Re: What's next for BCI?
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by David Levine
Right now there have only been 2 successful Blu-Ray TV releases - Lost and Weeds. Everything else has done really, really poorly.
|
Hey, David. While that's a valid point about the "television on Blu-ray Disc", I just feel the need to qualify it and point out that there hasn't been much of a choice yet for consumers in the TV-on-BD category.
Lost has done well because of the popularity of the show, combined with the fact that this release is THE reference-quality Blu-ray release which can really show off how terrific 1080p looks compared to DVD, or any standard-def version of this show (or any other show).
Weeds is also a good (and popular) show that looks great on hi-def, but also is the only TV series where the show has more than one season, that also has EVERY season done so far made available quickly on Blu-ray Disc, and at easy-to-bear prices.
The rest are shows that are only a season long so far, and may have gotten great critical acclaim, but are not as widely popular (
Damages, Mad Men). Or popular shows that people have been collecting on DVD, but not all seasons are available on Blu-ray, and those that are have been priced too high (
Smallville, Sopranos, Nip/Tuck, Rescue Me, Prison Break). I can't tell you how many people tell me they would get every season of
Smallville on BD if they were all available (and at a price they could deal with), but they generally don't want "some on DVD and some on BD", so they stick with DVDs for now, especially at the price the early seasons have been marked down to (there's actually a thread about this here on the HTF right now!).
Then there are one-shot titles that may not count as "TV on BD" on the retailers' sales metrics lists that you're looking at (
Stargate: Continuum, Batman: Gotham Knight, Justice League: The New Frontier); these are probably categorized as "DTV movies". And what about mini-series with somewhat limited appeal to a particular genre, of either spies or westerns, like
The Company, Broken Trail, Lonesome Dove?
Of course, it doesn't help when the Blu-ray release actually pisses people off. Such as releases, both out and coming out, from the BBC where the 1st season is being released on Blu at the same time the 2nd season is being released on DVD, and people (like me!) who already own the 1st Season DVD are loathe to upgrade to the first season on Blu at a such a high price tag (
Robin Hood, Torchwood). Or like
Masters of Horror, which unnecessarily (as far as fans are concerned) broke the first season into 4 separate "volumes" on BD. Or like today's release of
Justice League - Season 1, which STILL doesn't provide the OAR widescreen video - even on hi-def! - that many fans have been longing for, and as the producer of the show prefers for it per public statement (I'm giving this release a skip for precisely that reason).
Everything else is pretty much nature, nature, nature.
Planet Earth has sold a ton, and looks gorgeous. But how much of that sort of thing will the buying public, in reality, add to their collection? The run-down includes
Galapagos, Ganges, Discovery Atlas (4 releases)
, Fearless Planet, Wild China, Earth: The Biography, Human Body: Pushing the Limits, Weather Channel's Epic Conditions and upcoming releases
The Universe and
When We Left The Earth: The NASA Missions.
The upcoming releases of TV-on-BD titles might be a crop that will open the eyes of both retailers and studios to the category.
Chuck, Terminator: The Sarah Conner Chronicles, Pushing Daisies, Firefly, Band of Brothers and
Futurama: Bender's Game are likely to do well enough to make retailers sit up and take notice. In all honesty, I'm a bit more doubtful of releases like
Grey's Anatomy and
Supernatural, since they are picking up mid-series with no hi-def releases of the earlier seasons in sight (see the
Smallville discussion above).
I know I've missed a few TV-on-BD releases here that have release dates in the past, present and future (
Afro Samurai comes to mind), but you get the idea. So far the consumers have not necessarily been given the best crop of choices, but things are starting to grow and expand in this field. That's okay; it didn't happen automatically for DVDs, either. The players hit the market in 1997, and while there was a small handful of TV-DVD titles that year (starting with July's
Beavis And Butt-Head - The Final Judgment...from Sony's Music CD division!), the category didn't really start to take off until after Fox's mid-2000 release of
X-Files - The Complete 1st Season became the "killer app". So TV-on-BD also has needed some time to find its stride, and - in my opinion - it's beginning to happen.
Hopefully it snowballs, because what I see - daily - are people who are upset that they can watch something in hi-def on their television, but have to settle for standard def DVD releases of the same program. And those people are starting to give those DVD releases a skip, waiting for the Blu-ray Discs. Fans of the shows believe (i.e., "know", at least in their minds) that titles like
Star Trek: TOS (Remastered), Battlestar Galactica, Reaper and others "HAVE" to come to Blu-ray sometime in the near future, so they would rather wait for the hi-def version.
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by David Levine
I'll be surprised if we put out the Blu-Ray before next summer...
Hopefully after the holidays we'll get a better idea of where BR is trending, but my best guess is it's something we'll debut at Comic-Con next July.
We have every intention of doing it (Day Break too), but it has to be when the time is right.
|
Good info, and I hope you don't mind that I'll be passing this on to my readers.