Thomas K. Arnold is considered one of the leading home entertainment journalists in the country. He is publisher and editorial director of Home Media Magazine, the home entertainment industry’s weekly trade publication. He also is home entertainment editor for The Hollywood Reporter and frequently writes about home entertainment and theatrical for USA Today. He has talked about home entertainment issues on CNN’s “Showbiz Tonight,” “Entertainment Tonight,” Starz, The Hollywood Reporter and the G4 network’s “Attack of the Show,” where he has been a frequent guest. Arnold also is the executive producer of The Home Entertainment Summit, a key annual gathering of studio executives and other industry leaders, and has given speeches and presentations at a variety of other events, including Home Media Expo and the Entertainment Supply Chain Academy.
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By: Thomas K. Arnold
Are Budget DVDs the Rice Cookers of Our Industry?
Got a chuckle this morning when I checked Wallet Pop for its latest lists and found bargain DVDs right up there with ice cream makers, Polaroid cameras and ear candles on the consumer finance Web site's listing of "20 Most Worthless Pieces of Junk."
According to the introduction, "Have you ever been the victim of hype? Look in those tippy-top kitchen cabinets, or in the attic or in the basement, and we bet you can find a stack of items that you were convinced you needed to have, only to put the thing away to gather dust until your next yard sale. Our WalletPop bloggers found our houses stuffed with these things, and we put together a list of the 20 most worthless pieces of junk ever known to man."
Bargain DVDs came in at No. 12, right between "trade show swag" and ear candles. According to Wallet Pop, "Even the best films on DVD lose their appeal after maybe six plays. This is why budget DVDs, even if you pay just a dollar for them, represent nothing more than stealthy, dust-gathering clutter slabs. Budget DVDs can make sense if repurposed as drink coasters or Frisbees, but that's about it."
I clicked the link for "more on bargain DVDs" and was led to this rant from blogger Lou Carlozo: "... As the Chicago Tribune's DVD critic for two years, I saw all manner of budget dreck cross my desk. That included everything from 1940s 'lost classic' movies (usually, these were lost in 1942 because no one bothered to look them up again) to repackaged B movies with 'bonus features.' These usually amounted to nothing more than the trailer and a still photo gallery with lame-o captions. To borrow a cliché from the compact disc world, budget DVDs can make sense if repurposed as drink coasters or Frisbees, but that's about it. When cleaning the basement, you must promise yourself, if you spot one, not to give in to the siren cries of the Great Hoarding God. Box them up, take them to a local thrift store ... and don't even hang them from you car rear view, lest the cop that pulls you over begins to wonder about your bad taste as well as your traffic violation."
By: Thomas K. Arnold
'12 Rounds' to the Top
The action flick 12 Rounds, from 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, was the top DVD and Blu-ray Disc seller the week ending July 5, but it was something of a hollow victory. The film is one of the final releases from Fox's ill-fated Fox Atomic division, formed two years ago to create low-budget fare for teens, and it soared to the top of the sales chart with fewer than 150,000 units, a feat made possibly simply by the fact that there was hardly any competition. 12 Rounds debuted at No. 2 on Home Media Magazine's video rental chart for the week, right after Gran Torino, which regained the No. 1 position nearly a month after it was first released. Oh, where have all the new movies gone....? Click here for the full story.
By: Thomas K. Arnold
Wal-Mart is a Battlefield
By: Thomas K. Arnold
By the Numbers
By: Thomas K. Arnold
Big Surprise On Top of the Charts!
You've got to love the doldrum days of summer. Studios take a break from releasing high-profile theatricals so consumers can focus on what's at the movies, and that leaves the charts open to some interesting alternatives. Topping Home Media Magazine's rental chart this week is The Code, a direct-to-video thriller from First Look Studios starring Morgan Freeman and Antonio Banderas. The Code also debuted at No. 8 on the Nielsen VideoScan First Alert sales chart, while Disney's Confessions of a Shopaholic, a comedy with just $44.3 million in theatrical earnings, was the week's top seller. For the full chart story, click here.
Here are the week's top 10 sellers, according to First Alert, with percentage of sales coming from the Blu-ray Disc version. As you can see, Blu-ray certainly is picking up steam--quite a far cry from even a year ago, when the average title drew maybe 3% to 5% of its total sales from Blu-ray Disc.
1. Confession of a Shopaholic, 5% BD
2. Gran Torino, 15% BD
3. Transformers, 21% BD
4. Tyler Perry's Madea Goes to Jail, not available on BD
5. Inkheart, 13% BD
6. Pink Panther 2, 7% BD
7. Family Guy Volume 7, not available on BD
8. The Code, 15% BD
9. Friday the 13th, 17% BD
10. Taken, 20% BD
By: Thomas K. Arnold
Big Buzz About Paramount
Big industry buzz today about a Financial Times story that says Paramount Pictures is looking to merge its home entertainment division with that of another studio and is in fact in "advanced talks" with Sony Pictures and 20th Century Fox. The Financial Times story quoted "several people familiar with the situation" but had no on-the-record comments from anyone at any of the three studios.
According to the story, "The talks have focused on combining DVD production, distribution and back-office functions. One proposal would see Paramount begin using Sony’s DADC DVD production system rather than Technicolor’s system, which the studio currently uses. ... Following the merger, Paramount and its partner would outwardly continue to operate as separate entities. The two studios would also keep their own marketing and sales operations."
My take: There's probably an element of truth to the story, although I think calling it a "merger" is a stretch. And I do have it on good authority, from someone who works on the Paramount lot, that a replication change may be coming down the pike. "I see the Sony DADC guys running around there practically every week," this person wrote to me in an email. "Since they replicate with Technicolor, there's no reason for Sony to be there unless some distribution discussions are going on."
Wagging tongues say a third studio may also be in talks with Paramount: Universal Studios.
The merger rumors follow by two weeks a report by Reuters that a leading investment firm thinks Paramount Pictures could itself merger with another studio. "Today there are seven or eight motion-picture studios. A round of consolidation will occur in the next six to 12 months because of the costs of financing, prints and advertising, the benefits of globalization and such,” Reuters quoted CEO Mario Gabelli of investment firm Gamco Investors Inc. telling Barron's. "We hear talk of something going on."
To see Home Media Magazine's coverage of the Reuters story, click here.
By: Thomas K. Arnold
The Great Divide
By: Thomas K. Arnold
Just What Exactly Is Wal-Mart Doing?
By: Thomas K. Arnold
Harris Interactive Survey Gets Slammed
I thought I would pass on an email I just received from Corporate Advocates about a recent survey on high-definition packaged media. It reads as follows:
As you may have seen, there has been some recent reporting on the results of a Harris Interactive survey that arrived at some highly questionable findings on the number of Blu-ray Disc and HD DVD players currently in US households. By way of background, the recent Harris Interactive poll asked consumers whether they owned an HD DVD player, a Blu-ray Disc player, a PS3, etc. The survey has garnered some media attention despite the fact that, according to analyst groups that regularly track Blu-ray Disc hardware sales (as well as HD DVD sales before the format was pulled from the market), the survey results don't square with the actual shipping and sales numbers.
Given the grossly inaccurate results with respect to HD DVD sales (many times greater than those previously reported by the HD DVD group itself), and given that the sales-based numbers and the dramatic increase in Blu-ray Disc hardware and software sales clearly indicate that the format has in fact reached critical mass (surpassing even DVD penetration at the same point in DVD's lifespan), we thought it important to take a moment to provide you with actual data based on manufacturers' shipments and retail sales.
The 2008 sales data and the latest 2009 projections from Adams Media Research are as follows:
* As of December 31, 2008, 2.7% of US TV homes had a Blu-ray Disc set top player, and by the end of 2009 that number will have grown to 6.2% of US TV homes (6.1% and 11.0%, respectively, of HDTV homes)
* As of December 31, 2008, 5.6% of US TV homes had a PS3, and by the end of 2009 that number will have grown to 10.0% of US homes (12.5% and 17.6%, respectively, of HDTV homes).
* As of December 31, 2008 7.8% of US TV homes had either a Blu-ray Disc set top player, a PS3 or both, and by the end of 2009 that number will have grown to 14.8% of US TV homes (17.5% and 26%, respectively, of HDTV homes).
* As of December 31, 2008 0.3% of US TV homes had an HD DVD set top player, and by the end of 2009, that number will have shrunk to 0.2% of US homes (0.7% and 0.4%, respectively, of HDTV homes).
The estimates reported by Adams Media Research are based on its research into actual manufacturer shipments to retail and actual retail sales to consumers, and are significantly different than the survey-based numbers reported by Harris. In fact, the Harris numbers don't even square with the numbers reported by the HD DVD Promotions Group toward the end of that format's lifespan. As of the end of 2007, some 50 days before the announcement that the HD DVD format would be discontinued, the HD DVD Promotions Group was reporting set top sales of less than 1 million units….nowhere near the 9% of households that Harris claims based on its survey results.
As for the discrepancy between the survey results and the actual data, Tom Adams, president of Adams Media Research notes:
"The media industry has long known you can't trust the average survey respondent to correctly identify the high-tech devices in their homes; this finding suggesting that HD DVD player penetration grew from 6% to 9% in the period since the Blu-ray victory in the format war simply can't be right. Our research on shipments and retail sales of players suggests that some 340,000 homes had an HD-DVD player by the end of 2008 v. 3.1 million homes with a dedicated Blu-ray player, and 9 million homes with either a dedicated player, a PS3 or both. So far, despite the recession, sales this year put dedicated Blu-ray players on track to be in 7.2 million homes by year's end, with the number of homes having a BD-Player, a PS3, or both growing to 17.1 million. Meanwhile, HD DVD machines are long gone from store shelves and household penetration is shrinking dramatically. By way of comparison to what had been the most successful format launch in consumer electronics history, at the same point in DVD’s lifespan (four years in, at the end of 2000), DVD-enabled homes (set-tops or game machines) numbered 13.7 million”
By: Thomas K. Arnold
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