With the Iron Man Blu-ray selling over 500,000 units during its first week of release, the Blu-ray disc (BD) is well on its way to becoming a mass medium with mass market retailers like Target and Best Buy devoting more space to Blu-ray and offering players for under $200. Netflix expects to have a half a million Blu-ray subscribers by the end of the year and The Dark Knight is likely to become the first million-selling BD, if Iron Man or Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull doesn’t get there first. The idea that Blu-ray or hi-def DVDs would become a “niche market” like laser discs seems quite mistaken now, especially remembering that the bestselling laser disc, The Star Wars Trilogy, sold just around 30,000 units.
Already the success of the Blu-ray format has provided
Studios basically have two choices. The easy path is just making a high-def Blu-ray transfer of their existing materials. The other option is a full blown, frame-by-frame restoration of a classic movie to bring it up to contemporary standards for a high definition release. This is what
In addition to the excellent restoration job on the films themselves,
For an epic film trilogy like The Godfather, the Blu-ray format provides the incentive to put the effort and money into restoration. According to Home Media Retailing nearly 65% of all the copies of The Godfather: The Coppola Restoration sold in
Thus Blu-ray provides the perfect excuse for re-releasing epic films such as Lawrence of Arabia, particularly in conjunction with a major restoration, but what about re-issuing genre films? Sony’s Ray Harryhausen Collection includes four classic Harryhausen science fiction and fantasy films, It Came From Beneath the Sea, Earth vs. the Flying Saucers, 20 Million Miles to Earth, and The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad. The first three films were originally shot in black-and-white and are available in colorized versions on the Blu-ray discs, but, while the Blu-ray B&W versions are nice and clean, they are not appreciably better than conventional DVDs of the films in visual quality. The Blu-ray process does however work for The Seventh Voyage of Sinbad, which is definitely the highlight of The Ray Harryhausen Collection.
MGM has begun to release the James Bond films on Blu-ray with six titles releasing this week including Dr. No, From