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MichaelDignanSecondPaper 3 - 18 Jan 2010 - Main.EbenMoglen
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-- MichaelDignan - 08 Jan 2010

Michael, This question (of whether the movie industry will eventually die) was probably one of the biggest questions I left the class with. I still haven't gotten to speak with Moglen about it more, but I just cannot see such an industry with such high upfront capital costs existing for much longer. When I went to see "Up" in 3D, I started to notice how many 3D movies were planning to come out within the next year. I came to the same conclusion as you, thinking that this is the movie industry's attempt to maintain a foothold. However, I think that ultimately this attempt will fail. It certainly is a hot fad, but I think ultimately the unique "theatre experience" it creates will only be popular with a limited amount of genres (such as movies like Avatar). Moreover, as you noted, 3D has only just started in the theatres and it is already being replicated by home systems. It will not be long before the "theatre experience" in any form is replicable. I am really interested to see how the industry morphs in the next 10-15 years as it goes through its own version of the music meltdown.

-- EdwardBontkowski - 15 Jan 2010

 
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Is the Movie Industry Going to Die Soon? (Like the Recording Industry)

With copyright protection eroding, in an era where copies are made freely and infinitely, there seems little reason to continue a monopolistic regime of copyright protection set up for an analog world. If Gavin is right we basically live in a de facto copyfree world already. But even Moglen admits that creativity could be dampened when the upfront capital costs are high for a certain project, citing much of the movie industry as an example. While music has always been fairly cheap to produce, it is now incredibly cheap to copy. Not so for the movie industry, where, at least in Hollywood, the budgets often run into the dozens, or hundreds, of millions of dollars. Is a de facto copyfree world the best world if we want to continue creating a lot of digital movies? The music industry has all but capitulated the fight against free copying. The RIAA, once attempting to intimidate illegal downloaders into buying their music, has gone limp. The movie industry has seen slumping sales recently, while it could just be attributed to the economic disaster of 2008, downloading movies from the internet presents a real threat to the profitability of an industry that has high capital costs and depends on its ability to sell movie tickets as well as a large volume of home video DVDs.

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 While most large theatres use polarized film, home theatre technology is, currently, of inferior quality and too expensive for the average user. Anaglyph images are probably the cheapest to produce and view, but have a number of problems, foremost among them problems with color quality and sharpness, resulting in a lot of ghosting. Polarized 3D systems require a silver screen in order to maintain the polarization of the light reflecting off of it (if using projectors), or a few additional layers in a monitor that adds significant cost. Additionally, viewing angles in the home can be limited, and movement of the head can lead to ghosting, as images bleed over to the opposite eye. Shutter glasses, either LCD or mechanical, can make some people nauseous, but have an advantage over polarized glasses because they don’t restrict viewing angles. The glasses are obviously much more expensive than those used when watching polarized 3D films, but it may be cheaper to implement inside the monitor, since a simple IR emitter is used to sync the glasses with the monitor’s frame sequencing. Of course, most current HD television sets don’t have fast enough refresh rates to keep up, since you are effectively halving the frame rate when alternating between each eye. But the success of Avatar, which has been called 3D technology’s Jazz Singer, will no doubt spur the home entertainment industry to create better and cheaper systems for home viewing. And a number of new high definition televisions with 3D capabilities have recently been announced. If they are successful, they would almost certainly eat into the movie industry’s declining profits.

But it still remains to be seen how effectively new home theatre technology can display high quality 3D images for the average user. And the public theatre still offers some advantages over home viewing. IMAX screens are hard to replicate, even on today’s increasingly large television sets. Immersive sound systems are certainly doable in home systems, but add to the already growing costs involved. And the very public nature of the event might be a bonus. Anything that can be done to increase the awe factor at the theatre will help keep viewers coming. Anything to more fully immerse the audience in the film. At least for the immediate future, the movie theatre seems to have an advantage over home viewing, and in order to keep that edge, it needs to continue developing its appeal, because Sony, Panasonic, and Toshiba are busy developing television sets that make theatres obsolete. \ No newline at end of file

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-- MichaelDignan - 08 Jan 2010

  • You would think, throughout the analysis in this essay, that the people who owned the making of movies also owned the business of showing them in theaters. In the US, as a result of lengthy and complex antitrust enforcement activities in the 1940s, that's not true. You'd also think that the US was the place where Hollywood earns most of its money on its movies, and that's not true either. So a little less about the glasses and a little more about whether this is an economic proposition to save an industry or a new product wrinkle with not much effect on the big picture would probably be a good idea.


Michael, This question (of whether the movie industry will eventually die) was probably one of the biggest questions I left the class with. I still haven't gotten to speak with Moglen about it more, but I just cannot see such an industry with such high upfront capital costs existing for much longer. When I went to see "Up" in 3D, I started to notice how many 3D movies were planning to come out within the next year. I came to the same conclusion as you, thinking that this is the movie industry's attempt to maintain a foothold. However, I think that ultimately this attempt will fail. It certainly is a hot fad, but I think ultimately the unique "theatre experience" it creates will only be popular with a limited amount of genres (such as movies like Avatar). Moreover, as you noted, 3D has only just started in the theatres and it is already being replicated by home systems. It will not be long before the "theatre experience" in any form is replicable. I am really interested to see how the industry morphs in the next 10-15 years as it goes through its own version of the music meltdown.

-- EdwardBontkowski - 15 Jan 2010

 
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