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Posted: |
Sep 12, 2021 - 9:13 AM
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By: |
roadshowfan
(Member)
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I had well over 2000 films on disc, but to be fair, working in the industry at the time, I got an awful lot at no charge. I thought they were terrific & certainly an upgrade from the tape days, the box sets where incredibly expensive, but majority were well worth the costs. The best one for me was Close Encounters of the Third Kind, where the option to play the entire film a combination of the cinema cut & Special Edition was very interesting. As mentioned above a large number of extras have never made it to DVD or Blu Ray, commentaries, trailers & features. Along with actual cinema unaltered versions, example Where Eagles Dare had the intermission card & music play out & back into the film. The flipping over for the film & then the deadly “rot” did not help their sales or public acceptance & I do like Blu Ray & DVD so much more. Progress? Regards Andy b The GUYS AND DOLLS laser had playout exit music which has never appeared on any DVD or Blu-ray. Also SWEET CHARITY roadshow has only been presented intact on laser. 2 of many examples where the laser was superior. This sort of totally unnecessary error is incredibly infuriating, especially when the mistakes made on the DVD issues were never corrected for the Blu-Ray. Is Star! another case where the ent'racte and playout music were omitted from the DVD too?
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The steep prices didn't help Laserdisc's survival. I took a part time job at Ken Crane's Laserdisc Superstore so I could get them at cost. It was a niche market but we had Ray Harryhausen in shopping whenever he was over from England. He autographed a copy of "It Came From Beneath the Sea" for me. Tony Baxter from Disney's Imagineering was a regular. Miles Krueger came in on several occasions. We regularly shipped titles to Amblin Entertainment and Skywalker Ranch. Fun times! Cool story. I'm in a similar boat to Thor. They were too expensive for to jump ship from vhs and I always assumed that one day a version the size of a cd would come. And I was right! Not bad for someone usually 'techonolgically challenged'... I used the same reasoning to never buy pre-recorded films on vhs. Took up too much space and had poor picture quality. I just knew something better and more compact would come, for which I would gladly pay. My off-air recording I regarded as an art, especially on commercial channels (a period where we nerds all thanked God for the BBC), with the pausing for ad breaks. I remember the odd snag, such as when I paid a friend to 'video-sit' whilst I went out for the evening. She was meant to pause for the ads during Vertigo, and fell asleep with it being a "boring old film"!
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I'm in a similar boat to Thor. They were too expensive for to jump ship from vhs and I always assumed that one day a version the size of a cd would come. That's funny. I had a similar feeling too at the time, or at least I remember saying "I wonder if these will be like CDs one day". We're both proper Nostradamuses! Except I thought min-discs might be the future too. I waited to see how long they'd last, and they didn't! Fortunately that aforementioned caution clicked in and stopped me investing in them as I was more tempted than with laserdiscs.. Phew..
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Did the Laserdisc release of Thunderball have the original end credit music? The VHS did for awhile and it's never been o DVD or Blu Ray thus far. I still have the complete Star Trek original series on Laserdisc. For the sound mix.
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