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April 03, 2006

WSJ: This is a step forward in the collapsing windows of the movie business, but is still crazily convoluted…Movie studios have agreed to give movies to their co-owned online movie service Movielink at the same time that the movies hit DVD and retail. This will start with “Brokeback Mountain”, that is being released on DVD tomorrow.
The pact is for both new and catalog titles.Meanwhile, the independently owned competitor CinemaNow, has made a similar arrangement with Sony and Lionsgate and also plans to begin selling films this week.
Some major points:
– 300 films will go on sale on Movielink
– Movielink will allow consumers to burn a backup DVD of the movie and to keep the movie on as many as three computers. But the discs burned from Movielink will play only in computer DVD player, not on regular (TV) DVD players. If consumers have a Microsoft Media Center Edition PC, they can stream their copy of a Movielink movie to a TV set connected to a Media Center extender or Xbox.
– The TV viewing is still a few months away as movie studios agree and work on the DRM part.
– Movielink: Newer releases will cost between $20 and $30 — higher than DVDs — and catalog titles will cost $10 to $16, in line with DVDs.
– CinemaNow’s prices for all titles will range between $10 and $20, although its customers won’t yet be able to watch their movies on other computers or burn them onto DVDs. It will start with 75 movies for now.
– The movies on both services require more than an hour to download, even on a high-speed connection.
– Walt Disney hasn’t yet signed up for the sales or the earlier release dates.
NYT: Apple, Amaxon.com and nd other online retailers are also busily trying to cut deals with Hollywood to sell downloads.
– The downloads do not include the bonus features, like deleted scenes and filmmaker interviews, that often accompany DVD’s
– Whacked up example: “Memoirs of a Geisha,” from Sony, will cost $19.99 to download from CinemaNow and $25.99 from Movielink. As a DVD, by contrast, it is priced at $16.87 at Wal-Mart.
– Some studios, including Warner and Universal, plan to withdraw some movies from online sales in the period that they are appearing on pay TV networks like HBO.
Related: @ NATPE 2006: Portable Movies: Studios May Be More Receptive But iTunes Model Poses Problems


Originally posted by rali from PaidContent.org, remediated by yatta on Apr 3, 2006 at 02:15 AM