was left on the cutting room floor being stuck back in a movie "An Expanded Version". Doesn't sound like its "expanding" anything, from your description. While slight edits can dramatically effect the tone of a scene (witness "Troy" or "Kingdom of Heaven", where the Director's Cut is a radically different animal), that doesn't sound like what happened here. What's NEW that they are adding? They should probably advertise that, because calling it an "expanded" edition implies you are getting something new added that dramatically affects the viewing of the movie. If they are just putting back bits of scenes and scenes that were cut for the sake of time, they can't possibly actually be adding anything important back in. The title is dishonest, it implies that the viewer is getting something that they won't.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Sinewmire »

It seems to me that they are probably targetting people who haven't bought the film yet more than those who have. Having a new expanded edition might be enough to put a person who was on the edge of maybe buy, maybe not over to 'oh what the hell, I'll buy'. If anyone who already has it decides to buy again, cool bonus, but I doubt that's the main target of this.
I'd imagine they're trying to appeal to the hardcore fans, making them pay for the same DVD twice. I'd imagine anyone reluctant to buy the original DVD wouldn't be tempted by a new full-price extra edition, but would rather wait until they see it in a bargain bin. It worked on me with Lord of the Rings and the Liber Chaotica GW books, but I don't grudge New Line, though GW can rot it hell.*


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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Werrf »

Okay, this kinda jumped out at me...
Alyeska wrote:I have spent Forty Fucking Dollars on Avatar already. Two theater showings and the Blu-Ray (I don't even HAVE a BR player).
How, precisely, is this the studio's fault? You deliberately chose to buy a copy of a film that you couldn't play, and (presumably) knew you couldn't play, and that's the studio's fault for being greedy?

That aside, honestly, what the hell is all the fuss about? I'd love to see a lot of films re-released in the cinema (all the Star Wars films, LOTR films, and Iron Man come to mind), with new footage or not. We're always hearing that these films are best seen on the big screen, great...damn well put them on the big screen, and I'll watch them. If you need to justify it by sticking in some extra footage, sure, why not.

Once again, nobody is being forced to see the film. Nobody is being forced to buy it. Special editions and staggered releases are de rigeur these days, expecting otherwise is frankly naive. If you think that nine minutes of extra footage isn't enough to justify buying a new copy of the DVD, go out and rent it instead. Or rent it on Netflix. Or sell your existing copy on Ebay to cover the difference. And if there's an audience for a re-release, great! Re-release it. I never saw it the first time around, due to kids, work and timing, so perhaps I'd get to see it this time.

In all honesty, once again...what's the problem?
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by MKSheppard »

Gil Hamilton wrote:It takes alot of balls to call 9 minutes of footage that was left on the cutting room floor being stuck back in a movie "An Expanded Version".
I think Gil has nailed it here. Nine minutes is basically...not much of a bulletpoint.

If they had discovered 20-30 minutes that were cut; then yeah, it would begin to approach the crossover point for people who had already bought it to get this new copy in a couple years.

For example, look at the LOTR Extended Editions; there's a significant amount of "Added content" between the cinema editions and EEs:

LOTR: 30 extra minutes
TTT: 44 extra minutes
ROTK: 50 extra minutes

But for Avatar: EE with it's 9 extra minutes? It only really appeals to those who never saw the movie in theaters or own it on home video.

It'll make a profit, if only because it's building on sunk costs -- the marketing has been done for the movie; everyone knows about Shroomatar, etc. But it won't do as well as the marketing flacks think it will.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Eldy »

Alyeska wrote:I saw none of that. I shouldn't have to do online research to buy a damned movie.
What exactly do you want them to do? They released the news to major entertainment news sources where it was picked up and spread around by forums and the blogosphere. Do you want them to put up signs in front of movie stores saying "Surprise! There's a Director's Cut coming out!"? Do you want them to put a sticker announcing the fact that there are multiple versions of the film on every unit they sell? I'm not trying to be sarcastic: how much of a responsibility do you think studios have to spoon feed information to people before the responsibility of the consumer to stay informed kicks in?
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Alyeska »

Theo Nering wrote:
Alyeska wrote:I saw none of that. I shouldn't have to do online research to buy a damned movie.
What exactly do you want them to do? They released the news to major entertainment news sources where it was picked up and spread around by forums and the blogosphere. Do you want them to put up signs in front of movie stores saying "Surprise! There's a Director's Cut coming out!"? Do you want them to put a sticker announcing the fact that there are multiple versions of the film on every unit they sell? I'm not trying to be sarcastic: how much of a responsibility do you think studios have to spoon feed information to people before the responsibility of the consumer to stay informed kicks in?
How about RELEASING IT AT THE SAME TIME.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Alyeska »

Expanding on what Gil and Shep have pointed out.

I paid $20 for the Blu-Ray copy of Avatar. It is 162 minutes in length. That is 12.3 cents per minute.

The new release is the "Special Edition". Lets call it $25 for the Blu-Ray.

I already own the original. So for those additional 9 minutes I am paying 2.7 dollars per minute. That is a nearly Twenty Two times increase in price value for minutes. Because I already own the original 162 minutes.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by JLTucker »

MKSheppard wrote:
Stark wrote:So just rip your Blu Ray and burn the subtitles (or use MKV).
I only have a blu ray consumer player; I don't have a blu ray optical drive for my computer. Though I'll probably have one for my next build since they'll probably be cheap by then.
There aren't any awesome drives out as far as I know. I've tried two (one was a burner) and both were unable to play all the Blu-Rays I bought and there weren't any new firmware updates available when I purchased the drives. I've also looked over NewEgg for drives and I keep seeing comments saying that not all Blu-Ray discs work.
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Kanastrous »

Bakustra wrote:
Most people feel that films, and, indeed, most entertainment are motivated by artistic purposes, or at least should be.
I'm sure that 'most people' are free to view the purpose and nature of films however they choose. So what? What relevance does that feeling have to a studio's right to do as they please with the works that they financed, created, and own?
Bakustra wrote:So rereleasing a film with minor additions in a brief period of time after its initial becomes seen as a betrayal of trust and naked money-grabbing.
Well, in order for it to be a betrayal of trust we need to define exactly what 'most people' were trusting the studio to do. I'm going to guess that maybe you mean that the audience is trusting that any re-release of a given film will be different in a particular degree from the initial release version. Well, in this case Fox is advertising not only how much the change represents in terms of run time (about nine minutes) but also the outline of the additional content (more battle footage, more on Na'vi...uh, naughtyness, more back story regarding Grace etc) and putting up a new trailer displaying some of the new material.

So where is the 'betrayal of trust?' You're being told pretty much exactly what to expect, so you have pretty much all of the information that you need in order to make an informed decision as to whether or not you wish to see the re-release.

Or maybe the 'trust' is that the initial release cut would be the only cut of the film, for ever and ever, amen. Since revised edits of films are released constantly to video, and since revised edits have been re-released in the past, there's no reason for anyone to expect that the 2009 cut was the final version and therefore no violation of trust since no one ever said that it would be, anyway.

As for 'money-grabbing' - if you feel like buying a ticket, buy one. If you don't, don't. No one is 'grabbing' your money; they are offering you a chance to spend it on a product which they hope will attract your interest. If you choose not to, there's no penalty, no pressure, no reproach, no imaginable consequences of any kind at all in your life.

Or maybe you feel that a business holding a property with the potential to earn them further $$$ in addition to its first run should just sit on it and pass up the opportunity out of some sense of...I don't know. Asceticism? A distaste for filthy lucre? A feeling that it's nobler to ignore an entirely legitimate business opportunity, in order to...what? Feel good about themselves because people who pass up opportunities to earn money by entirely legal and righteous means are somehow 'better' than people who don't? What about the company's obligations to its shareholders (yes, I know that around here we don't care about shareholders but alas people actually responsible for managing companies don't generally get to think that way)? I don't know about your personal views on business but do you really think corporate decision-makers blow off opportunities for profit when there is no harm of any kind being done to anyone at all, by pursuing the opportunity? Why should they? To satisfy the self-righteousness of people outside their industry who don't even have any kind of stake in the matter, one way or the other?
Bakustra wrote:If the nine minutes is valuable to the film, it should have been on the original DVD/Bluray.
Since we managed to arrive at an acceptable release cut without it, the new material is clearly not critical to the narrative. It does add some extra dimension, though, but the salient point is that the video release - which was contractually scheduled - came too early for full rendering of all of the new material being included. Pushing back the release date was not an option because of the contractual obligations on the participants' parts.

And in any case, no one was defrauded, ripped off, deceived or in any way at all badly done to: anyone purchasing a DVD or bluRay got precisely what they were told to expect: a digital media copy of the film in the same editorial configuration they saw it in the theater. Since it was publicized before the DVD release that there would be a theatrical re-release of a new cut, anyone who bought the initial-cut DVD had every right and opportunity to wait and see what the new cut would turn out to be.

And to anyone in that position: you liked the initial cut well enough to purchase a copy. Do you suddenly not like it anymore, simply because there is a different cut coming out? You haven't even seen the new cut. What makes you sure that you won't prefer the cut you own, that you liked well enough to purchase in the first place?
Bakustra wrote:If it isn't, then it's pure paff that shouldn't be trumpeted as anything more than generic deleted scenes.
'Generic' scenes? They're not 'generic;' they're part of a specific work and fit in specific ways into that work. There's a middle ground between scenes that contribute absolutely nothing to a work, and scenes whose removal would cripple it, and that's where this material falls. There was a lot of pressure regarding the film's running time, which exhibitors thought was over-long even as it was released; this is to a degree the re-insertion of material that had to be sacrificed as part of the release process. Now that the film has done as well as it has, its director has the clout to put that material back in. Because as writer and director it's an opportunity to put it back up on the big screen in a form closer to what he had originally hoped for. There's no reason that a director should be guaranteed that opportunity, but there is zero reason he should reject it, should it present.
Bakustra wrote:Imagine, say, if the Beatles had released Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band without the hidden track after A Day in the Life... and seven months later released the historical album, at the same price. Alternatively, imagine that they cut out Good Morning Good Morning instead, for a "valuable to the film" analogy. In both cases, the albums would both have sold well, but now imagine that every band started doing this. Suddenly, the advantage disappears as people start waiting for inevitable rereleases or refuse to buy the slightly-changed rereleases, excepting obsessive music nerds.
I'm agnostic as to whether or not Fox will do well with the re-release (although I expect they'll probably do okay). But what I'm objecting to is not the validity of re-releasing a film as a business model; I'm objecting the what smells like this sense of outraged pissed-off done-wrong entitlement and moral outrage over a studio's decision to see if they can extract some additional revenue from a property that they own, and which they are re-releasing at their own expense without harming anyone at all. In part so that its writer and director can present the audience (which was in the main quite enthusiastic about the film to begin with) with an expanded version which hopefully they may enjoy a bit more. If they voluntarily and under no pressure at all choose to view it. It's as though there's a perception that there is an actual social or economic benefit to avoiding the re-release of a film whose ticket sales will if nothing else kick some useful $$$ back into the tax base.
Bakustra wrote:The same thing happened to Disney with their horde of DTV sequels to older movies. They started selling less and less as time went on and people noticed that they sucked. As a result, they have been barred from rerelease for a long time, and Disney's animation departments are in serious trouble.
I'm not entirely following you here. A full theatrical release of an expanded version of the same feature <> cheap 'n' cheerful straight-to-video low production value sequel to an entirely separate work. How does a raft of cheapass videos undermining the Disney animation brand relate to a singular theatrical release of an expanded feature film? If your point is that Disney trying to make some extra $$$ off a property=Fox trying to make some extra $$$ off a property, you have to go a bit further and actually compare the format, qualities, and numbers of the follow-up products. Avatar with a few extra minutes' content <> Jafaar Spends an Afternoon at the Whorehouse or whatever lame video follow-ups to theatrical pictures you have in mind.
Bakustra wrote:While companies do have the right to overexpose brands and run them into the ground, customers also have the right to bitch about the film industry adopting one of the more noxious practices of the comic-book industry.
Customers have a great deal more power than that. They have the power to stay home and not buy tickets. And the 'right' to bitch is predicated upon actually understanding what's going on. People who bitch about nefarious plans to screw them by pre-planning a re-release and 'tricking' them into buying copies of the original cut when there's a 'better' cut coming do not understand that no one talks re-release until seeing how the first release pans out; in November/December 2009 there was actually some degree of pessimism regarding Avatar and people were mostly hoping that it would just earn out, forget about huge sales and records broken and fanpersons in blue body paint and all the rest. People who bitch that the initial DVD release should have included the 'restored' material do not understand that much of it was not rendered in time for the DVD release, and that legal obligations between Lightstorm, Fox, and their distribution arms were damned inflexible, meaning that holding the release was not an option. And in any case the director would certainly prefer that new material be seen as part of a theatrical viewing, just as the film was primarily intended for theatrical viewing to begin with, which is his prerogative. People who bitch that 'the studio just wants to make money -' well, fucking duh. Any business making their money via legal means and legitimate products without harming anyone at all is a good business. Particularly when that business is offering a product without which anyone who disapproves can live in perfect safety and comfort and can easily avoid if they so choose.
Bakustra wrote:Companies should also maybe listen to customers if they value them... but I suppose that you're assured that the people who complain are the only ones who disagree with this practice.
Fox listened to the long-lasting buzz surrounding Avatar and that buzz suggested to them that the audience would be receptive to the re-release. Considering the degree of test-marketing, test-viewings, re-edits, fine-tunings etc that studios pursue in the hope of nailing a given audience's tastes, I find it kind of peculiar that you think studios are disinterested in what their customers have to say. Will studios take their marching orders from consumers? Fuck, no. But they are certainly interested in trying to figure out what said customers want to pay their $$$, to see. Which makes it strange how widely studios seem to persist in missing the mark, but thankfully audience research is not my department.

The people who dislike the practice, whether they complain or not have every right to not-see whatever it is that they prefer not to see. Hopefully there will be something out there that they would like to see. If not, there's always books, chess, and maybe going outside and getting some nice fresh air and exercise.
Bakustra wrote:If you feel that films are made for profit
I don't feel that commercial films are made for-profit; it's a stone fact. Even people making small independent 'art' films may hope that their film will get at least limited distribution in order to just earn back the considerable expense of making them, profit welcome should it actually happen. As for folks making films without an interest in commercial distribution, or even earning back their investment, good for them. That's as legitimate field of film making as any and serves as an invaluable incubator for talent and exploration of novel concepts and techniques.
Bakustra wrote:and not for storytelling or other artistic purposes,
Why should there be a binary solution set? If you wish to make a film in certain genres to a certain degree of finish and make some money while you're at it, that doesn't mean that you have ditched any interest in telling a story or pursuing an artistic goal. That's the tension on virtually every project I've done: the director wants Shakespeare, the Cinematographer wants Ansel Adams, the Production Designer wants Rembrandt, and the producers organizing and financing the project want Mister Monopoly Moneybags. Since they all need one another to get anything done, the final product will be whatever emerges from that tug-of war. Remember that saying about seeing how sausages are made? Yeah,just like that. The dichotomy between we want to make money and we want to make something of artistic merit is entirely false. Do you really think any given producer doesn't want both the big box-office money and the little golden statue?
Bakustra wrote:I must question why you ask questions about the layout of ships for the films you're involved in. If the purpose is to make money, why pay that much attention to detail? After all, the audience that doesn't notice is larger than the one which does.
In the specific case of the ship's layout it's in part because I'm personally a freak for technical accuracy wherever possible and in part because members of the ship's crew begged me to 'make the ship look real for a change' and having promised that I would do whatever I could, I'm not going to back off. People in my department frequently get into fights over that sort of thing. Which raises another issue: the professional team that creates a film or tv show is extremely diverse in terms of skills, personality, and philosophy. I've seen creative differences lead to actual fistfights (of course the subtext was about power but that argument itself is over creative differences).

But anyway the question again reflects the false dichotomy suggesting that it has to be about money, or about storytelling, one to the exclusion of the other.
Bakustra wrote:Ha ha! It's funny because you don't care about what your customers think!
Depends upon what you mean. Do I broadly, considering the total of available moviegoers or tv-watchers, care what they think? Sure I do. Do I care what any specific given person on this board thinks? It depends upon whether or not what they think is underwritten by anything worthwhile in terms of an informed argument (so far...no, not really). I'm not here as some kind of studio rep laying down the company's line; this is what I happen to think myself based upon my experience in the industry. So really you're talking about the various studios' customers, not mine in any personal sense.
Bakustra wrote:The reason that I object is not "fuck you, imma communist sir", but rather more along the lines of an intervention on a friend doing something stupid. Shortsighted attempts to increase revenue along these lines tend to peter out or even backfire, and since I love film as a medium, I do not like that prospect.
How do you anticipate the Avatar re-release backfiring? This is not the first time a film has had a second theatrical release, and it's not the first time a film has been theatrically released in a new cut. Since examples of re-releases and re-edits damaging studios by virtue of being re-releases or re-edits would provide really good support to your argument, I'd like to see them.

I guess the re-release could backfire in terms of widespread disinterest and no one coming to theaters. But that's no worse that any other film failing to perform up to expectations, and that's something the studios have clearly incorporated into their business model with relatively little discomfort.
Bakustra wrote:Yes, let's not complain about company practices. We should be grateful to corporations for deigning to give us this rerelease, and never be convinced that it's a bad idea and somewhat abusive of its customers in any way.
No one suggested that you ought to be grateful. I'm suggesting that the outrage is misplaced and foolish. No one 'deigned' to give you anything; the studio is putting the product out there in the hopes that you will deign to give them some of your hard-earned $$$, to watch it. And you haven't actually shown how it is in any way a bad idea for the studio to do it (save that it annoys some people who by their own account are going to exercise their freedom to avoid the product; since it's tough to imagine anything easier than not-going-to-a-movie it's unclear how these people find themselves to have been harmed, or even what rational cause they have to take offense). Likewise you have not explained how it is in any way abusive for a studio to offer audiences a revised theatrical re-release, considering that (a) the re-release was publicized long ago and no one was deceived regarding plans for its release, (b) the contents of the re-release have been described sufficiently well that any person may make in informed choice as to whether or not the re-cut interests them and (c) we all, every last one of us, have full freedom to decline purchasing a ticket.
Bakustra wrote:Do you have any experience with customer service or interaction at all?
I've worked a few retail jobs, in which the only enjoyable, non-soul-deadening part was interacting with customers. I have not worked specifically in customer service a la 1-800-type call-center help-type stuff.
I find myself endlessly fascinated by your career - Stark, in a fit of Nerd-Validation, November 3, 2011
Kanastrous
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Re: Avatar Expanded Edition in Theaters, August

Post by Kanastrous »

Alyeska wrote:I want to make something very clear to you Kanastrous. I didn't steal your precious movie that you worked on.
It's hardly 'my movie.' It's Jim Cameron's movie. And 20th Century Fox's. As you observed, I just worked on it.
Alyeska wrote:I watched it in the threaters twice. Once in 2d, once in 3d (god 3d sucks ass).
Okay, you paid for your tickets and each time you got the value out of your tickets by sitting in the theater and watching the movie. You don't think that buying two tickets for two screenings entitles you to anything more or less than those two screenings, do you?

Sorry to hear the 3D didn't work for you. Weirdly enough it worked very well for me despite previous 3D movies being just awful for me, to watch.
Alyeska wrote:I then purchased it on Blu-Ray.
Which entitles you to have and own your copy on the bluRay (and actually I agree with you that acquiring an additional copy of something that you already legitimately own on commercial media is fair and should not be problematic).
Alyeska wrote:So don't get all bent out of shape acting like I am threatening your existence.
I'm bent out of shape about your avowed intention to steal yourself access to the new release of the film, which is not merely a backup copy of media that you already own. Doubtless you will argue that the additional nine minutes' content is insufficient to qualify it as a 'different' film. Well, if it wasn't different, you wouldn't be interested in acquiring it, would you? You already have a legitimate copy, so if you steal access to the new cut it's obviously in the interest of obtaining new material.
Alyeska wrote:I have paid for the movie three times and spent $40 on it.
And that $40 entitles you to the two tickets and the contents of the purchased bluRay, and nothing else besides. You've already had as much value for that $40 as you're entitled to. Unless on the backs of the tickets or in the bluRay packaging it states that your $40 entitles you to more. Scan that part of the tickets or label and shoot it my way and we'll have no more argument between us on the subject.
Alyeska wrote:I am considering a Copyright Violation, but I damned well didn't steal it.

Copyright Violation DOES NOT equal theft. You already have my money. I simply have no desire to give it to you again because some company pulled a dick move. Just because it is their legal right does not make it morally right.
Well, to begin with *I* don't have your money. You never gave it to me. And you yourself indicated that in exchange for your money you received two theater tickets - which is all your $$$ entitled you to, when you bought them - and a bluRay, which is all that your $$$ entitled you to, when you bought *that*. There's no implied or explicit open-ended commitment saying that Alyeska gets all he wants of every cut or release into the future because he bought two tickets and a bluRay, receipt of which means that he is owed nothing further.

As for the 'dick move' business I guess the fiction that you were in some way cheated is so cemented in your head that anything I point out to you regarding publicity etc won't have any more impact than the efforts of all the other people in this thread who have tried to point out to you that you were never lied to, never mis-led, never cheated, and that your failure to notice that future re-release was bring publicized is unfortunate but absolutely no one else's responsibility.
I find myself endlessly fascinated by your career - Stark, in a fit of Nerd-Validation, November 3, 2011
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