Director to receive guild's Golden Eddie Filmmaker of the Year award
Blu-ray Bets 'All In' on Black Friday
Industry counts on cheap titles, players to entice consumers to upgrade. (After that, all bets are off.)
The moribund home-video business is counting on Black Friday.
Both studios and retailers are hoping that a flurry of price-slashed $3.99 DVDs and $7.99 Blu-ray titles will kick-start consumers’ desire to own movies rather than rent them -- and in the process, persuade many of them to finally switch to the higher-end format.
“An awful lot is at stake,” said consumer electronics analyst Richard Doherty, noting that studios and their retail partners need for people to adopt the newer Blu-ray format and start building disc libraries again instead of renting movies for a dollar at Redbox.
“The studios still make money on a $3.99 DVD sale,” he explained. “Not as much as they used to, but certainly more than they do at a Redbox kiosk.”
One thing is for sure: With huge retailers, including Wal-Mart and Amazon, making discs and disc players key to their fierce ongoing price battles, movie-related goods are the “it” product during the busiest retail shopping day of the year -- the day after Thanksgiving.
And the prices are, well, insane.
An LG Blu-ray player, for example, which sold for over $300 just a year ago, can be had on Amazon for $99.99 this week. Also on Amazon, you can buy brand new DVD versions of Oscar winners including “Crash” ($4.99!) or “Slumdog Millionaire” ($7.99) for less than the price of movie popcorn.
Meanwhile, Blu-ray discs are discounted all over the shelves of Wal-Mart, where the Steve McQueen classic “Bullitt” ($8.36), the George Clooney/Brad Pitt remake of “Ocean’s Eleven” ($9.86) and Nicolas Cage's “Ghost Rider” ($7.98) are all priced about a third of what they probably should be, given the current youthful life stage of the three-year-old format.
As Wal-Mart ($405 billion in annual sales) takes an aggressive stand against the encroachment of Amazon ($20 million in yearly revenue) by implementing severe price cutting on popular consumer items like movie discs – what they call a “loss leader” strategy in the retail game – much of the reduced margin gets written into the stores’ financial books.
However, the studios themselves are absorbing much of the margin dent, too, through retail subsidies. It’s all part of a strategy to get people buying again, and – they hope -- buying Blu-ray.
“We expect Blu-ray to be a loss leader to some degree in the fourth quarter,” conceded Fox Home Entertainment president Mike Dunn, speaking to TheWrap at last month’s Blu-con conference in Los Angeles.
With the rental side of the business thriving, aggregate retail transactions of DVD and Blu-ray titles are actually up significantly over the 1 billion or so that were made in 2008, according to Adams Media Research’s Denis Cambruzzi. However, with the number of higher-margin sell-through transactions way down, overall home entertainment revenue is expected to once again decline in 2009, somewhere probably in the single-digit range.
“In this recession, what the consumer is telling us is, they don’t want to own the movies as much as they did in the past,” noted Cambruzzi.
Of course, the ability to walk out of Wal-Mart with a new Blu-ray player and the beginnings of a next-generation-format library for under $200 this Black Friday potentially has the power to revert consumer behavior back into “buy” mode.
According to Doherty, the consortium of studios, retailers and consumer electronics retailers backing Blu-ray project that with the huge price discounts, 2009 will end with more than 10 million U.S.



Comments
DaveBG Says
You'd have to have money to burn TO go for solid state, unless you think 5x the price for 20% of the capacity is good value. Equally, waiting for SS tech to be able to match optical media for price/capacity is a real fool's errand. Never has been able to, likely never will.
'Course you could be talking about SD cards, which have been an abject failure in music distribution and are almost certainly about to be as big a flop in movie distribution. If the expensive, inconvenient and DRM'd to the hilt efforts from Mod Systems and Digiboo etc are anything to go by, anyway.
Want to talk foolishness? Here's a GREAT example - buying a HD TV for probably $500-$1000 then waiting years for some unproven vaporware distribution format to take off so you can take full advantage of it, all for the sake of a fraction of what you paid for the same TV. That's foolishness my friend.
Quality brand name Blu-Ray players are available pretty much everywhere on-line and in your favorite stores, from $150 or less, with full backwards compatibility with DVD and almost 2000 hi-def titles avaiable to rent or buy.
Mod System's proprietary SD card player is available from 10 rental stores up North somewhere for about $50, with 1000 standard-def titles available to rent. Better get there quick though, they wont be around for long (and I don't mean in a good way). Heh.
tom vinelli Says
i was at walmart 3 hours after black friday started and i didn't see any 7.99 blu-ray discs. if the studios want blu-ray to take off there movies need to stay at a fair price.
JReeds Says
Blu-ray was never going to be a big replacement like the DVD was to Laser Disks or VHS tapes.
Buying Blu-ray now and dumping mountains of cash to rebuild your movie library (especially if you're old enough to have suffered through such a thing once or twice in the past) is the height of foolishness.
Want to know what the REAL next gen technology is?
It isn't Blu-ray, it's Solid-state. Unless you have the money to burn, you're better off keeping your current equipment for just a couple more years.
Personally, I have over 400 titles on a combination of DVD and old VHS (not all older movies have been ported to DVD). No chance for me to dump a temp technology like Blu-ray into the mix, even if getting started would ONLY cost around $200 (low-quality player included).