Categories
Cinema Only on DVD

The Final Frontier of Physical Media

originally published on Inside the Envelope

Continued from Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4 / Part 5 / Part 6 / Part 7 / Part 8

Disney shocked the world – okay, maybe not the world, but at least the author of this column – when they announced real, honest to god, physical media Blu-ray and 4K releases of the Disney+ series The Mandalorian, WandaVision, and Loki. This marks the first time that any of the platform’s content will be making its way to a retail disc. Coming on the (relative) heels of the 2020 announcement that they would cease to release their live action films on 4K (with exceptions for Star Wars, Marvel, and James Cameron), this is surprising news, but maybe it shouldn’t have been.

As I said in an old Only on DVD column, “DVD is dead. Long live DVD.” We’re currently living in a world that is at once trying to kill physical media and milk it for everything that it’s worth. Some market reports have suggested that physical media sales are up 10% so far in 2023. Without a multi-year trend, that’s little more than an encouraging statistic – but we can’t hang any hats on it because we also just learned this month that the once largest business-to-business home entertainment distributor will cease to ship discs once their inventory has been depleted. The Ingram CEO cites increasing overhead with diminishing returns as the reason for Ingram’s exit from the business. I’m not sure what this really means for the consumer since rental chains had already ceased to exist, big-box stores hardly stock any physical media, and we already purchase most of our DVDs directly from niche distributors and – let’s be honest – Amazon. 

While I’m encouraged that Disney hasn’t totally abandoned the consumer, the announcement of three of their flagship properties (all Star Wars and Marvel) doesn’t exactly fill me with hope for more. What about the 76 movies and TV series that disappeared from Disney+ and Hulu in May? (I wasn’t finished with The World According to Jeff Goldblum, you heartless bastards.) The only thing we can do with any kind of purpose is support physical media with our dollars. That’s the language these companies speak. All we know for sure is that if there’s money to be made these companies are going to find it.

They don’t really care about the consumer. If they did, we’d see a lot more physical media available for people who can’t or won’t subscribe to the streaming channel.

They don’t care about the creatives producing content for their streaming services. If they did, we’d see a lot more physical media available at the request of the creators who fear that their work will be deleted from existence without warning due to those pesky residuals. That said, fallout from the WGA/SAG-AFTRA will ultimately change how the companies do business with their talent – and it might lead to an even more rigorous culling of streaming content. 

Of course, Disney isn’t the only company under siege from a vocal, critical minority. Director Michael Flanagan has taken to the social media airwaves to publicly praise those enterprising individuals that have pirated his unreleased-on-DVD Netflix series as “noble archivists.” Without physical media releases, he notes, his work could disappear without a trace. Flanagan had been a mainstay on Netflix with The Haunting of Hill House, Gerald’s Game, and Midnight Mass. Only The Haunting of Hill House and The Haunting of Bly Manor have received physical media releases – because they were co-produced by Paramount, which retained home video rights. At one point Netflix promised to follow through on releases for his work, but ultimately failed to do so, explaining that it just wasn’t a “priority.” This conversation with Netflix, in part, caused him and his production partner Trevor Macy to move their new projects to Amazon Studios.

Will Amazon release Flanagans’ series? We are, after all, still waiting on a release of the platform’s most popular series, The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. The grass is always greener.

Michael Flanagan’s not wrong. There is a preservational aspect to home media that most people just aren’t talking about. And they’re not talking about it because, as a collective, we’ve been brainwashed into thinking that the things we love will always be available at the click of a button. And it’s just not true. I talked to a film preservationist to confirm my suspicions that studios aren’t likely taking the precautions necessary to preserve digital content.

But let’s get back to that “always available” issue because there’s an aspect of this issue that I’ve never really talked about. Consumer burnout. 

My dad called me the other day because he wanted to watch the Sony Pictures Classics movie The Phantom of the Open (2021). He, like many of us, subscribes to a healthy number of streaming services and assumed it had to be available somewhere on one of them. He didn’t want to rent it because he’s already paid a considerable sum for Peacock, Netflix, Paramount, Prime Video, etc. on top of his regular cable bill. I tried to run through the standard explanation about the way streaming services license movies for exhibition, but stopped myself because maybe he had a point. How much are we expected to pay to watch what we want when we want it? At what point does this model collapse because it’s just too difficult or too expensive for the average viewer to manage?

As a result of having researched the streaming business model for this series of columns for DVD Netflix, I’m fully aware of the methodology. I’m also fully aware that my own viewing habits require me to track down movies I know with 100% certainty are not available to stream. I’m an outlier. The average consumer doesn’t just shrug when faced with a $4 rental charge on top of the $50+ they’ve already shelled out for a handful of services. It’s all currently unsustainable. Some of these services will begin to disappear, taking their content along with them. 

When DVD Netflix began shipping envelopes in the late 1990s it felt like we had the world at our fingertips. If it was available on disc, we could probably rent it for a relatively low monthly fee. Corner mom and pop video stops were still hanging on, Blockbuster (*spits*), and DVD-by-mail supplied anything we could possibly want. During these halcyon days, I remember thinking that that was the best of all possible worlds. Laserdiscs had improved upon VHS by giving us improved picture and sound with the correct cinematic aspect ratios. DVDs made that hobby affordable and improved the image even further (even though the compression ruined the laserdisc sound mixes). We even had entire runs of classic TV series in a package the size of a Tolstoy novel. Movies we’d never had the chance to see – or see correctly. (Had we really seen Lawrence of Arabia if we’d only seen it on a 4:3 Full Frame VHS tape?)

Still, we wanted more. Over the next two decades, the “more” we wanted resulted in the surrendering of control – the control we’d gained in the VHS wars over the content we owned and watched – returned to the production companies and media conglomerates. They’re once again working to control what you watch, how you watch it, and when you watch it. Ideally supplanting everything with cheap, disposable content that’s really just pretty okay and probably written by AI. 

They would like nothing more than to eliminate the home video distribution of movies and TV series. With that in mind, do you know why Disney released The Mandalorian on 4K and Blu-ray? Obviously, money. They haven’t totally taken that control back – not yet – and not as long as we continue to make the case for physical media. Not as long as the Michael Flanagans of the world – successful streaming filmmakers – stand up to take back control over their art. Disney recognizes that there’s still money in disc-based entertainment. If we continue to support content that can be owned and never adulterated, we can curate our own content libraries. We still hold the control.

This is the last month of DVD Netflix [author’s note: this was published in September of 2023]. I’m sad because I won’t get any more little red envelopes. I’m sad because this is my last column for “Inside the Envelope.” I will continue to write about movies and physical media elsewhere, but this particular gig felt important because you, the reader, cared as much as I do. Most importantly, the DVD Netflix employees cared as much as we all did. It was an absolute pleasure working with them and for you, bolstering your queues and making sure you never ran out of enthusiasm for the envelopes in your mailbox.

This final ‘Only on DVD’ column serves as a so long for now, but not a farewell forever. The spirit of our relationship continues as long as you continue to seek out new-to-you movies and pass along recommendations to your friends and family. Keep forcing companies like Disney and Netflix to acknowledge that there’s money to be found in the hills of DVD distribution. Let them continue to pretend that they’re doing it for the fans (because it makes them feel good). Each disc you buy or rent is a small act of film conservation.

Keep them all circulating.

It might be a little harder without DVD Netflix, but we survived pan-and-scan so we can do anything. Godspeed, weary moviewatcher. 

Categories
Cinema Only on DVD

DVD Netflix is dead. Long live DVD.

(originally published on Inside the Envelope)

Only on DVD: Part 7

Continued from Part 1 / Part 2 / Part 3 / Part 4 / Part 5 / Part 6

We’ve all heard by now that DVD Netflix will stop sending little red envelopes this fall. When I announced it on the Cinema Shame podcast, I mentioned – that with very few exceptions – this means that most of us (99.9% of us?) no longer have rental access to physical media. As someone who grew up during the video store era, this realization leaves me grappling with an cinexistential crisis. This current generation of budding cinephiles will never browse a rental shelf. Spare me the argument that this is progress. Not all progress benefits us. 

My local video stores provided a huge portion of my film education. They directed my path of discovery based on the catalog titles they’d chosen to stock on their shelves. We VHS kids had some magazines and film books to direct our attention, but when we wanted to rent a movie we often just walked into the video store blindly, reaching our hands out into the darkness just to see what we could find. 

Even without DVD Netflix, that experience didn’t exist anymore. Although we have more movies available to us at the click of a mouse, that blessing is also a curse. How does anyone stumble into a new favorite movie? If you’re watching something new in 2023, it’s because you probably went searching for a specific title or cast/crew member. Some exceptions remain – like browsing the cobwebbed corners of Prime Video or Tubi, but you’re still at the mercy of the app’s search returns, unpredictable video quality, and “you might also like” algorithms. That’s going in blind, but with someone you don’t know handing you random titles that you’re definitely absolutely going love because you watched Pitch Perfect 2 that one time in 2017.  

It’s not the same. There’s a negligible sense of discovery and zero adventure. Spare me the eyerolls and nostalgia gasps. A Friday trip to the video store was the pinnacle of my average week as a pre-teen stuck in rural Michigan. What’s the modern day equivalent? There isn’t one. I don’t meant to suggest that we’ve become a passionless society, but maybe we’ve become a passionless society. In the absence of obstacle, what need does passion even serve?

Faux outrage and virtue signaling is not passion.

You could argue, of course, that video store shelves were less efficient, that they didn’t bother to narrow down their offerings to focus your search. That, however, was the beauty of the experience. Each store had its own personality, its own clerks stocking employee recommendations. I grew up in a tiny farm community. We had two bars, two convenience stores, and two video stores serving roughly 2,000 people. In my head, the rental stores were called “the one with CEDs” and “the one without CEDs.” (Yes, indeed, one of my stores stocked Capacitance Electronic Discs, aka RCA Videodiscs and I’ll let you guess which one went out of business first. That said, it had more to do with their commitment to extraordinarily high late fees.)

The point is that, unintentionally or not, each store had a share in developing my cinematic perspective. Through one I had access to the future of home video technology (a format that is now a super geeky go-to punchline), surely fueling my entry into the next big thing – Laserdiscs – and for a minimum-wage teenager with limited liquid assets, I got pretty hot and heavy with the magic of those vinyl-sized flippers. Just say it with me VHS generation… and say it extra sexy…

original… aspect… ratio.

Through the other location, I found classic movies. I remember plucking It’s a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World (1963) from the shelf because of the size of the two-VHS box with the shiny gold MGM banner across the top. At the time I didn’t know Sid Caesar from Sid Vicious. There wasn’t an algorithm in this universe that would have put that epic, madcap comedy in front of my face based on my habit of watching Batman (1989) over and over and over again. 

I’m waxing nostalgic not to dwell on what we’ve lost as a moviewatching culture because we do enough of that already, but to consider how we move forward with what we’ve got left. Our movie rental stores have all become banks and pharmacies (cue Joni Mitchell), but that doesn’t mean we’re left without opportunity for the arbitrary fate of offline, algorithm-less discovery.

Take a trip to your favorite second-hand bookstore or thrift shop just to see what’s in stock. There’s bound to be some title that takes you by surprise. Survey the VHS tapes, the DVDs – and take one home with you. Two if you’re feeling daring. There’s no reason we can’t “keep circulating the tapes” (to borrow an old Mystery Science Theater 3000 phrase) on our own. Give the movie a watch. Maybe you’ll want to add them to your collection. Maybe you won’t, but that doesn’t matter! It’s about the act, the adventure. If it’s not a keeper, you’ll have the opportunity to put it back into circulation via a redistribution service like SwapADVD.com or eBay.

So, while there’s still time, dive into the abyss that is the nether regions of the DVD Netflix catalog and then watch through that queue. (Show us your conquests on the socials with #GetThroughMyQueue.) After that? Well, there are video stores all around us, if we just take the time to blindly wander into the semi-dark.

Categories
Cinema

Twilight Time Sale Recommendations – 20th Century Fox

In yesterday’s post I picked 12 Essentials from the Twilight Time sale and I happened to included a few of the 20th Century Fox catalog titles. I won’t repeat those in today’s list because 1) you’ve already heard me wax effusive about them and 2) I get to pick more movies that I like. Therefore, in today’s post I definitely won’t mention Stormy Weather, Two for the Road, The Bravados, or Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? other than to say that you should most definitely stop what you’re doing and place an order that includes Stormy Weather, Two for the Road, The Bravados, and Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? 

I should also mention that none of us know for sure what Disney will do with the 20th Century Fox catalog titles. I wrote about my thoughts in this post, but we’re all playing a wait and see game. It would surprise no one if these titles never appeared on another form of physical media. For anyone that rightly distrusts those gatekeepers promising “everything available all the time” this is no doubt disconcerting because their “everything” does not consist of the mid-century classics that make up 90% of the Twilight Time catalog.

Remember sale prices are ongoing through the month of September and most titles are available at both ScreenArchives.com and Twilight Time — but some are only available at ScreenArchives.com.

Keep in mind that I’m just one guy and I haven’t seen all of the 20th Century Fox movies in this catalog — so I’m likely missing some gems. If you have a surefire recommendation leave it in the comments or hit me up at @007hertzrumble on Twitter and I’ll broadcast it to the Twatterverse.

12 (more) 20th Century Fox Titles Worth Picking Up from the Twilight Time sale

 

dragonwyck twilight timeDragonwyck (1946)

A dream blends into nightmarish reality as Miranda Wells (Gene Tierney) movies to New York to live with her rich cousin. The Tierney and Vincent Price combination doesn’t sound natural on paper, but handsome 1940’s Vincent Price has charm, pizazz, and an undercurrent of something nefarious. This is gothic fare of the highest order and reminds immediately of Alfred Hitchcock’s Rebecca. Who needs soft focus when you have Gene Tierney?

snake pit twilight timeThe Snake Pit (1948)

Also available on an Indicator series Blu-ray in the UK. You might call her Queen O. Or Her Highness Livvy of Havilland. It doesn’t much matter how you worship, but worship you shall. Olivia de Havilland’s a force of nature as a disoriented woman who finds herself in a mental hospital with no explanation and no memory of her new husband. Dr. Kik works with her to unlock memories through electro-shock therapy. The suppressed memories come trickling out, building suspense and keeping the viewer guessing. A potent time capsule of our unfortunate views on mental illness.

inferno twlight timeInferno 3D/2D (1953)

An alcoholic millionaire (Robert Ryan) breaks his leg falling off his horse and is left to die by his philandering wife (Rhonda Fleming) and her lover (William Lundigan). Ryan’s at the peak of his powers. This story about survival against the odds takes place amidst immaculate desert landscapes and Rhonda Fleming’s highly articulate eyebrows. If you have the ways and means, view the 3D version, but if you don’t the 2D will do just fine.

dont bother to knock twilight timeDon’t Bother to Knock (1954)

And speaking of Roy Ward Baker… I caught Don’t Bother to Knock on TCM last year expecting a silly little one-note thriller notable for being an early dramatic vehicle for Marilyn Monroe. This hotel-bound melodrama gripped me from reel one. Richard Widmark plays Jed, a skeezy airline pilot (Widmark can’t not skeeze) trying to get some rest in a hotel when a young woman catches his eye — she’s babysitting for a wealthy couple, but he’s not so sure she’s exactly capable. Monroe shows great range, the film always feels off-kilter, and you won’t worry about predicting where it’ll end up.

warlock twilight timeWarlock (1959)

I could try to sell with the story or Edward Dmytryk or 2.35 : 1 Deluxe color cinematography — but instead I’ll just list the cast and let you ponder things. Richard Widmark (again!). Henry Fonda. Anthony Quinn. Dorothy Malone. Deforest Kelly. Richard Arlen. Frank Gorshin. You want to see this movie now, don’t you? Naysayers would call this a generic genre film, I’d call this an old-fashioned star-fueled Western saga about a weary town turning to hired guns for salvation — a year before the release of The Magnificent Seven.

morituri twilight timeMorituri (1965)

I chose this spy-oriented thriller over the (at times overly) languid The Quiller Memorandum because this is a movie that not even genre aficionados have heard about. And truth be told, I only watched this because someone pestered me for a month. Director Bernhard Wicki’s (The Longest Day) Morituri features surprisingly layered performances from Marlon Brando and Yul Brynner and Conrad Hall B&W cinematography. When you think the movie’s going to ride the standard wartime narrative, it becomes something more interesting — a character study aboard a grim, claustrophobic merchant ship that manipulates its inhabitants like a puppetmaster.

bedazzled twilight timeBedazzled (1967)

The story of the hapless schmuck who sells his soul to the devil for seven wishes he uses to woo the beautiful Raquel Welch. This Dudley Moore / Peter Cook classic necessitates viewing on Blu. Who knew this film could look so vibrant? (Though Adam Tyner at DVDTalk.com raised questions about a possible stretching situation.) Bedazzled remains an essential — albeit one constructed more like a sketch-show than a cohesive feature film. The schtick works for the old comedy team of Moore and Cook and this is one Twilight Time disc fans of British comedy shouldn’t be without.

incident twilight timeThe Incident (1967)

The tagline for Larry Peerce’s subway-bound thriller is “Hits like a switchblade knife!” — which causes me to think about West Side Story gangs throwing switchblades jabs in between jetes. Then of course there’s the reality of this gritty psychological drama about two thugs terrorizing a subway train. Martin Sheen makes his screen debut as one of the two hellraisers aiming to make your blood boil — and boil it will.

pretty poison twilight timePretty Poison (1968)

Only in the 1960s did studios dare to release a pop-art rom-com psychological thriller that’s as much Psycho as it is Bye Bye Birdie. Anthony Perkins convinces a smalltown girl (a radiant Tuesday Weld) that he’s a secret agent. He’s not, of course, and that sets this movie off in all kinds of surprising directions.

next stop greenwich village twilight timeNext Stop Greenwich Village (1976)

Paul Mazursky doesn’t always get the love he deserves because he directs low-key dramedies about fully formed human characters. His movies feel nostalgic and ponderous about the crazy human condition. Speaking of craziness, this story about an aspiring Jewish actor that moves to bohemian Greenwich Village in 1953 features Shelley Winters, Christopher Walken, Bill Murray, Lois Smith, and Jeff Goldblum among many other familiars. A wonderful card to have in your back pocket for “Six Degrees.”

black widow twilight timeBlack Widow (1987)

You might have expected the 1954 Film Noir Black Widow, but no! That’s a fine but unexceptional entry in the canon. Meanwhile this Black Widow from 1987 boasts Debra Winger and Theresa Russell playing a wicked game of cat and mouse — plus appearances by Dennis Hopper, Nicol Williamson, and Lois Smith (again!). Starts slow and probably needed a stronger finale — and yet this oh-so-80’s entry entertains due to the strength and screen presence of its two female leads.

rapid fire twilight timeRapid Fire (1992)

Sure — this is just another 1990s actioner, but it’s the final Brandon Lee actioner before an on-set accident on The Crow cut his life tragically short. Rapid Fire dispenses with downtime and just serves martial arts and shoot-em-up set pieces. This movie is pure disposable fun — and Power Boothe villainy! — and I’m still shocked someone had the wherewithal to release this gem on Blu-ray. Hopefully Brandon Lee’s oeuvre gets another wave of appreciation.

20th century fox

The master list of EVERY Fox-distributed Twilight Time title currently in print!

(Italics denotes titles on my short list for my highest recommendation. Titles listed in order of Twilight Time release.)

Violent Saturday (1955) – DVD
Woman Obsessed (1959) – DVD
Beloved Infidel (1959)
Royal Flash (1975)
Che! (1969)
The Vanishing (1993)
Flaming Star (1960)
Stormy Weather (1943)
April Love (1957)
The Best of Everything (1959)
Black Widow (1987)
Broken Lance (1954)
The Detective (1968)
From the Terrace (1960)
Where the Sidewalk Ends (1950)
Julia (1977)
Garden of Evil (1954)
Panic in Needle Park (1971)
The Gang’s All Here (1943)
Tony Rome / Lady in Cement (1967 / 1968)
Pretty Poison (1968)
The Keys of the Kingdom (1944)
Two for the Road (1967)
Kiss of Death (1947)
Peyton Place (1957)
How to Steal a Million (1966)
Inferno 3D/2D (1953)
Hell and High Water (1954)
State Fair (1962)
The Long, Hot Summer (1958)
Beneath the 12-Mile Reef (1953)
Captain From Castille (1947)
Doctor Doolittle (1967)
Forever Amber (1947)
My Cousin Rachel (1952)
Dragonwyck (1946)
The Incident (1967)
The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds (1972)
The Seven-Ups (1973)
Don’t Bother to Knock (1952)
No Down Payment (1957)
Blue Denim (1959)
Next Stop Greenwich Village (1976)
Hilda Crane (1956)
My Gal Sal (1942)
Let’s Make Love (1960)
The Revolt of Mamie Stover (1956)
Cinderella Liberty (1973)
Rapid Fire (1992)
The Hot Rock (1972)
The Other Side of Midnight (1977)
The Bravados (1958)
Black Widow (1954)
The Adventures of Hajji Baba (1954)
The True Story of Jesse James (1957)
Satan Never Sleeps (1962)
A Man Called Peter (1955)
Untamed (1955)
Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (1957)
Bedazzled (1967)
The River’s Edge
The Quiller Memorandum (1966)
Three Coins in the Fountain (1954)
Stagecoach (1966)
The Snake Pit (1948)
Warlock (1959)
Morituri (1965)
Bandolero! (1968)
Pin Up Girl (1944)
Mother Wore Tights (1947)
Hello, Frisco, Hello (1943)
Ten North Frederick (1958)
The President’s Lady (1953)
The Chairman (1969)
Whirlpool (1949)
Wild in the Country (1961)
The Tall Men (1955)