I wish that everything could come out on Blu-ray too, but that's just not realistic. The estimate is that by the end of 2009, 6.2 percent of U.S. homes will have a Blu-ray player (the number jumps to 14.8 percent if you include all PS3s). That's still very much a niche market. The number of people who are in that group and who would buy a $40 MSRP Blu-ray of The Last Days of Disco is minuscule. You and I are amongst that group, and there are probably several dozen more here on the forum, but Criterion can't produce a disc just for us.jwomaha wrote:My complaint against Criterion is that they aren't releasing every new spine number/title on blu-ray as well as on standard dvd...This Xmas we will probably see a huge surge in blu-ray player/disc sales; yet Criterion doesn't seem to have a logical approach to how they'll support the format - Imagine "Che" or the upcoming Rosselini War Trilogy not coming out on blu-ray - it could happen. Likewise, why did Criterion bother to create a new HD transfer for "The Last Days of Disco," only to not release it simultaniously on blu-ray? If nothing else, why can't Criterion be like Disney and let buyers buy a double disc set that has both the blu-ray and the standard dvd? Wouldn't that please everyone?
With Blu-ray production costs being what they are, companies only release things on Blu-ray that they expect to have extremely high levels of market penetration. They also focus on movies where they feel the demographic that owns most Blu-ray players (which right now is heavily overlapped with PS3 owners) overlaps with the demographic of the film. That is why the film about Italian mobsters is coming out, but not the film about French familial angst.
I'm pretty sure that Criterion's Che will be released on Blu-ray, but I would be shocked if the Rossellini set is. The odds that it would be profitable are slim.
I, for one, would not be pleased to see Criterion go down the Disney path. It's not like Disney is releasing everything in that hybrid format. They own thousands of films, but only do that for a few major releases. Including both versions increases the cost to the consumer and is wasteful. You can find further debate on the merits of this practice here.