There's more room for new movies on the shelves of Blockbuster than there's room for new movies at the multiplex. If there are people who will want to buy them, then that space will get filled.
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There's more room for new movies on the shelves of Blockbuster than there's room for new movies at the multiplex.
Maybe that's it. DVD packaging is smaller, therefore you can have more movies per shelf. Is that what you meant? Otherwise I don't see what DVDs have done that videos haven't.
DVDs have generally been priced cheaper than VHS.
Does that mean more of them are stocked? Is DVD actually making a larger proportion of movies available to me?
I honestly have no idea of the shifting home movie market -- I'm not trying to attack or disprove a point.
So far as I can tell, that just means stores can stock 500 of the latest Tim Allen "comedy" instead of 100.
I have examined this statement in depth and the market as a whole and I can only come to one conclusion:
Oliver Stone is a dick.
I don't have the exact figures, but movie studios are selling orders of magnitude more DVDs than they ever sold video tapes.
Video tapes were priced to be sold to rental stores, and DVDs are priced to be sold directly to consumers.
Oliver Stone is a dick.
dies from shock
It's making movies into supermarket-shelf items, which is probably the best you can get at Wal-Mart. ... It's hopeless.
I wonder why he thinks that people with a deep love for the cinematic arts do their primary DVD-buying at Wal-Mart.
I wonder why he thinks that people with a deep love for the cinematic arts do their primary DVD-buying at Wal-Mart.
I think it's that if we, the connoisseurs, discover DVDs can be bought at Wal-Mart ... nope, got nothing.
Video tapes were priced to be sold to rental stores, and DVDs are priced to be sold directly to consumers.
Hmm. I now realise I have no idea how much a movie on VHS costs. Will have to look.