Re: MY DREAM CAME TRUE- "Peyton Place" on DVD this May from Shout! Entertainment!!
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Originally Posted by phil*
Then Shout! should let Fox make the new transfers,incur the extra expense,and pass the costs onto the consumer.
Let's face facts...the vast majority of people who are going to buy this set as currently constituted are those who are old enough,like myself,who watched this show when it originally aired. It is highly unlikely that those born in the 1980's and beyond will purchase a 45 year old black and white soap opera...and when word gets around that the video transfers on these discs are subpar as well...the probability of younger consumers buying "Peyton Place" IMHO,would be next to non-existant.However,if the set was remastered to the same extent as "The Fugitive" DVDs were,offering a pristine, crystal sharp image...then word of mouth re:the quality of the show's acting and storylines in addition to the excellent video transfers would spur buying by this demographic as well.
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That all sounds great, but the Fugitive has a much bigger following - and it didn't sell that well. Definitely not enough to recoup the cost of the remastering. So to not lose their shirts on the deal, they hopefully had a big deal to sell the show into syndication.
Fox could do the same for PP, but they aren't going to spend the money unless they know they can get it back.
The problem is that remastering is EXPENSIVE. Just like music licensing and everything else involved with making a DVD set. And you'd be surprised how many sets not only don't make money, but never come close to recouping.
Here's an example. I worked on a set that required 100,000 in music licensing. It sold 1500 copies. Now, I can tell you we didn't make 67.00 profit on each set sold. And that doesn't include the cost to license the program, authoring, manufacturing, marketing, advertising, packaging, shipping, etc.
We'd all love to have all of our favorite shows painstakingly remastered from the original elements and with extensive (and relevant) special features. But the reality is, sales of most shows (especially older ones) won't support that. And the increase in sales from "doing it properly" is almost never anywhere near big enough to compensate.
So the only viable options are:
- Release it roughly as/is
- Don't release it at all
I'd rather take what I can get - especially on niche or cult shows that don't air regularly on some cable station.