I'm saying that I used to, and now I get access to more anime for $10 than I ever did before without spending tens of thousands of dollars. My taste has rapidly improved in that time, since I can just try so many different types out, instead of investing only in what I previously enjoyed.Samtemdo8 said:Your saying you don't buy and collect Home Media?Shiver Me Tits said:DVD/Home media. You mean the multi-billion dollar empire that ended up being mostly Blockbuster?Samtemdo8 said:I lived through TV for a long time now. And I am mostly thinking of DVD/Home Media and that streaming is killing it.Shiver Me Tits said:Do you come from an alternate reality where most people bought their TV shows outright, and value owning them for long periods of time? I guess you're at least a Millenial, to not realize that the history of television is a history of BROADCAST.Samtemdo8 said:Streaming is the devil incarnete. People complain about Games being Always Online DRM yet they can put up with Streaming movies/shows?bastardofmelbourne said:I agree totally with the second point, but there's some background stuff working to prevent the first;Samtemdo8 said:At this point Hollywood should just lower the box office standard. Stop expecting every movie to be a billion dollar maker.
And stop bloating Marketing and use cheaper methods of marketing.
- Studios take much a smaller cut of the first-week ticket sales than they used to, due to a number of theatre chains folding in the 2000s. For example, when Phantom Menace came out, some theatres got to keep literally about 1% of the ticket price during the first week. Nowadays, the deals with theatre chains are more egalitarian (it seems to average at about a 50% split), which is good for theatres and theoretically good for customers of theatres, but means that a film has to make twice as much box office gross as it did in 1999 in order to reach the same profit.
- Films are becoming more expensive to make, for much the same reason that AAA video game releases are - the special effects technology advances, and so does the manpower cost and amount of post-production work required to get the film looking up-to-par.
- While home media has been super important for the past couple decades, DVD sales have been declining in favour of cheaper streaming services, and there's always the looming spectre of internet piracy and/or some technological advancement shaking everything up again; that all combines to make studios more keen on the fast, "guaranteed" box office haul instead of a slow, less-predictable home media profit over ~10 years.
So, yeah. Major franchise films with a $1 bllion target number aren't going away anytime soon.
I do think that these films have a problem with inflated marketing budgets, mainly because no-one should have to spend $150 million dollars [http://www.forbes.com/sites/robcain/2016/04/06/was-the-400-million-warner-bros-paid-for-batman-v-superman-a-good-investment/#54beb7a47d67] marketing a film where Batman fights Superman, for Christ's sake. This is what the internet is for.
Games have a very different history, so we have a rare moment here, and that is a non-fallacious invocation of the "Apples and Oranges" confusion.
Oh how liberating. I wish I could get rid of my giant library of content and go back to renting it by the one or two, along with abusive late fees.
No offense, but between this and your passion for various studio dog eggs on release, I have to wonder how green is your astroturf?
I'm also saying that most people other than the handful of otaku here, could not afford it. Streaming is much better for virtually everyone who isn't into collecting for the sake of a collection.