This is the reason I picked up the 2-disc version. Unlike the Lord of the Rings films, I have no interest in seeing an extended version of King Kong. I already have the Production Diaries, so this will be enough to hold me over until the HD on a platter release.
For me, as much as I was a fan of the Production Diaries on line, I feel they're more filler than anything. I've always been more of a fan of the look back (ala Lord of the Rings) style documentary put together AFTER having completed the film. So it was the single disc for me this time, and definitely the Extended Edition in the future.
I went on a King Kong spree yesterday! I picked up the 2 discer, the PD, the original King Kong and the 70's remake of King Kong, both were only $9.99 a piece.
Plus I got 3 bucks off the 2005 film AND a King Kong movie poster that Coconuts was giving away with every purchase! I made out pretty well on that deal.
I'm right there with ya, I always ask innocently why people want to miss half the movie, often times they arent even aware of what they are missing. Open matte is another issue of course.
I was going to speak up and try to make conversataion about widescreen to the kid, i've done that on a couple of occasions at Best Buy, but this kid was big and mean looking and he looked like he could probably kick my ass so I kept quiet. :b
A word of advice when attempting this: Check the knuckles. If they are scarred or have open sores, they've been dragged for too long. There's nothing you could say that would make any difference.
There was a snippet of that scene in the trailer. The group in a boat as something slithers through the water toward them.
Actually, now that I've watched all the post-production diaries, there's a lot of scenes that didn't make the final film, including some of the pick-ups. What's the point in shooting a pick-up, then not using it?
They make a point of mentioning on the Featurettes and the PPDs that a large portion of the trailer has been changed or cut. Blame the awesome power of non linear editing combined with a director not afraid to adapt his vision for the film until its finally done.
Well - what's next: lets see -- Volkswagon could pay a little more for a larger chunk of real-estate. Maybe pay a little more to throw in their logo. Maybe pay a little more to run the commercial right before the movie starts (and you can't skip it).
Keep giving a little bit. When it's too late, you won't know what happened.
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I think it cheapens the quality of the product.
Imagine if they had done this to the Lord of the Rings SE menus.
I'd rather have it in the menus than forced viewing the way Disney and other studios have done.
Like it or not this is not the theater business we grew up with, and there are some experiments in alternative financing we will love and some we will hate.
As long as they stay off the actual coverart and menus, I'm fine. Hell they could include a full catalog for their 2006 lineup, I could care less, it still ends up in the trash.